What do you get when you combine domain picking and web 2.0? You get PickyDomains.com – a classic win-win service. Here is how it works. A person who wants a domain name deposits $50 and writes specifications about the desired domain. After that the order is added to the database. Now anyone can see that order and submit his or her ideas for the domain name. If a name is registered, contributor who suggested
the name gets $25 via PayPal (the other half goes to PickyDomains.Com). If none of the suggestions are deemed usable, the client promptly gets $50 deposit back upon request.
While PickyDomains.com is only one year old, it already landed on the list of 10 wackiest but successful online business ideas, has been profiled by The San Francisco Chronicle and boasts Aaron Wall, Yanik Silver and Wendy Piersall among its customers.
The next time you can’t come up with a domain name or if you are the creative
type who’d like to get paid for suggesting unusual domain name ideas – check out PickyDomains.com.
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That’s uber cool! I’m definetly going to sign up for that for naming my domains, and I’ll try out suggesting. I’ve heard of similar services, but this one stands out.
Hafiz Dhanani’s last blog post..Welcome to Ask A Blogger
hey there the system with Pickydomains is bad anyone can pay the $50 and simply choose a domain name and then register it as a dislike.
i work at Domainpod.co.cc and we offer a domain naming service but we use professionals so we can’t steal anyones domain name ideas and we don’t offer e refund it only costs £20 but we give specific domain names as they type in all of the info about their website also we give people advice on domain names and give them all of the info of the domain nam