Over 30,000 registered domains expire on an average day because their owners fail to renew them. Some don't have the time for their websites any longer. Others don't have the money to continue their web business. Some just plain forget about the domains and have changed email addresses so they miss all the renewal notices.
Of course, many of these domains were completely ignored by their owners when they had them so the domain is worthless to a Domain Profiteer. But thousands of these daily expiring domains were promoted by their owners so they have a significant linking structure and free traffic from search engines, links and type-ins.
Imagine a webmaster working for months (or even years) to build up traffic to his website. He gets link partners. He posts messages in related forums. He gets articles on other websites. Over time, he builds up a pile of good links that produce a lot of quality traffic that is far better than any pay-per-click traffic he could buy. One day... for whatever reason, the webmaster lets that domain expire. So where does all that incoming traffic go? Nowhere. What a waste! And what an opportunity for you!
When you know how to quickly and easily find the quality expiring domains, you can get all that traffic (and the profits it brings) for yourself!
And contrary to what you might think that these domains sell for crazy high prices, you can pick up 99% of these domains for just $60 which includes the annual domain registration fee. That's right - you could get thousands of dollars of very valuable targeted traffic for a measly $60!
See... domains are like "virtual real estate". In the real world, real estate investors find bargain properties that they purchase for big discounts. Then, they rent those properties for passive income or sell those properties for a big payday. As you're about to discover, you can do the same thing with domains - virtual real estate - on the Internet. But you can get started without spending thousands of dollars, getting a mortgage or having to make big monthly mortgage payments.
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
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