I Sold My Oldest and Most Worked-On Website

February 5, 2016 Posted by Tyler Cruz

A few weeks ago I sold my oldest and most worked-on website, Movie-Vault.com.

I’ve owned Movie-Vault.com for over 15 year which is about half of my lifetime, and so I have a lot of history and attachment with the site, especially since it was my first big website.

First, I’ll explain why I even bothered to put it up for sale in the first place considering the above. There are four primary reasons:

Firstly, I’ve actually been selling off my network of sites over the past few years. For a while I was focusing exclusively on affiliate marketing and didn’t have time to run them, so it had already been my goal for a while to dramatically reduce the number of sites I own.

Secondly, I really want to focus on Votesy, and while I was hardly spending any time on Movie-Vault over the past 5 years, having it sold and out of my hands would still take some weight off my shoulders.

Thirdly, I simply lost interest in film over the years, and once you lose interest in a project it is doomed for failure. I was once passionate about movies and film, but that simply fleeted over time.

Lastly, since Movie-Vault.com was essentially "dead", I could have used the money from the sale to put towards Votesy.

Unfortunately, it only ended up selling for $1,500. I had set the reserve at $1 so I was willing to take the risk of a low sale – I was committed to selling it.

The new owner got an absolute steal on it. I can’t begin to tell you how much of a steal he got. Just the robust custom-programming of the site is easily worth the sales price several times over; the entire system could easily be rehashed to make a gaming review site, for example. Then there’s the fact that the system has 15,000+ double opt-in registered members, over 2,500 exclusively-written movie reviews, etc.

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But sites these days, unless absolutely swarming with traffic, almost exclusively sell based on existing revenue, and Movie-Vault.com was making next to nothing.

I actually first created Movie-Vault.com as part of a grade 12 Information Technology assignment in which we had to make a website. I created a purple website called "Movie Planet", and after I was graded for the assignment, decided to keep working on the website. Shortly thereafter I purchased a domain for it (it cost like $150 at the time!) and the rest is history.

I had worked incredibly hard on Movie-Vault.com, and honed a lot of my skills on it. I learned HTML, Photoshop, Javascript, CSS, MySQL, Perl, and some basic server stuff such as console commands, Apache, etc.

In fact, my decision to try to make money online for a living originally stemmed from those first few months of putting banner ads up on Movie-Vault and making $5 a month, then $11, then $15, etc. That was the exact moment I decided to do this for a living. I don’t believe I ever wrote about that before.

I have a lot of memories with Movie-Vault.com. Apart from personally interviewing people in the industry (directors, producers, film scorers, actors), one of the notable memories I have is when Lucasfilm Studios sent me a cease and desist notice after one of our news posters leaked behind-the-scenes photos of Star Wars Episode II.

We received so much traffic as a result of that, that it took down our servers for a couple of days. We were getting links from all over the internet, including the front page of Yahoo! (Yahoo! was still very popular at that time).

And of course, for a while Movie-Vault.com was attending red carpet premiere’s and interviewing A-list celebrities.

Here’s one we did with Justin Bieber:

(Note: You may need to visit the post directly at TylerCruz.com if you’re reading this via e-mail or RSS in order to see the video.)

And here’s one from the Transformers: Dark Side of the Moon premiere:

(Note: You may need to visit the post directly at TylerCruz.com if you’re reading this via e-mail or RSS in order to see the video.)

Anyhow, the sale of Movie-Vault marks an end of an era for me. PokerForums was my largest money-making website, but I invested the most blood, sweat, and tears into Movie-Vault.

In some ways it feels good to sell it though. Maybe the new owner can resurrect it back to life again, and selling it does take a bit of load off my shoulders. It’s nice to look forward, not back.

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Posted: February 5th, 2016 under My Websites  

28 Responses to “I Sold My Oldest and Most Worked-On Website”

  1. Mark H. says:

    Hey Tyler,

    I’m glad to see you are active on your blog again.

    For $1,500, why wouldn’t you just keep the site? I know you aren’t doing anything with it anymore, but just because the site is dead doesn’t mean you should give it away for practically nothing. I also have sites that are no longer what they used to be, but I have no intention of selling them for such a low price. Even if someone offered me $1,500 for one of my dead sites, I would rather just keep the site and turn down the low offer. The only reason I would sell for a low price is if I absolutely needed the money.

    • Tyler Cruz says:

      I wouldn’t have sold Movie-Vault for only $1,500 if I had known that would be the final price. I was committed to selling it though as I had set no reserve on the auction and was willing to take that risk in order to try to drive up interest on the auction.

  2. bf says:

    I agree with Mark. $1500 seems very low to sell all those emails, back reviews, and history. For that price, I’d have just given it to somebody I know and trust (like your reviewer, for example).

  3. Ethan says:

    Good for you Tyler! What people don’t understand is sometimes you have to give up the good to go after the great.

  4. ChrisBa says:

    Good for you!
    I am in the process of “cleaning up” old sites as well 🙂

  5. Ian says:

    I think what happens to most us is that our interest changes over time. We initially start out in one direction and over time we drift in a new direction, whether intentional or not.

    I’ve been keeping up with Tyler for a while now and it seems he is moving in a new direction — maybe real estate investment.

    I know the biggest killer for me is time. There simply is not a lot of time to keep for me to keep up promoting and maintaining a lot of websites. It makes sense sometimes to just offload it so that you can maintain focus and commit to your desired interest.

    my two cents…

    🙂

  6. How can a one give his mostly worked on websites to someone else? The site we worked on very hard should not not be for a sale.

  7. If you sell it on flippa than the new owner was lucky enough to take it. Otherwise in there mostly people selling spam and garbage sites more than 5k USD.

  8. Arjun Sharma says:

    I agree with Mark. $1500 seems very low to sell all those emails, back reviews, and history. For that price, I’d have just given it to somebody I know and trust (like your reviewer, for example).

  9. How can a one give his mostly worked on websites to someone else? The site we worked on very hard should not not be for a sale.

    Yeah, you should have given the site to me Tyler! I wanted it for a long time. 😀 ::Hugs bf for saying that::

  10. I think what happens to most us is that our interest changes over time. We initially start out in one direction and over time we drift in a new direction, whether intentional or not.
    I’ve been keeping up with Tyler for a while now and it seems he is moving in a new direction — maybe real estate investment.
    I know the biggest killer for me is time. There simply is not a lot of time to keep for me to keep up promoting and maintaining a lot of websites. It makes sense sometimes to just offload it so that you can maintain focus and commit to your desired interest.
    my two cents…

  11. I agree with Mark. $1500 seems very low to sell all those emails, back reviews, and history. For that price, I’d have just given it to somebody I know and trust (like your reviewer, for example).

  12. After it has been sold, what difference does it make if it is “destroyed”?

  13. I think what happens to most us is that our interest changes over time. We initially start out in one direction and over time we drift in a new direction, whether intentional or not.
    I’ve been keeping up with Tyler for a while now and it seems he is moving in a new direction — maybe real estate investment.
    I know the biggest killer for me is time. There simply is not a lot of time to keep for me to keep up promoting and maintaining a lot of websites. It makes sense sometimes to just offload it so that you can maintain focus and commit to your desired interest.

  14. You deserved more than that..But its ok..Now look forward for other things as well.

  15. VIRALAXE says:

    I think what happens to most us is that our interest changes over time. We initially start out in one direction and over time we drift in a new direction, whether intentional or not.

  16. sevenseasweb says:

    agree with digvijay singh kashyap how can one give own website to other on which we have worked hard

  17. But why u sold your website?

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