I sell onions on the Internet (2019)

deepsouthventures.com

410 points by sogen 14 hours ago


bencornia - 12 hours ago

> The way Faulkner treats his characters, I treat domain name projects. I buy them with an intention to develop. And I let them take the lead. They’re the inspiration for the business itself. They guide me towards what they need to become. I’m just the dude behind the keyboard (sorta).

I feel the same way about personal projects and blogs. A good idea tends to be self-reinforcing. It just needs someone to uncover it. Selling onions on the internet seems unusual but to the right person that idea is gold.

Fiveplus - 12 hours ago

The internet was originally promised as a way to disintermediate these kinds of supply chains, yet we often ignore these "boring" businesses for hype trains. The fact that he added a phone number and it sometimes out-sells the website is the cherry on top.

eightturn - 12 hours ago

author here : ) happy to answer questions if you have any. We also have a twitter account here if you want to follow along: https://x.com/vidaliaonions

stephenlf - 13 hours ago

Absolutely insane way to start a business. “Let me blow 2 grand on a domain name. Not sure what it’s for, yet.”

Brajeshwar - 3 hours ago

This is one of those articles that pops up here once every few years, and I love it every time. I love these stories of low-hanging, boring businesses that succeed in simple, yet strange and satisfying ways.

And of course, this helps me continue, like many others, to go domain-first on ideas that sound good at interesting times. I have enough domains to be ashamed of in numbers, but I will continue to register more, as more ideas hit me in the shower and on my walks. My wife has seen me walk out of the shower halfway more often than not to check availability and register domains. I’ve also had my share of well-sold domain names, so I don’t regret my hobby/obsession.

pinkmuffinere - 3 hours ago

There is also a follow up article: https://www.deepsouthventures.com/part-two-i-sell-onions-on-...

breadchris - 12 hours ago

This feels like a relevant wiki page to mention https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Futures_Act

j-krieger - 9 hours ago

> but for kicks & giggles, I dropped in a bid around $2,200 ’cause I was confident I’d be outbid

Boy do I wish I could just drop 2k on a whim for a vanity project

glamp - 12 hours ago

I love this post. I read it a few years ago and tried the same thing. I bought and then built riverreports.com (https://www.riverreports.com/).

tomrod - 13 hours ago

What a cool story. Not tech for tech's sake, but tech that grows into something simpler, more efficient, and more world-opening for something as wonderful as the Vidalia onion

derektank - 13 hours ago

Peter appears to still be at it.[1] Very impressed by his commitment to the bit.

[1] https://xcancel.com/searchbound/status/1996247844080996549#m

ohyoutravel - 12 hours ago

Got these many years back after having been posted here. Very happy with the purchase, but wouldn’t order again as my wife hated the smell. Highly recommended everyone order these at least once.

rdtsc - 11 hours ago

> Some folks can eat them like an apple. Most of my customers do.

My grandfather and my cousin, who he pretty much raised were eating regular red or yellow onions like apples like that. I had never seen anyone else do that. They would make an onion "salad" which was just cut up onion with olive oil and salt.

petterroea - 4 hours ago

If I could run a few services like this that just provide useful and predictable services to a community of people I'd be perfectly happy with my life

pottertheotter - 7 hours ago

This crosses from quirky to unhinged:

During a phone order one season – 2018 I believe – a customer shared this story where he smuggled some Vidalias onto his vacation cruise ship, and during each meal, would instruct the server to ‘take this onion to the back, chop it up, and add it onto my salad ‘.

reactordev - 13 hours ago

Sometimes you start a business. Sometimes a business starts you. Awesome that the author saw this as an opportunity and not a down side to owning a name he never really wanted to begin with.

Sometimes the right business just finds you and you’re at the right place at the right time to see it.

robofanatic - 4 hours ago

I bought djangosquare.com with exactly the same thought a year ago and till today I haven’t done anything with it!

- 12 hours ago
[deleted]
MagicMoonlight - 11 hours ago

This is the kind of thing I’d like to do. I have so many ideas, but I’m not sure how to actually make them happen.

How much money does it take to start something like this?

ciconia - 10 hours ago

> Them: We leverage automated machine learning to enhance your existing BI visualizations with more proactive insights

> Me: I sell onions on the internet

That's exactly how I feel about AI! Instead of all that useless nonsense, just keeping it real, doing something that's actually useful for individuals and for society.

rootusrootus - 10 hours ago

I love onions, but never tried a Vidalia. We have Walla Walla sweet onions out here and I suspect they’re pretty similar.

vednig - 11 hours ago

I love this guy's marketing honest and compelling

jrecyclebin - 12 hours ago

Great advertising for vidalias. I simply have to try one now.

zkmon - 13 hours ago

That's very interesting. My domain purchased in 2015, finally seems to make some meaning due to recent tech advacnes. Time to do something with it.

dgrin91 - 13 hours ago

(2019)

Forgeties79 - 12 hours ago

I love how I came into this thread going “it would be fun if this was actually about onions, but it is probably something about Tor” but was wrong!

qwm - 2 hours ago

I wonder what this guy would think of what I'm doing with poop.net

bell-cot - 12 hours ago

233 points and 89 comments back in 2022 - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32053044

- 12 hours ago
[deleted]
throwaway0x832 - 13 hours ago

correction: https://x.com/searchbound/status/1007015211486900229?ref_src...

tantalor - 12 hours ago

It's kind of funny this guy doesn't understand his own business.

It's not onions. It's lead generation.