Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale

$1.4M Annual Rev Exhaust Brand + 83% Margin Cloud Stacking SaaS + Seller Candy Webinar

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TODAY'S TOP DEAL

Extended Reality Studio

7-year-old VR/AR/MR development studio focused on enterprise immersive training, HSE/safety training applications, and 3D visualization, serving blue-chip customers across energy, aerospace, manufacturing, and healthcare.

Key Metrics: $715K annual revenue, 59% profit margin, 31K email subscriber list

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EDITORS CHOICE:

4WD Exhaust Ecommerce Brand

9-year-old Ecommerce brand specializing in 4WD performance exhaust systems and accessories. Operated by a small team with automated systems in place for seamless management and fulfillment.

Key Metrics: $1.4M annual revenue, $750 AOV, 1M+ lifetime website views

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Cloud Stacking SaaS

4-year-old SaaS platform that automates the creation of cloud stacking networks for SEO professionals. Revenue is generated via a recurring subscription model.

Key Metrics: $288K annual revenue, 83% profit margin, 180 active paying subscribers

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Kosher Phone Shopify Store

2-year-old Shopify store selling kosher phones and accessories to a loyal, underserved niche. Operated by a lean team with streamlined workflows and automated fulfillment.

Key Metrics: $38K annual revenue, $238 AOV, 58% profit margin

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SPEAKER_01

Welcome to the deep dive. You know, what do an industrial flight simulator, a fleet of four by four trucks, and a religiously compliant smartphone actually have in common?

SPEAKER_00

Well, uh, aside from sounding like the setup to a really weird joke, they are all businesses generating serious cash with ridiculously lean teams. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Teams so lean they basically don't have a physical footprint. So our mission today is to unpack this specific portfolio of four businesses that are currently up for sale. We really want to figure out the uh the architectural playbook behind highly profitable modern online businesses.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah, it's a fascinating cross-section of the digital economy. I mean, we're looking at everything from enterprise-level virtual reality all the way to hyper-specific retail.

SPEAKER_01

Let's jump right into that virtual reality side first, because we've got the seven-year-old Extended Reality Studio. They build VR and mixed reality apps for blue chip companies in, you know, aerospace, energy, manufacturing.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Then the financials on this one are just wild. They're pulling in $715,000 annually.

SPEAKER_01

Oh wow.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, with a 59% profit margin, and they have a 31,000 subscriber email list to back it all up.

SPEAKER_01

Wait, okay, let's unpack that. A 59% margin is massive for custom software development. How exactly are they pulling that off?

SPEAKER_00

Well, think of their product as the ultimate industrial flight simulator. So when a highly dangerous multi-million dollar mistake happens on, say, an offshore oil rig, these guys make sure it happens in pixels instead of real life.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, right. So that real-world risk mitigation is exactly why they can command such a massive premium.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Enterprise clients aren't just paying for pretty 3D visualization. Yeah. I mean, they're paying for insurance against catastrophic physical accidents. Preventing just one single injury or equipment failure in aerospace pays for the software a hundred times over.

SPEAKER_01

So Enterprise VR obviously needs heavy tech development to justify those margins, but how are insanely lean teams getting even higher margins without all that heavy upfront lifting?

SPEAKER_00

Right. And this portfolio gives us two great examples of that. Hyper-specific niches doing exactly that. We've got a cloud stacking saws and a kosher smartphone store.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Okay, let's look at the saws first. It automates SEO networks, right?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, essentially generating interconnected cloud assets to artificially boost a website search ranking. And it operates at an incredible 83% profit margin on $288,000 in revenue.

SPEAKER_01

Wait. Let me just do the math on that for a second because the source says they only have 180 active paying subscribers. So 180 users generating that much revenue means they're charging, what, roughly $1,600 a year per user?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that's exactly it.

SPEAKER_01

What makes a tiny user base pay that much without churning? Like how is that a viable business?

SPEAKER_00

It really just comes down to pure B2B utility. For an SEO agency, manually building out those interconnected cloud networks is incredibly tedious.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, totally.

SPEAKER_00

So a $1,600 annual tool that replaces a junior employee's busy work is an amazingly easy sell. And once that automation is baked into their daily workflow, churn practically drops to zero.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It's an artificial moat, which actually perfectly mirrors the kosher phone store. They take a total commodity like a standard smartphone and add a strict religious compliance layer.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. By heavily modifying the operating system to remove internet browsers or specific apps to meet kosher standards, they instantly eliminate 99% of their competition.

SPEAKER_01

Wow. And they bring in $38,000 in revenue with a massive $238 average order value.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, because the target audience is fiercely loyal to the few vendors who actually serve them. You know, you don't need millions of eyeballs if your hyper-specific audience literally has nowhere else to go.

SPEAKER_01

Makes total sense. Yeah. So an artificial compliance mode or an SEO workflow tool creates these high margins for a small group. But what happens when an underserved niche like this fully matures and scales?

SPEAKER_00

Well, that's where we look at the nine-year-old e-commerce brand selling four WD performance exhausts. They're doing $1.4 million in revenue.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell with a $750 average order value.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. But the interesting mechanism here isn't just the million-dollar top line, it's the operational architecture.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. Because a lot of e-commerce brands at this scale get totally bogged down with warehouse staff and inventory management.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. But not this one. They are running on a fully automated fulfillment model.

SPEAKER_01

So when a customer orders a massive heavy 4WD exhaust system, the software just routes that order directly to a third-party logistics center or a drop shipping supplier.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The core team never actually touches the metal. They have effectively decoupled revenue growth from headcount.

SPEAKER_01

Which is the dream, honestly.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. I mean, when you automate the busy work of inventory routing, scaling from a hundred orders a month to a thousand doesn't require a hiring spree or a new warehouse. It literally just requires server bandwidth.

SPEAKER_01

It's wild. So whether you're stripping feakers off a smartphone to serve a religious community or routing a thousand-pound truck exhaust through an automated supply chain, the modern acquisition playbook is really clear.

SPEAKER_00

Own an ignored niche, build a moat, and automate all the busy work. It completely redefines what a scalable business looks like today.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. So here's something for you to mull over as we wrap up. If you had to launch a fully automated lean business tomorrow, what hyperspecific, underserved niche is hiding in plain sight in your own daily life? Thanks for joining us on this deep dive.