Monday, 10 December 2012
Make Money With Affiliate Programs
Whoever buys the property makes the final decision as to how much it's worth when they part with cold hard cash for it, of course. Mixed in with a "guesstimate" of what the owner thinks it's worth, people value their properties based on what real estate agents tell them they're worth, in the offline world.
Not many domain names are valuable, without a functioning website, so. It's likely that most of those phrases being typed in are trademark terms and are owned by the trademark holder. Very few domain names that get traffic just from people typing the domain name into a web browser, there are very. But they are speculative because everyone knows that the real value of a domain name comes from what you do with it, some people go for domain-name valuations. When you look online you see that websites are more difficult to value.
A rule of thumb is that a web property will be worth about 12 times the monthly profit it generates. You could collate your traffic and sales data for the previous six months and show it to prospective buyers, if you wanted to, well. What do you base your valuation on? What if you have a website?
But one of the most common things to look at is PageRank. And you could look at income generated from advertising, you could look at any income generated via affiliate links, well. How do you value those sites? There will be some websites that aren't obviously sales-based, of course.
Webpages can also pass along PageRank and thereby help other pages to get indexed by Google and rank higher in natural search engine results. It's likely to appear near the top of search engine results for any query containing words and phrases relating to the page, if your page has high PageRank. PageRank is Google's system for determining how "valuable" a web page is.
The more it costs an advertiser to place their link on that page, the higher the PageRank of the page. Some websites sell links on their pages based on the PageRank their pages have. It's still a valuable web property, but has high PageRank pages, if a website doesn't generate income. Why not base a website's valuation on it, if PageRank is valuable, so?
It can't hurt to get valuations from as many different sources as possible, but if you're looking to sell a website, it's the buyer who decides on the value of the web-property, ultimately.
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