Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale
Welcome to Daily Deals, your go-to podcast for discovering the top online businesses for sale on Flippa.com, curated for entrepreneurs and M&A enthusiasts.
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Now you can stay up-to-date with the hottest businesses on the market without lifting a finger. Each episode packs a punch in just 10 minutes, featuring a hand-picked selection of high-potential businesses currently available for acquisition on Flippa.com, from eCommerce stores to SaaS platforms and digital content sites.
We provide valuable insights into each business’s financial performance, growth potential, and strategic opportunities. Whether you're looking to expand your portfolio, invest in a new venture, or explore a business exit, The Daily helps you stay informed about the most lucrative opportunities in the online business world.
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Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale
$1.1M KDP Platform + 18-Yr Merch Brand + $79K MRR Customer Engagement SaaS
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TODAY'S TOP DEAL
8-year-old B2B SaaS platform providing web push notifications, on-site overlays, email, SMS, and customer feedback through a single, integrated solution. Generates revenue via a subscription-based SaaS model.
Key Metrics: $979K annual revenue, $79K MRR, 155 active paying subscribers
EDITORS CHOICE:
18-year-old Shopify and Amazon FBA brand specializing in pop culture–inspired apparel and merchandise. Operated by a small team with streamlined workflows and fulfillment process.
Key Metrics: $344K annual revenue, $60 AOV, 142K email subscriber list
2-year-old digital platform serving Amazon authors with high-margin, productized book launch services, repeat revenue, and scalable operations. Revenue is generated through fixed-price launch packages sold to authors.
Key Metrics: $1.1M annual revenue, 70% profit margin, 7.5K customer base
6-year-old PrestaShop brand specializing in customizable sofas, mattresses, fabrics. Operated by a lean team with a reliable supplier and streamlined workflows.
Key Metrics: $362K annual revenue, $2276 AOV, 2.5K email subscriber list
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✨ AI generated from The Daily email content.
You know, usually when we think about uh buying a business, we picture a physical storefront, right? Like there's a cash register, shelves stocked with inventory, a sign over the door.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, exactly. You can walk in, test the product out, and you know, actually see the owner working behind the counter.
SPEAKER_02Right, which is why the digital acquisitions market can feel so um abstract. You are buying invisible assets, stuff like code bases, email lists, automated workflows. It completely challenges our traditional idea of what gives a company its value.
SPEAKER_01It really does. It's a totally different ballgame when the assets are basically just data.
SPEAKER_02Okay, let's unpack this. Our mission for this deep dive is to decode a recent digital enterprise acquisitions and marketplace report. We want to understand what makes digital businesses valuable today by looking at four real-world companies currently up for sale.
SPEAKER_01And the first one is a really interesting B2B customer engagement sauce, which is software as a service. It's an eight-year-old company being brokered by uh Alejandra Martin out of Spain.
SPEAKER_02Right. And they bundle web push notifications, email, SMS, and customer feedback. It's essentially a uh a digital Swiss Army knife for businesses.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. And they're pulling in $979,000 in annual revenue with about $79,000 in MRR or monthly recurring revenue.
SPEAKER_02Which is solid, but honestly, the metric that blew my mind was the customer base. They only have $155 active paying subscribers.
SPEAKER_00I know, right? It sounds so low for nearly a million dollars a year.
SPEAKER_02Right. To generate that much from just $155 clients, they must be targeting high-ticket enterprise level companies. Once a company wires this software into their daily communications, the switching costs are just too agonizing to rip it out.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, that definitely explains the high retention. But you know what's fascinating here is how drastically that contrasts with another service business in the report.
SPEAKER_02Oh, you mean the KDK platform?
SPEAKER_01Yeah, the Kindle Direct Publishing Platform. It's only two years old, and they help Amazon authors launch their books. And in just two years, they've hit $1.1 million in annual revenue.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell With like 7,500 customers, right? But I have a really hard time wrapping my head around their profit margins. The report lists a 70% margin.
SPEAKER_01Which is wild for a service business.
SPEAKER_02Exactly. Usually a service business requires heavy human labor, which just eats your profits alive. How on earth are they keeping 70 cents on every dollar?
SPEAKER_01Well, by entirely removing bespoke custom work, they don't write personalized marketing plans. It is a highly productized service, so authors just buy fixed price packages.
SPEAKER_02Ah, got it. So it's basically an assembly line.
SPEAKER_01Totally. The company relies on rigid automated templates for formatting and launching. This highlights a crucial difference, right? The eight-year-old SAWs might secretly rely on the founder personally whining and dining those 155 high-ticket executives to prevent churn.
SPEAKER_02While the book launch service just relies on a scalable machine, you know, that tension between founder-led sales and scalable systems is a perfect lens for looking at the physical goods in this report, too.
SPEAKER_01Absolutely, because that exact same dynamic dictates e-commerce value.
SPEAKER_02Right. Like the 18-year-old merchandise brand selling pop culture apparel. The listing ends in 11 days, by the way.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, and they use a standard Shopify storefront and Amazon FBA, which means Amazon handles all the physical warehousing and shipping.
SPEAKER_02And they have a massive email list, right? Like 142,000 subscribers. But their average order value, or AOV, is only 60 bucks. So that gets them to $344,000 annually.
SPEAKER_01Which is a classic high-volume, low-ticket model.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. But here's where it gets really interesting. I am struggling to understand how that merch brand compares to the final listing, which is a six-year-old furniture brand selling custom sofas and mattresses.
SPEAKER_01The one running on PrestoShop, right?
SPEAKER_02Exactly, which is just an open source e-commerce platform. They have a microscopic email list of just 2,500 people, yet they generate more annual revenue than the merch brand, like $362,000 a year.
SPEAKER_01Right. Well, if we connect this to the bigger picture, it really comes down to the monetization vehicle and uh overcoming sales friction. The furniture brand's average order value is $2,276.
SPEAKER_02Aaron Powell But how does the mechanism actually work? Because I mean, you can't just put a buy now button on a $2,276 custom sofa that a customer has never physically sat on. The friction is just way too high.
SPEAKER_01You're right, they don't. While the merch brand relies on massive volume and quick impulse buys, a high-ticket furniture brand operates a really trust-heavy funnel.
SPEAKER_02So those 2,500 email subscribers aren't just casual scrollers.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. They are highly qualified leads. To close a $2,000 online sale, the brand is likely mailing out physical fabric swatches, offering high-end 3D room renderings, and utilizing like personalized concierge-level customer support. Both businesses succeed through lean teams, but they are totally distinct paths to profitability.
SPEAKER_02So what does this all mean? For you listening right now, the major takeaway is that digital value doesn't look just one way. You know, you can have a high retention enterprise Saws, an automated book launch assembly line, an impulse by merch empire, or a concierge custom furniture shop.
SPEAKER_01But this raises an important question, tying right back to where we started. In a physical store, you can see if the owner is the one personally charming the regulars or, you know, fixing the displays.
SPEAKER_02Right. But online it's all hidden behind a screen.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. So if you were to buy a turnkey digital business today, how much of its current revenue is silently reliant on the original founder's unwritten daily habits? And uh what happens to that beautifully streamlined workflow the moment a new operator takes the wheel?