Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale

$5.1M Ergonomic Chair Brand + 40M Sessions Media Portfolio + The Exit

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TODAY'S TOP DEAL

Ergonomic Chair Shopify Brand

4-year-old Shopify brand specializing in premium ergonomic chairs. Operated by an experienced team with automated systems and global 3PL for fulfillment. 

Key Metrics: $5.1M annual revenue, $741 AOV, 286% YoY revenue growth

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EDITORS CHOICE:

Media Site Portfolio

11-year-old portfolio consisting of 9 content websites focused on Italian entertainment news with a strong 21.8M social media following on Facebook. Monetized via display ads and Meta Content Monetization Program.

Key Metrics: $503K annual revenue, 97% profit margin, 40M annual sessions

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Media & Events Agency

8-year established APAC media and events platform catering senior enterprise technology decision-makers. Monetizes through sponsorship-led revenue across recurring regional events, webinars, and targeted digital programs.
 
Key Metrics: $901K annual revenue, 22% revenue growth rate, 30 active paying corporate clients

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Home Decor Amazon FBA

7-year-ol Australian home décor brand specializing in premium faux potted plants. Operated by a small team with streamlined workflows and reliable supplier relationships.

Key Metrics: $698K annual revenue, $34 AOV, 4.8-star product rating

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SPEAKER_00

Have you ever wondered what uh multi-million dollar online businesses actually look like behind the scenes when they're put up for sale? I mean, you usually only see the glossy storefront, right?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, exactly. You never really see the raw financial engine that's, you know, printing the money right before the founder hands over the keys.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right. So welcome to today's deep dive. We are looking at a broker's portfolio of high-growth digital assets. Our goal today is to, well, extract the key mechanics, making four very different online businesses run.

SPEAKER_01

And mapping out how they generate serious revenue really reveals some completely different philosophies on uh risk and scale.

SPEAKER_00

So we're starting with physical inventory, specifically a four-year-old Shopify brand selling premium ergonomic chairs. And the top line numbers are just aggressive.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we're talking $5.1 million in revenue.

SPEAKER_00

Right, with a $741 average order value and uh a massive 286% year-over-year growth rate. This is brokered by Amber Burke, by the way. It's essentially a high-ticket rocket ship.

SPEAKER_01

It really is, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But okay, let's unpack this for a second. Because I mean, a 286% growth rate for a four-year-old physical product sounds great, but is it actually sustainable without supply chain nightmares? Buying enough heavy inventory to match that demand could easily bury a company.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. That kind of hypergrowth always strains a supply chain. I mean, the only thing keeping that rocket ship from exploding is their reliance on a highly automated global 3PL.

SPEAKER_00

Uh so a third-party logistics company.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus, Jr. Exactly. By outsourcing the warehousing and fulfillment completely, they convert this massive logistical friction into a, you know, a predictable operational cost. But contrast that high stress environment with the second business on our list.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right. The seven-year-old Australian Amazon FBA brand selling faux-potted plants.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, a completely different game entirely.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. I mean, it's like comparing a luxury sports car to a reliable minivan. This one only does $698,000 in revenue, and it has a tiny $34 average order value.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell, but it survives because of that FBA model, right? Fulfillment by Amazon.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah. It's basically like putting a vending machine inside someone else's really busy shopping mall. Amazon owns them all, the foot traffic, the warehousing, all the shipping. The owner just has to ensure the vending machine stays stocked.

SPEAKER_01

Right. You're trading that explosive revenue for operational stability. By piggybacking on Amazon's infrastructure, they've streamlined their workflows and built incredibly reliable supplier relationships.

SPEAKER_00

So no managing global shipping chaos for heavy furniture.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. It becomes a steady, low drama workhorse with a 4.8 star product rating, mostly because the actual fulfillment mechanism is entirely outsourced to a behemoth.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But you know, both of those businesses are still battling physical supply chains to scale. What if you could scale without moving a single physical box?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that brings us to the digital assets.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Starting with an 11-year-old Italian entertainment media portfolio, they boast 21.8 million Facebook followers.

SPEAKER_01

And they drive 40 million annual sessions, which is huge.

SPEAKER_00

Which pulls in $503,000 a year. It's like a massive digital billboard on a packed highway.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and they monetize strictly via display and meta-ads through the content monetization program. But the metric that really stands out here is their 97% profit margin.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, 97%? Okay, here's where it gets really interesting. How on earth does that Italian media site maintain a staggering 97% profit margin? Well, I assume that once a piece of Italian pop culture content is published, distributing it to 21 million people on Meta costs them absolutely zero in overhead, right?

SPEAKER_01

Pretty much. The marginal cost of digital distribution is zero. It is a pure volume play, pure margin on top of a fixed creation cost.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow. Yeah. That makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

But relying on millions of casual clicks is just one way to monetize an audience. Look at the exact opposite approach. This eight-year-old APAC Media and Events Agency.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The exclusive VIP club approach. They target senior tech decision makers, bringing in $901,000 a year.

SPEAKER_01

And they're growing at 22%.

SPEAKER_00

And they do that with only 30 active corporate clients. That is a wild ratio compared to 21 million followers.

SPEAKER_01

It is. But reaching 30 senior executives who control multimillion dollar enterprise tech budgets is inherently more valuable to a sponsor than reaching 21 million casual entertainment consumers.

SPEAKER_00

So it's a high value B2B sponsorship model.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They monetize through sponsorship-led revenue across regional events, webinars, and digital programs.

SPEAKER_00

So corporations pay massive premiums for direct access to those specific buyers.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It proves that massive reach is totally unnecessary if you own highly lucrative, deep-pocketed B2B relationships. You really don't need millions of followers.

SPEAKER_00

You really don't need to be everything to everyone. So you've just seen four vastly different blueprints for digital success.

SPEAKER_01

Right. From $741 chairs all the way to Italian pop culture.

SPEAKER_00

You can navigate complex global shipping, leverage Amazon's mall for a $34 plant, print 97% margins on sheer volume, or sell exclusive B2B access to just 30 clients.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, the mechanism of delivery defines the nature of the business. You basically have to choose which type of friction you want to manage.

SPEAKER_00

Which leaves us with one massive lingering question for you. You are looking at these perfectly staged, wildly profitable engines with automated systems, massive growth, and up to 97% margins. Right. If they run this well, why are the founders choosing to sell them right now? What do they see coming in the market that a buyer might not?