Eric F

164 posts

Eric F

Eric F

@DoerTheGreat

Katılım Kasım 2023
40 Takip Edilen820 Takipçiler
Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
@MichaelCyger When I buy something and I know that I can even make a decent amount of money selling it at wholesale. That’s how I know I got a great deal
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Michael Cyger
Michael Cyger@MichaelCyger·
What excites you as a domain name investor?
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Hiren M. Patel
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames·
🙏 Grateful to God, Family, and Friends🙏 Sold: PYAI .com for $14,089 via @atomHQ Bought: $710 in October 2017 Hold time: 8 years I don’t usually share purchase prices, but I’m sharing here so we can learn from the full picture. With God’s blessings, this is another small win to reinvest. I also feel the sale possibly undersold in today’s AI moment, and that’s part of the lesson. The path (2017 → Atom 2020 → sale) => 2017 (acquisition @ $710): I was actively dissecting 4L names from multiple angles. For PYAI, my first read was “PY” as a brandable echo of Pi and “AI” as Artificial Intelligence. Back then I sold a lot on the @NamePros aftermarket (investor-to-investor friendly deals) and documented these dissections regularly. => 2020 (batch listed on Atom): When I added a batch to Atom in 2020, the lens sharpened: “PY” also maps to Python. That Python × AI pairing made PYAI feel more premium, since Python is the dominant language for AI thanks to its libraries, frameworks, ease of use, and large community. => 2022 (inflection): Until ChatGPT’s 2022 storm, much of AI naming still felt speculative. Since then, plenty of companies have built their own models and kept exploring AI for automation and many other important things. => Today (sale @ $14,089): Closed via Atom. It may be an undersell in the current AI cycle, yet it’s a clean exit and fresh capital to redeploy. A window into my older dissection mindset (thread now closed): #post-6491681" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">namepros.com/threads/4l-lll… A cousin with the same logic: => Sold: PYFI .com for $7500 (Python Finance) in September 2018 => Bought: $230 in February 2018 => Hold time: 7-month hold => Context: DeFi wasn’t mainstream yet. PYFI is now used as Python Finance by the current company (uncertain if it’s the same buyer or a later owner). Point: Many buyers rush after terms go mainstream. When I buy before the headline moment—guided by a strong dissection—I often capture the real discount. Pre- vs post-hype buying (AI and DeFi) I acquired PYAI and many other 4L + AI names well before ChatGPT. I also acquired additional AI names after ChatGPT—naturally at higher awareness-driven prices. The same pattern applied to PYFI—bought/sold before DeFi hype—and later I added other FI names post-DeFi (again, at higher awareness pricing). Lesson: We need to keep improving our selection process continuously so results remain repeatable. Why 4L is still my favorite niche In my model, meaningful, pronounceable 4L have a higher probability of selling for a decent ROI than non-meaningful pronounceable 4L. => Meaningful pronounceable 4L (examples): LIPI / USRE / FIEX / AICO / NIJI => Non-meaningful pronounceable 4L (examples): GIDU / PEOF / QAGA / IPCY Both can sell, but at different tiers. If I pay more for a weaker pattern (e.g., GIDU) than a meaning-rich 4L (e.g., LIPI), long-term returns suffer. Pronounceable is table stakes; meaning is the edge. I’ll share other filters later. Key takeaways => Dissect early, buy early. Multiple legitimate reads (e.g., PY = Python, AI = Artificial Intelligence) stack value. => Meaning > randomness. Pronounceability is necessary; meaning compounds. => Be early to cycles. Pre-hype buys can feel uncomfortable and later look obvious. => Sell, learn, redeploy. Even a “possibly undersold” exit funds the next thesis—steadily compounding the journey. With God’s blessings, I’ve been selling 4L domains for 5 and 6 figures regularly. I’ll soon share one of my 6 figure 4L sales so more friends can learn from the details. I believe sharing is caring—I’ve learned many things from the openness of friends in our domain-investor community, and once in a while I also share a few sales so we can all keep learning from each other.
Hiren M. Patel tweet media
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames

🙏 Grateful to God, Family, and Friends 🙏 I’ve always loved strong 4-letter brands—and I don’t obsess over the extension when the asset fits the use case and buyer. Consistency > hype Sold following assets via @afternic Vbet .io => $20000 (Negotiated. Hold time 1 year) SPCS .org => $4995 (Bin. Hold time 8 years) My playbook hasn’t changed—quality 4-letters with clear sound/meaning, extension-agnostic. Patience on some, quick turns on others.

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Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
@ppcbz @atomHQ Since you asked nicely I will summon the domain gods
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Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
@qualitynames Such a beautiful name bro congratulations on the acquisition 👏
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Hiren M. Patel
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames·
Thank you God, family, & friends 🙏 🟡 MCC .com Turns 40: The 4th Heir of the .com Dynasty Enters the Vault On July 11, 1985, something quietly historic happened. A digital asset was born — not an NFT, not a blockchain token, but something rarer and older: MCC .com, the 4th .com domain ever registered in human history, went live. And 40 years later today, I'm deeply honored to share that this irreplaceable digital asset — the 4th .com ever registered in internet history — now resides in our collection. 🔸 It's Older Than... Pretty Much Everyone Let’s put this in perspective. When MCC .com came online, the vast majority of today's tech giants and Fortune 500s were still figuring out their fax machines. => Apple didn’t register Apple.com until 1987 => Cisco was still 2 years away from cisco.com => IBM was busy installing floppy drives when ibm.com went live in 1986 => Adobe, AMD, GE, Boeing, Siemens, and Xerox all came later In fact, 96 of the first 100 .com domains were registered after MCC .com. So yes, MCC .com had a digital birth certificate before nearly every global enterprise even knew what a domain was. 🔸 True Digital Scarcity — Before the Blockchain Was Cool In a world where people pay millions for digital collectibles on the blockchain, it’s easy to forget what real scarcity looks like. NFTs are minted by the second. Tokens are forked and respawned. But there are only 4 domains in existence that can say this: “We were born in the beginning. We just turned 40.” MCC .com is one of those 4. That makes it a true Internet-native collectible — the equivalent of a Genesis Rock, but made of pixels and protocol. A rare digital artifact with unforgeable provenance, older than Bitcoin, Google, Facebook, and yes — even older than the World Wide Web itself. 🔸 The Puzzle, the Punchline, and a ChatGPT “Thank You” To make it fun, I dropped a subtle puzzle on Twitter yesterday — four strange dates. A couple of brilliant friends @AtulAGhorpade & @DoerTheGreat cracked the code. They recognized the history. They saw the pattern. As promised, your reward is… 🥁 A non-handwritten “Thank You” letter, proudly generated by ChatGPT. 😄 (Yes, I keep my promises.) 🔸 Final Thought: Some Domains Are Just Built Different In today’s tech world, we throw around buzzwords like “digital gold” or “irreplaceable tokens.” But when it comes to MCC .com, the facts are plain: => Born: July 11, 1985 => Position: 4th .com ever => Legacy: Pre-IBM, pre-Apple .com, pre-pretty-much-everything So next time someone flexes a NFT or a Layer-2 token… Just remember: MCC .com was here before the flexing even started. MCC .com — The 4th Heir of the .com Dynasty. And still going strong at 40. Last but not least let's celebrate @ethereum journey as well who just completed his 10th anniversary today. 🎉 Happy 10th Birthday, Ethereum! 🥳 Launched in July 2015, Ethereum didn't just create a blockchain — it sparked a revolution. In just a decade, it gave the world: 🔹 Smart Contracts – Code that runs trustlessly, forever changing how agreements are made. 🔹 DeFi – Open, borderless finance. From lending to trading, without intermediaries. 🔹 NFTs – A cultural and digital ownership shift. From art to identity, Ethereum made it provable. 🔹 DAOs – Internet-native organizations governed by code, not hierarchy. 🔹 Layer 2 Scaling – Rollups and zk-tech expanding access to billions. 🔹 A thriving ecosystem – Thousands of dApps, millions of users, and trillions in on-chain activity. From “just an idea” to a global digital nation — Ethereum redefined what’s possible. ✨ Here's to the first 10 years of innovation, and to the next decade of decentralization. Happy Birthday, Ethereum. 🦄💜
Hiren M. Patel tweet media
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames

These 4 dates walked into a bar in 1985. The bartender said, “You all look... legendary.” Can you figure out why? 🔹 March 15, 1985 🔹 April 24, 1985 🔹 May 24, 1985 🔹 July 11, 1985 The first person to crack the code will receive a non-handwritten thank-you letter—lovingly generated by ChatGPT. 😄

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Hiren M. Patel
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames·
🙏 Grateful to God, Family, and Friends 🙏 I’ve always loved strong 4-letter brands—and I don’t obsess over the extension when the asset fits the use case and buyer. Consistency > hype Sold following assets via @afternic Vbet .io => $20000 (Negotiated. Hold time 1 year) SPCS .org => $4995 (Bin. Hold time 8 years) My playbook hasn’t changed—quality 4-letters with clear sound/meaning, extension-agnostic. Patience on some, quick turns on others.
Hiren M. Patel tweet mediaHiren M. Patel tweet media
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Hiren M. Patel
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames·
🙏 Grateful to God, Family, and Friends 🙏 MyForce .com Sold for $90,000 via @Escrow_com Not every deal is just about money. Some are about trust, intuition, and the quiet confidence that comes from walking the long road with the right values. I’m happy to share that MyForce .com has officially been sold for $90,000 via @Escrow_com, structured as a 60-month lease-to-own agreement with the same incredible buyer who earlier acquired MyVehicle .com for $105,000. What makes this story special isn’t just the amount — it’s the timing, trust, and energy behind the deal. The Backstory Incredibly, I acquired MyForce .com just 3 months before we agreed on the deal — through a @godaddyauctions . Yes, only 90 days of holding. But while the timeline was short, the decision wasn’t random. At the time, MyVehicle .com was already in escrow. That deal had taken nearly 6 months of negotiation and structure. Through that process, I got to know the buyer — not just as a customer, but as a person. I understood his mindset, his mission, and most importantly — his integrity. So when he expressed interest in MyForce .com, the dialogue was natural. He made a humble request: could I consider $90,000 over 60 months, with no down payment, and some flexibility? I didn’t hesitate. Why? Because I already had something more valuable than a deposit: trust. Deal Structure Total sale price: $90,000 Term: 60-month lease-to-own via @Escrow_com Down payment: None (by buyer’s request, accepted based on strong past record) Monthly installments: Starting at $1,000, increasing over time Delays: Yes — multiple months saw late payments Outcome: Every payment was made. Every challenge was met with communication. Every commitment was fulfilled. Why I Acquired MyForce .com The reasoning was simple: => I love the “My” prefix — personal, memorable, brandable => MyVehicle .com had already validated the “My+Keyword” strategy => And no — I wasn’t holding out hope that @salesforce would come knocking someday. LOL But MyForce .com had presence. It felt strong. It felt like a brand waiting to happen — across fitness, energy, empowerment, even AI or defense. And that feeling was enough. A Lesson in Trust and Character This deal taught me (again) that structure means nothing without spirit. At any point, I could’ve enforced the contract, reclaimed the domain, and kept the payments. But that’s not who I am. That’s not how I do business. I stood by the buyer — not because I had to, but because I wanted to. And once again, doing the right thing led to the right result. The Bigger Picture I’ve come to realize that the fruits we enjoy today often come from seeds we planted years ago — even if we didn’t realize it at the time. => My crypto investments, built through a disciplined and patient approach, have delivered handsomely over the past few years. => I've been accumulating gold since 2009, never imagining it would quietly outperform the S&P 500 over a 20-year span — but it did. => Real estate, mutual funds, and equities have rewarded long-term conviction with 20–25%+ CAGR over 10+ year periods. These aren’t “lucky wins.” They’re rooted in a belief system. My philosophy is grounded in two simple ideas: 🌱 The Farmer You plant. You water. You protect the soil. Some seasons are quiet. Others bring storms. But you stay consistent. And when the time is right, the tree bears fruit — not just once, but again and again. 🎋 The Bamboo For years, nothing seems to happen. Underground, roots grow deeper. Stronger. Then, suddenly, in a matter of months — it rises 20 feet. Not because it grew fast, but because it was ready. I treat domains the same way. Sometimes the reward comes in 3 months — like MyForce .com. Other times, it takes 3 years. But the principle is always the same: faith, consistency, and patience. Final Thoughts MyForce .com was one of the shortest holds of my portfolio — but the lessons, trust, and impact will last far longer. What began as a quick auction pickup became a $90,000 deal built on nothing but mutual respect. With God’s blessings, my business continues to evolve — from six-figure monthly domain sales to steady lease-to-own five-figure income, and a growing, diversified investment portfolio. But no matter how high we rise, I believe the roots — humility, trust, ethics, and faith — must run even deeper. Thank you again to God, family, and all the friends who continue to support this journey. 🙏🙏🙏
Hiren M. Patel tweet mediaHiren M. Patel tweet mediaHiren M. Patel tweet mediaHiren M. Patel tweet media
Hiren M. Patel@Qualitynames

🙏 Thank You God, Family, and Friends 🙏 MyVehicle .com Sold for $105,000 via @Escrow_com Every journey has milestones that leave a lasting impression on our hearts. For me, MyVehicle .com will always hold a special place in my entrepreneurial story — not just for its value, but for the journey, faith, and patience it demanded. I’m happy to share that MyVehicle .com has officially been sold for $105,000 via @Escrow_com , concluding a 60-month lease-to-own deal that began with a heartfelt negotiation and just wrapped up successfully. The negotiation took about 6 months, but the full payout and relationship spanned over 5 years. We always remember our first range-breaker — that defining deal which resets what we once thought was possible. The automotive sector has played a huge role in my life. In fact, ElectricCar .com, which I sold for $180,000, was my first single-payment six-figure deal. But MyVehicle .com holds the title for my first agreed six-figure deal, structured over a long-term plan — and now completed in full. The Backstory I acquired MyVehicle .com back in 2018 via a NameJet auction. Around that time, I already owned ElectricCar .com, and my vision was clear: collect premium automotive assets that could define the future, especially as EV (Electric Vehicle) interest was just starting to surge. MyVehicle .com stood out to me as a powerful umbrella term — versatile and broad, applicable across multiple facets of the auto industry. Over the years, I consistently received serious inquiries. In 2019, one interested party started with a $5,000 offer, which through discussion reached $25,000 — a fantastic ROI considering I had only held it for under a year. But I politely declined while keeping the door open, as I had long-term conviction that the name would eventually break the six-figure mark, even if some found that laughable back then. The Deal That Tested Patience and Character In February 2020, just as COVID fears were beginning to spread, our daughter came down with a flu. My wife and I soon followed with similar symptoms. Doctors told us to rest — back then, no COVID testing was available, and we had no way of knowing what it really was. Amidst that, I received an unexpected email — the same person who had offered $25,000 six months prior was back. I immediately recognized his name and revisited our past conversation. We got on a phone call, speaking for over an hour. I walked him through facts, market trends, and data — highlighting that even at the time, the highest known public sale with the keyword “Vehicle” was VehicleHistoryReport .com for $31,000. The buyer appreciated the insight, but had budget constraints. I remembered wise advice once shared by @BradenPollock : "Always try your best to help your customer find a solution." So, instead of walking away, I offered a structured plan. Initially, I asked for $15,000–$20,000 as down payment, with the balance in monthly installments. Since the buyer preferred using a credit card for his initial payments, I knew I couldn’t expect more than $5,000 per month due to processing limitations. So, we worked out a custom plan: Down Payment Schedule (First 4 Months) Month 1: $4,735 ($2,300 + $2,434.50 escrow fees) Month 2: $4,750 Month 3: $4,750 Month 4: $4,750 Installment Structure Months 5–15: $1,580 per month Months 16–27: $1,000 per month(adjusted due to COVID-related constraints) Months 28–60: $1,790 per month A Lesson in Patience and Faith As the deal unfolded, there were numerous delays and inconsistencies in payments — some of which are clearly visible in our transaction screenshots. The buyer often reached out asking for understanding due to market uncertainty. Many times, I could have enforced my rights. Per Escrow rules, I could have emailed them, and if no payment was made in 7 days, I could have reclaimed the asset and kept all payments made up to that point. But I chose not to. Why? Because I believe in God, ethics, morality, and trust — even when tested. God gave me several such tests during this period. I saw each moment as a choice to stand by my values rather than chase short-term gain. I believe in positive vibe deal. Hence I always supported all of his requests. And I’m glad I did. With God’s blessings, the buyer fully paid off the domain last month, marking the completion of my first-ever agreed six-figure lease-to-own deal. A Bittersweet Twist Just 5 months after this deal began, Vehicle .com hit the market. I had recently completed my ElectricCar .com sale and had fresh capital to reinvest. Naturally, I wanted to grab Vehicle .com to round off my portfolio. I offered $75,000, but it eventually sold to another investor for $120,000. I was genuinely happy for the buyer. I believe in celebrating others after they’ve executed. Reflecting on the Journey Today, six-figure deals are a regular part of my business, with God’s grace. I’m now averaging six figures in domain sales monthly, with a consistent five-figure income stream from active lease-to-own agreements. Beyond domains, I’ve been receiving great returns in other investments as well — from real estate, crypto, stocks, mutual funds, gold, and bonds — all showing exceptional CAGR. Each of these has a story, and I may share more from those experiences another time. Final Thoughts Warren Buffett once said, “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket,” while @elonmusk Elon Musk countered, “You can put all your eggs in one basket — just watch that basket closely.” I admire both, and I try to find a balanced path across various sectors. Life will always bring challenges. What matters is how we respond — how we show up for the tests life throws at us. Those are the exams we must pass to graduate to the next level. This was more than a domain sale. It was a story of patience, conviction, ethical conduct, and divine timing. Thank you again to God, my family, and all friends who’ve supported me on this path. 🙏🙏🙏

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Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
@dnrater No one cares what you think no one asked for your estimate you didn’t buy the domain and you didn’t hold the domain please stop replying to my posts or you will be blocked
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DNRater
DNRater@dnrater·
🌐 Opmo .com 💰 Sold Price : $13,000 ✔ @DNRater Recommended BIN : $16,003 ✔ Estibot Valuation : $16,000 ✔ Godaddy Estimation : $9,194 ✔ InternetX Appraisal : $303 📌 Venue : @atomHQ 📆 2025-07-29
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Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
@CDomainer @atomHQ Just posting some sales I haven’t posted in a while. I have a lot to post I’ll get around to it in time
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Eric F
Eric F@DoerTheGreat·
Sold Opmo.com @atomHQ $13000 undersold but it doesn’t matter to me a deal is a deal
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