Domains

LLLL.com in the World Wide Web

countrychart760x2001.jpg We used to call it the World Wide Web. But March has started and the naysayers are not stopping their work. The more the LLLL.com prices go higher and the more the naysayers write no-sense posts around the Forums to cool down the market like the scammers were not hurting it enough.

The problem is that they keep saying the same things, over and over, despite the LLLL.com buy-out 4 months ago proved them already wrong.

And they call me a hyper but on the same level I could assume they simply do this to spread fear and buy these precious domains for little since they missed the right timing.

So let`s get together a few points again for our lovely nayasayers and let`s see if they really like to look like blinds.

- Naysayers argument 1: low quality /bad letters are not worth 1/26 of their similar LLL.com because we say so and we`ll never be able to explain why.

There is not such a thing called “crappy letters” or “low level letters”. As Italian for me, the words like SONY or NIKE would be hard to spell and would sound orrible if I did not know those Brands , but for an English person, I guess they sound fantastic. You should really travel in ASIA without any Travel guide and see/hear another culture, it may help your mind. I struggled several months when I left Italy and had to force myself to understand what these people were pronuncing.

I invite you to buy a Worldmap and count how many Countries are in the World and how many different languages exist.

What is “junk” for you may be gold for a Chinese:

After reading another “LLLL.com bashing thread”, a Chinese Domainer (AKA DOTCN on NamePros.com) found these useful examples:

“Here are the 10 LLLL com you list here in this thread as the worst LLLL examples:
xjdq
xkwq
ZXQX
QKZZ
ZXWQ
zqqz
ZQXJ
ZQQK
ZQXK
YJXZ

and do you know how many end-users are using these LLLL’s?

I have just checked them on .cn, .com.cn, .com and .net, and here are the end-user sites:
http://www.qkzz.cn/
http://www.yjxz.cn/
http://www.xjdq.com.cn/
http://qkzz.net/
http://www.zqxj.net/
http://www.zqxj.com/

Do you still think these LLLL are useless?”

Note: the examples were referring to a list of 10 randomly listed LLLL.com as the worst ones from an English/American point of view and out of 10 , AT LEAST 6 were found to be valuable for Chinese people.

And since many people around the world who don`t use English as their first language are ONLY NOW starting to use the Internet (and in some places not yet) there are more than likely many LLLL.com that may be wonderful for them.

Usa is just one country in the World and the more we go ahead the less it matters against 6 other Billions of WORLD WIDE CITIZENS.

This is also why I believe in the letters that americans see as “worst”.

Considering Chinese love Q-X-Y-Z and do not use or dislike A-E-I-O-U-V

Considering Italians love U-V and dislike J-K-X-Y-W

Considering Germans love Z-K-U-W

I think that some of the cheapest LLLL.com may offer the biggest ROI in the long term since what americans like was pretty much all taken long time ago, but the new cultures are and will be experiencing a sort of LANDRUSH for them. We are simply luckier enough to be here before them.

- Naysayers argument 2 : The fact there may be high traffic to some of these Chinese Letter LLLL.coms but Chinese traffic pays squat, 0.01 a click, most parking providers will block it if at possible, due to click bot fraud, It is just pure s**t traffic. To much click fraud behind it.

What is crap traffic now, may become good traffic for Chinese Parking companies when they will jump in this business. Things do change. Did you know that 500 years ago Silicon Valley was worthless?

- Naysayers argument 3 :

Average Chinese household income: $1300 (urban households…for rural it’s $300) Average American household income: $46,000 (yeah that’s about 35 times greater)

Do you really think no one else knew that Chinese or Indian people earn less than the US people?

But also: do you think that all americans buy domains or just a very little little little tiny elite does? If just 1 % of Americans were domainers, I think we would be discussing the 5 letters buyout.

And since China has more than 1,000,000,000 people compared to the 300,000,000 people of the USA , I`m confident to say that it does not take many large Chinese large companies or Millionaires to have the same impact. And while the US is declining , China is growing. India, Pakistan , Brasil too. Lots of other countries are growing too since they deal mainly with China, Japan and India.

- Naysayers argument 4 : Chinese, Russian, Japanese ,etc. people willuse IDN Domains so they will not need LLLL.com

Oh really? And so if international buyers/visitors want to see/understand that website of that big Chinese/Russian/Japanese/etc. company you are telling me that they will have to learn the other language or maybe…something like the companies will realise they need the .com for the rest of the World?

- Naysayers argument 5 : I`ll add here other valid arguments. Just post them in the comment space and I`ll be able to read them even if they are not visible to you yet.

I invite people to write me any other valid argument on this topic and it will published with the answer if it will be helpful to this topic.

Thank you

3 Responses to “LLLL.com in the World Wide Web”

  1. he he, you really don’t like naysayers :)
    Maybe just forget about them and enjoy LLLL profits?

    I think that most of them will stop arguing only after November 2008, when there will be no mass drops of LLLLs and prices will be steady high.

  2. Hi Oskars, at the moment I`m not enjoying any profit since I sell an average of 3 domains per month (the minimun just to keep some cash flow) and during February I did exactly just 3 , 2 of which were LLLL.com all Premium letters (as they way most domainers refer to) while the 3rd was not a LLLL.com
    This is not a good time to sell, there is a long way to go before that time comes.
    But I doubt they will stop arguing since some people are just stubborn and will never admit to be wrong , no matter how clear it will be.

  3. […] is not English, there is a LLLL niche that may actually provide a greater return in the long run. Trading LLLL with the understanding of letter values in Chinese and other European languages may well be a hidden gold for […]

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