Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale

$17M IT Firm + 98% Margin Car Wrapping Brand + Compression Brand with 10% repeat customers

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 5:08

TODAY'S TOP DEAL

IT Consulting Firm

30-year-old IT consulting firm specializing in cutting-edge areas like cybersecurity, data center management, and telecom solutions. Generates revenue via project-based, licensing, and maintenance programs.

Key Metrics: $17M annual revenue, 31% profit margin, 300 clients per year

View Business >


EDITORS CHOICE:

Compression Shopify Brand

2-year-old Shopify brand selling compression socks and related leg- and foot-comfort products, built on a proven paid-social funnel. Operated by a lean team with streamlined SOPs and efficient fulfillment system.

Key Metrics: $727K annual revenue, 10% repeat customer rate, 42K email subscriber list

View Business >


Car Wrapping Marketplace

7-year-old marketplace specializing in professionally designed car wrap liveries, sim-racing skins, and premium vehicle templates. Over 1,500 high-converting digital designs listed, requiring no inventory, production, or shipping.

Key Metrics: $84K annual revenue, 98% profit margin, $95 AOV

View Business >


Trading Journal SaaS

3-year-old white-label B2B SaaS platform that provides fully branded trading journal web applications for trading brands and communities. Subscription-based billing with clients paying monthly, linked to the number of users in their trading communities.

Key Metrics: $65K annual revenue, 94% profit margin, 20 active paying subscribers

View Business >

Find more online businesses for sale or start your exit journey at Flippa.com
✨ AI generated from The Daily email content. 

SPEAKER_01

If you picture buying a business, you probably imagine like a noisy factory floor. But we're looking at a stack of broker listings today that prove well, the smartest acquisitions right now are completely invisible.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, completely invisible.

SPEAKER_01

Right. So, okay, let's unpack this. Our goal for this deep dive is to figure out what actually drives business value.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And we're doing that by evaluating four radically different companies currently on the market.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, seeing how they balance things like scale, overhead, and you know, profit margins. If you're looking for where the smart money goes, well, let's look at the traditional model first. Think of it like a local utility company or a heavy-duty freight train.

SPEAKER_00

Right. It takes massive effort to build that infrastructure and momentum.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But once it's there, people just pay their bills on autopilot.

SPEAKER_00

And that maps perfectly onto the first listing we have. It's from a broker in Baltimore, Amber Burke. It's a 30-year-old IT consulting firm doing cybersecurity in telecom.

SPEAKER_01

Wow, 30 years.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, 30 years. And they pull in uh $17 million in annual revenue across about 300 clients.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell, which is a lot of clients.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. The value there is sturdy, predictable, project-based work and licensing, which leaves them with a solid 31% profit margin.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But you don't need 30 years to build value. Because on the other end of the spectrum, we're looking at a two-year-old Shopify brand.

SPEAKER_00

The compression socks one.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, selling compression socks. And they're just rating around $727,000 a year.

SPEAKER_00

That's a pretty huge difference from $17 million.

SPEAKER_01

It is. But if the IT firm is a freight train, this Shopify brand is a nimble race car or like a pop-up concert. It generates cash fast, but you have to actively sell tickets every single time to keep the lights on.

SPEAKER_00

Well, what's fascinating here is the actual mechanism keeping those lights on. I mean, they only have a 10% repeat customer rate.

SPEAKER_01

Wait, really? Just 10%?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, just 10%. So the socks themselves, they aren't even the primary asset. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It's the email list.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. They have a 42,000-person email list and really streamlined SOPs. So their day-to-day operations basically run on autopilot.

SPEAKER_01

And they just relentlessly leverage that list to feed their paid social funnel. Right.

SPEAKER_00

Spot on to drive those conversions.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Okay, but here's where it gets really interesting. To break past that 31% margin ceiling of the traditional IT firm, you have to kill the overhead entirely.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell You have to drop the physical services and inventory entirely.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. Which brings us to our next tier of businesses.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The pure digital plays. So we have a seven-year-old car wrapping marketplace. They sell over 1,500 digital sim racing skins and vehicle templates.

SPEAKER_01

Which is purely digital.

SPEAKER_00

Purely digital, yeah. Because of that, their profit margin is a staggering 98%.

SPEAKER_01

Oh wow. 98%.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And then there's a three-year-old trading journal sauce platform. It's a white-label B2B app.

SPEAKER_01

So trading communities pay to slap their own branding on the software.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly right. And they're sitting at a 94% margin with just 20 active subscribers.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, hold on. I have to push back here.

SPEAKER_00

Sure, go ahead.

SPEAKER_01

If margins are sitting at 94% and 98%, why is the total revenue so low compared to the others? I mean, the car rep business is only at $84,000. The Sauce platform is at $65,000.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Compared to the $17 million IT firm, aren't these just glorified lifestyle businesses?

SPEAKER_00

Well, that is the natural assumption when you're looking purely at top line revenue. But if we connect this to the bigger picture, the true power of these zero inventory, zero shipping models is leverage.

SPEAKER_01

Leverage, how so?

SPEAKER_00

Take that trading sauce platform. Their subscription billing is linked directly to the user count inside those 20 trading communities.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I see.

SPEAKER_00

Right? Because there are zero fulfillment costs. If those 20 clients grow their own user bases, the SAW's revenue scales automatically.

SPEAKER_01

So you aren't just saving warehouse space.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. You are acquiring a highly efficient mechanism that scales income without requiring any proportional capital investment, even with just 20 subscribers.

SPEAKER_01

So what does this all mean for you, the listener? It flips the script on what makes an acquisition target truly valuable.

SPEAKER_00

It really does. It's not always about chasing massive top-line revenue. Right.

SPEAKER_01

Sometimes value is entirely about the efficiency of that revenue and the specific assets you're acquiring. Whether that's a heavily cultivated email list.

SPEAKER_00

Or 1,500 digital designs that cost absolutely nothing to duplicate.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. You are buying leverage. And some of these mechanisms are perfectly primed, just waiting for the right buyer to step in.

SPEAKER_00

Which raises an important question about their ultimate ceiling.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and that leaves us with a final thought for you to mull over. Going back to our invisible digital factory floor, since those car wrap and sauce businesses have virtually zero fulfillment costs, is their low revenue just a sign of a highly limited niche? Or does it represent an untapped gold mine just waiting for a buyer with a bigger marketing budget to come in and scale them infinitely?