Fixed Fraction vs. Strategy Curves: which should I use?
Both methods produce a My Price from the Estimated Retail Value. They just answer the question “how should the discount change as domains get more valuable?” differently.
Fixed Fraction (My Price %)
A flat percentage of the Optimistic retail value. An 80% setting prices a domain with a $5,000 Optimistic retail value at $4,000, and a domain with a $1,000,000 Optimistic retail value at $800,000. The discount never bends.
Use it when you already have a portfolio rule of thumb and want every name priced the same way without thinking about size.
Strategy Curves (Aggressive / Balanced / Patient / Conviction)
A curve that bends with retail value: stronger names get a higher fraction of retail, the long tail gets discounted more. This reflects how STR (sell-through rate) actually behaves in real portfolios — deeper discounts unlock liquidity on smaller names without burning margin on hero names. Conviction takes this further, scaling from a deep discount on commodity names to a premium above retail on your best, most in-demand ones.
Use a curve when you want pricing that scales with value the way most successful portfolios do.
How they interact
If the My Price % field has a value, it wins. If you leave it empty, the Aggressive / Balanced / Patient / Conviction strategy you selected applies. Asian Market Pricing (88/888) works on top of either choice.