MNAPA.com
is available for sale
About MNAPA.com
MNAPA is a highly brandable five-letter .com name for any local site dedicated to city planning. It featured a blog, a news section, and conferences for the Minnesota Chapter of the American Planning Association (APA Minnesota).
Exclusively on Odys Marketplace
$1,310
What's included:
Domain name MNAPA.com
Become the new owner of the domain in less than 24 hours.
Complimentary Logo Design
Save time hiring a designer by using the existing high resolution original artwork, provided for free by Odys Global with your purchase.
Built-In SEO
Save tens of thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours of outreach by tapping into the existing authority backlink profile of the domain.
Free Ownership Transfer
Tech Expert Consulting
100% Secure Payments
Premium Aged Domain Value
Usually Seen In
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Own this Domain in 3 Easy Steps
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.1
Buy your Favorite Domain
Choose the domain you want, add it to your cart, and pay with your preferred method.
.2
Transfer it to your Registrar
Follow our instructions to transfer ownership from the current registrar to you.
.3
Get your Brand Assets
Download the available logos and brand assets and start building your dream website.
Trusted by the Top SEO Experts and Entrepreneurs
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I purchased another three aged domains from Odys in a seamless and painless transaction. John at Odys was super helpful! Odys is my only source for aged domains —you can trust their product.
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★ ★ ★ ★ ★
I have bought 2 sites from Odys Global and they have both been of high quality with great backlinks. I have used one as the basis for creating a new site with a great DR and the other is a redirect with again high DR backlinks. Other sites I have looked through have low quality backlinks, mostly spam. I highly recommend this company for reliable sites.
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Earlier this year, I purchased an aged domain from Odys as part of a promo they’re running at the time. It was my first experience with buying an aged domain so I wanted to keep my spend low. I ended up getting a mid level DR domain for a good price. The domain had solid links from niche relevant high authority websites. I used the site as a 301 redirect to a blog I had recently started. Within a few weeks I enjoyed new traffic levels on my existing site. Happy to say that the Odys staff are friendly and helpful and they run a great business that is respected within the industry.
Place-making in an Era of the Electronic Milkman
Remember When?
Can you remember a time when the milkman came around every day or two and delivered fresh milk and dairy products to your door? For us baby boomers, and folks older than us, the milkman was a neighborhood institution. He could always be seen driving his small delivery truck around the neighborhood. I remember one day actually riding with the milkman when I was about eleven years old. I appreciated the way he greeted anyone who came to the door, and if there were no one home, he would place the household's preordered goods in an insulated box by the side or back door.
The way we buy things, especially dairy goods, has changed significantly over the years. Today, most people buy their dairy goods at the grocery store or, when time gets short, at the local gas station or convenience store. Frequent deliveries from a small truck running through the neighborhood are virtually non-existent these days. Part of this change is an improvement in pasteurization, merchandising, and storage of dairy products to a point where there is little risk in such perishables spoiling. However, another is increasing profitability for dairy distributors when their customers travel to the store. As long as people drive to and from the store, the costs of home delivery are borne by each and every customer. Today, all the dairy products we consume on a daily basis are warehoused for us to go and get in our own cars
Even the grocery store has changed dramatically in form and function since the era of the milkman. Back then, we would fill out a pre-printed order card for milk, eggs and butter for the next few days, and place it in the box. The next day before school let out, the insulated aluminum box would be filled with cold milk to go with our afternoon cookies. Mom would drive the station wagon once a week to the local grocery store for other foods and sundries. Nowadays we pack up the kids up to four times a week, strap them and ourselves in the car, drive on congested roadways to the big box stores, walk a quarter mile to get what we need, pack up the car again, drive congested roadways home and unload the car. Increasingly, these repetitive trips are taking their toll - in time, energy, stress, cost and quality of life. QVC and infomercials, as well as electronic banking, tax filing and news reporting, are a popular, recent phenomenon. They are all indications that convenient access to just about anything is getting closer to home. Increasing catalog sales and delivery service business revenues are direct evidence of buying decisions and delivery service being brought to our doorstep. Home grocery delivery is becoming increasingly attractive to customers with little time for routine grocery shopping. Companies like Simon Delivers in the Twin Cities and Peapod in the Chicago area are currently experiencing an extraordinary increase in demand for home delivery service. In response, their selection of available products has improved, and so has the sophistication of their delivery service. Popular retailers such as Best Buy, Pottery Barn and The Gap are expanding their catalog and web site presence as an alternative to in-store shopping. Even Target has a link within the Amazon.com website, and Wal-Mart has its own on-line shopping site, Walmart.com. We are just beginning to see large volume retailers of household necessities offer turnkey on-line ordering and convenient delivery. This trend has some beneficial consequences, including reduced trip generation on local roadways, and extra time customers can spend with their friends and family. It has also had some detrimental consequences as well, including local citizens becoming increasingly disengaged from community life.