Scott7
Top Contributor
Flippa domain name auction page for Clocks.com.au
4 day auction, no reserve.
4 day auction, no reserve.
There were no bids in the auction. I set a high starting price and if there had been a bid, the domain would have sold. So there was no reserve above the starting price that potential bidders had to guess. There's no way I'd start a no reserve auction for a valuable domain on Flippa with a $1 starting price.thats great , soooo tell the story? ( i've never used flippa)
you put it on flippa no reserve so why was it not successful? no bids? how does that work? how did you pull it off the auction?
how'd ya find the end user?, via flippa?
we don't need to know price unless you want to, but how was the negotiation process?
i'd be very interested having never done it
tim
yeh, thats where its at, i've posted this a million times, start breaking down the numbers and create a "breakeven point " for them.wouldn't have to generate many sales
I take 'no reserve' to mean that you don't need to bid more than the starting price for the item being auctioned to be 'on the market'. If there is a bid, it will sell - no need to guess how much you have to bid to get to the point where the item will be sold. Otherwise you could say, 'so really there was a reserve' in the case of an auction starting at $1 where the item would be 'on the market' after the first bid. A reserve implies that the item may not sell even if there is a bid..so really there was a reserve? semantics?
Yeah. I may not be correct in my understanding of 'reserve', however, what I stated above was what I meant when writing 'no reserve' in the original auction post. I wasn't trying to be misleading, but rather, wanting to let potential buyers know that if they placed a bid there would be a winner.i get it, just as the last thing i bought at auction was a second hand washing machine in 1993 for $20, i didn't get "reserve"