Daily Deals - The Best Online Businesses for Sale

13-Yr eLearning Site + $1.1M Swimwear Brand + Connect with WebAcquisition

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TODAY'S TOP DEAL

eLearning WordPress Site

13-year-old WordPress site specializing in microlearning soft skills video training and content distribution. Has direct sales to 60 organizations in APAC and a network of resellers in 17 countries.

Key Metrics: $614K annual revenue, 94% profit margin, 55 partner resellers

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EDITORS CHOICE:

Home & Lifestyle Blog

17-year-old home and lifestyle blog in the Home & Garden category with strong organic traffic and loyal readers. Monetized via premium ad partnerships and affiliate programs.


Key Metrics: $185K annual revenue, 136K monthly page views, 95% profit margin

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Swimwear Shopify Brand

2-year-old Shopify store specializing in two-piece swimwear sets with exclusive printed patterns. Asset-light business model with manufacturing, logistics and fulfillment handled by established external partners.

Key Metrics: $1.1M annual revenue, $75 AOV, 35K email subscriber list

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Printed Products Business

15-year-old B2B Ecommerce brand supplying businesses with printed products such as business cards, stationaries, posters, flyers, and brochures. Lean operations with reliable manufacturer and fulfillment partner.

Key Metrics: $216K annual revenue, $71 AOV, 5-star product rating

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✨ AI generated from The Daily email content. 

SPEAKER_00

You ever look at uh a toll booth on a busy highway and think, wow, what a perfect business model.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. I mean, the cars just drive themselves.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The state caves the roads and the operator literally just sits there collecting quarters. So uh welcome to this custom deep dive. Today we are hunting for the digital equivalent of that toll booth for you.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we're opening up a curated stack of listings for these, you know, high-margin digital and e-commerce businesses to see exactly how they generate serious cash.

SPEAKER_00

It's gonna be fun. I mean, peeking under the hood of these turnkey assets gives you a real masterclass in how modern internet companies squeeze maximum profit out of every single transaction.

SPEAKER_01

For sure. So, where are we starting today?

SPEAKER_00

Let's start with um today's top deal. It's brokered by Amber Burke out of Baltimore. It's a 13-year-old e-learning WordPress site.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, yes, the one selling soft skills microlearning courses.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And the numbers are just nuts. They sell directly to 60 organizations in the APAC region, and they have this NARMI of 55 resellers globally.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a huge footprint for a site that age.

SPEAKER_00

Right. But the jaw-dropping part is the revenue. It pulls in $614,000 a year. And get this the profit margin is 94%.

SPEAKER_01

94%? That is just it's insane.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's untack this because a 94% margin is literally that digital toll booth we were talking about. And we see a really similar story in an editor's choice listing for a 17-year-old home and lifestyle blog.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right, the one monetized via ads and affiliates.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that one pulls $185,000 a year with an even higher margin, 95%. So I have to ask, are these astronomical margins mostly a byproduct of their age? I mean 13 and 17 years of organic growth.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Or is it the product?

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Is it purely the nature of selling digital content?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, what's fascinating here is how these businesses ruthlessly exploit the zero marginal cost of digital replication.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Like, yes, having a domain mature for over a decade definitely means a massive reduction in marketing costs.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Because search engines already trust you, right?

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But the real engine driving a 94, 95 percent margin is the format of the product itself.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Meaning like you film a training video once. Aaron Ross Powell Right.

SPEAKER_01

Or you write a lifestyle article once. The cost to deliver that file to five corporate executives is identical to delivering it to 5,000.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, you aren't buying cotton or uh paying for shipping containers.

SPEAKER_01

No, you are just duplicating bits and bytes. It's practically free.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So what does this all mean when we leave the pure digital realm? I mean, if zero marginal cost makes digital businesses so insanely profitable.

SPEAKER_01

Why sell physical goods?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Why would anyone voluntarily deal with the headaches of physical products?

SPEAKER_01

Well, because the demand for physical goods is never going away. But modern e-commerce tries to eliminate the friction of producing them. Take the two-year-old Shopify swimwear brand in our stack.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, right. Despite only being around for two years, it generates $1.1 million annually.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, with a $75 average order value. And they achieve this massive volume so quickly through an asset light model.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning they outsource the manufacturing, logistics, and fulfillment.

SPEAKER_01

Completely. You see the exact same strategy in a premium listing ending in 15 days. It's a 15-year-old B2B printed products brand.

SPEAKER_00

The one doing $216,000 in revenue with those five-star ratings.

SPEAKER_01

Yep. $71 average order value. And they also lean entirely on external manufacturing partners to handle the heavy lifting.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but here's where it gets really interesting. I mean, isn't an asset light model with external partners just a fancy corporate term for dropshipping with a better logo?

SPEAKER_01

I mean, I guess it definitely sounds like drop shipping on the surface.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So what are you actually buying if you purchase one of these companies?

SPEAKER_01

Well, the mechanics of where the value lives are totally different. See, a standard dropshipper usually slaps a logo on a generic, low-quality product and relies on a constant churn of expensive social media ads to find transient buyers.

SPEAKER_00

Just burning cash to find a one-time purchaser.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. So if we connect this to the bigger picture, the true asset in these premium physical businesses isn't the inventory, it's the proprietary customer acquisition engine.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, so the real value is the captive audience they've built over time.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Precisely. Like for the swimwear brand, they've cultivated a highly engaged 35,000-person email subscriber list.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, 35,000.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and for the B2B print brand, it's 15 years of institutional trust and repeat corporate clients.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right, because literally anyone can hire a factory overseas to print flyers or sew swimsuits.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The manufacturing is completely commoditized. What you are actually acquiring is the customer relationships.

SPEAKER_00

Which means the winning formula, whether you're selling a digital video on leadership or a physical box of business cards, relies on aggressively lean operations.

SPEAKER_01

You offload the physical logistics to partners so you can focus entirely on the customer.

SPEAKER_00

That is a huge shift in business strategy.

SPEAKER_01

It really is.

SPEAKER_00

Because if you own the relationship in the audience, the fact that someone else owns the warehouse and the sewing machines becomes your biggest advantage.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. Rather than a massive liability. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

Which leaves you with this to ponder as you go about your day. If the manufacturing, physical fulfillment, and digital delivery platforms are now entirely outsourced and commoditized, will the future valuation of any business rely exclusively on capturing human attention? I mean, are we all just trying to build better toll booths on the attention highway?