Total expenses on advertising hosting etc per month (excluding management time) in USD:
4200.00
Total time to run the site per month:
72
Level of skill to run the site: (where 1 is no skill and 10 is very specific skill set/interest set)
1
Total estimated cost of management time per month:
720.00
Net profit per month:
0.00
How long at this level of earnings (in months):
64
Alexa:
This is the site's Alexa rank:
1598
This is the Alexa graph showing the site's performance over the last six months (what?):
Compete:
Compete discloses this information about the site:
Monthly Visitors: 249941
Backlinks:
Yahoo shows this number of links to this site, inclulding links to internal pages: All Results
20049
Of those, this many are links to the home page: All Results
14319
And this many are links to the internal pages:
5730
This is the number of links from .edu and .gov sites: All Results
WoW updates and faqs click here Blizzard.. To learn more about ingame faqs and quests click here InFo. ... Click here to return you to ...pubpages.unh.edu/~dcv2/webpages/picture.html - Traffic
Number of unique monthly visitors:
5000*
Number of members/forum members (if applicable):
10000*
Page Rank:
The Page Rank of the home page is: For PR 5 & 6 sites earning less than $100 the value is a multiple of earnings that is usually considerably higher than indicated here. It can exceed USD 0 for your site.
5
Other pages on the site with PR include this list:
If there is valuable software, database or other asset that is not currently contributing to the income - or will influence the earnings trend upwards - this could increase the price the site reaches at auction. Similarly, if there is an asset that will cease to exist after sale or a license that will revert or end post-sale this could adversely affect the price. If you haven't provided any of those figures then there may not be relevant notes to put this valuation in better context.
If the bulk of the traffic or revenue is from an associated blog or forum that could skew the valuation. Other things being equal sites in some sectors - like the adult industry - sell for a lower multiple. A site that revolves a lot around the seller's personality is more difficult to sell and could see lower prices.
The more a site requires in regular management/promotion time the less attractive it is to buyers and the fewer the buyers bidding for the site at auction, the lower the final sale price.
Other things being equal, a larger number of pageviews suggests to the buyer that the earnings will be steady. If, however, too much of traffic is being referred by just one or two sources that increases the risk for the buyer and often serves to reduce the value.
The larger your body of quality content the greater the number of "natural", organic links a buyer can expect in the future and that influences his perception of how the site is going to fare once he's taken it over. However, content that is duplicated elsewhere, that is lifted from "article directories" etc., tends to impress buyers less and such content pushes down the multiple they are willing to pay. Nature of subject matters too. Evergreen content on, say, astronomy, is likely to be more attractive than content that dates quickly - for example, reviews of the latest laptops.
Web businesses currently available for sale at various forums