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FFTB.com

is for sale

FFTB - Fortune Favors The Bold

About Fortune Favors The Bold

FFTB is an acronym for the popular proverb "Fortune Favors The Bold". It's highly used in content that promotes self improvement, motivation and success - via social media #FFTB, in vlogs, in blogs, in books, and is also sold on clothing and other merchandise.

Fun Fact About FFTB

In the movie "John Wick" (Keanu Reeves) has this phrase tattooed on his back in Latin.

Fortune Favors The Bold - John Wick

How To Use FFTB Dotcom

Do you own or plan to launch a company where the root brand name is either "Fortune" or "BOLD"?

For example, if you were an online casino named Fortune Bookie and wanted to use "Fortune Favors The Bold" as the theme of a marketing campaign or company slogan - you could use FFTB.com to support the branding of that campaign.

The same applies, if for example, you were an electric racing bike company named "Bold Bikes", except here the emphasis would be put on the word BOLD.

Fortune Favors The Bold - FFTB.com - can easily be used as a brand itself, within the financial or self-help market, but it can also be used as an acronym, to shorten the name of a company, product or service, for example: First Fintech Bank (FFTB).

Another use would be as a branded URL shortener, to mask long links shared on social media.

4-Letter dot-coms in the form of a word or meaningful acronym, like FFTB, are significant corporate assets and highly coveted digital real estate. They create very short, highly memorable addresses, that are easy to spell, easy to say and quick to type - making them powerful branding and marketing tools.

Also, just as a "what if" ... what if you wanted to be the anonymous founder of a Wealth Building Secret Society, offering your carefully selected members wealth, power and succes beyond their wildest dreams ...

Popular And Other Possible Meanings For FFTB

  • Fortune Favors The Bold
  • First Fintech Bank
  • Food For The Brain
  • Fresh From The Bakery
  • Fantasy Football
  • Fueling Future Technological Breakthroughs

How To Flex Using FFTB Dotcom

Are you a bold entrepreneur who truly lives and believes in the FFTB mindset and want to put it on display?

If you're looking for a personal or business flex, consider this ...

In only 4-letters, FFTB.com perfectly encapsulates the phrase "Fortune Favors The Bold" and can match the license plate on your favorite supercar!

How much attention you think you'd attract with a license plate like the example below?

Acquire FFTB.com, then get the matching license plate, which fits perfectly in 7-letters with the domain extension spelled out as FFTBCOM.

You'll instantly grab eyeballs and website traffic from the road, surely getting a ton of free marketing through social media posts by onlookers who see this plate on a moving Lamborghini, Ferrari or Bugatti maybe?

Stop somewhere and park your car - it's always promoting you and/or your business and its an instant conversation starter! People will say "Hey, that's a cool car, a cool plate and how did you get that domain name?"

Oh, and there's one more thing ... remember all the free social media attention that you're sure to acquire with this flex? You can start this off yourself, simply by posting your supercar with the FFTBCOM plate and use the hashtag #FFTB.

Owning FFTB.com by itself is a flex and allows you to own the mindshare on all things FFTB, but adding in the FFTBCOM license plate and also making use of the hashtag #FFTB - it's a branding trifecta! You can literally dominate all the communication around FFTB - Fortune Favors The Bold. You can, by default, own the hashtag across all social media platforms.

FFTB License Plate
TNG_WantThisName_GIF_2

Think about what this domain is worth to your startup, rebrand, new product or service launch and then fill out the form below, to send me a serious offer/proposal.

FAQ's About Offers

A serious offer starts at $50,000+. If you've got a real budget within that range, then we can begin a conversation.

$50k could be the magic number, but don't run with that, because most times it's not. $50k is an opener to having a serious conversation about the true value of the name, in relation to your particular enterprise and/or industry, and if you're a qualified buyer.

If a $50,000 starting price has you running for the hills - you might wanna re-think that "big idea". It's probably not as great and profitable as you think.

You may also want to do some due diligence and get up to speed on domain name values.

Domains are unique digital assets and my pricing is value-based.

Beyond the brand-worthiness of the name, its popularity, keywords, length, ease of pronunciation and memorability - my pricing is based on 2 main factors:

1. The highest and best use of the asset in a competitive business category.

2. The monetary and intrinsic value the asset will bring to an existing or future business, that's seeking to be the category leader.

I accept offers to acquire and normally sell my domain names in the ranges of 5 to 7-figures. Some names can even climb to 8-figures - so you need to be launching something that's a big deal, in order to justify the investment in your company's branding.

My ideal clients are well-funded entrepreneurs, engaged in big business, launching scalable enterprises that produce multi-million to multi-billion dollar revenues.

Like physical real estate, domain names are digital real estate and the best addresses sell for thousands to millions of dollars on the aftermarket.

Most aftermarket domain inquiries are from curious "Looky-Loos" and/or wannabe entrepreneurs with half-baked ideas, wanting premium names at bargain-basement prices ... I don't respond to such inquiries. 

If you sent an offer that was below the $50,000 minimum and/or you didn't submit authentic contact information, in hopes of a stealth acquisition ... your "offer" went ignored.

Also, inquiries coming from free email accounts, I rarely take seriously. So if you're using a Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail or any other free email account, your offer probably went into my "suspect" folder and never got my attention. 

My names are valuable assets and I receive a lot of interest, so for sake of time, I only reply to real offers that make sense.

My ideal clients are well-funded entrepreneurs, engaged in big business, launching scalable enterprises that produce multi-million to multi-billion dollar revenues. I only respond to serious offers from individuals or companies who meet that criteria and understand the value of the asset into which they're looking to acquire.

Most times, no.

Domain brokers usually try to achieve stealth acquisitions of domain names by submitting anonymous offers from a buyer in the shadows ...

I don't entertain "cloak and dagger" style inquiries.

If you're a broker representing a client who wants to acquire one of my names, then be prepared to provide your client's identity and their business intentions for the domain.

Otherwise, it's a non-starter.

Yes. I offer zero interest monthly payment plans, depending on the size of the transaction.

I accept Visa, MasterCard, PayPal, bank wires, escrow payments through Escrow.com and escrow through my attorney's trust account.

If we're using an Escrow service, the associated fees fall on you. Once the dough hits escrow, I transfer the domain name and any brand related assets to your control.

After you confirm ownership, funds are released to me.

Easy-peasy!

More Business Names

Need Custom Naming?

No problem. I can whip up a fancy schmancy new name, customized specifically for your brand vision and business category.

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