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Website Investing 101 - How to Buy and Sell Websites for Profit

Website Investing 101 is an informational site dedicated to providing resources and guides for people looking to buy and sell websites, and build online businesses

WANT TO DEVELOP ONLINE INCOME STREAMS? Start Here

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jake

The Risks of Buying and Investing in Websites

May 15, 2019 By jake Leave a Comment

The 5 Downsides of Investing in Websites

If you read my first post on why websites are great investments you hopefully learned a little bit about why websites and online businesses can be great investments. Maybe you even jumped on my bandwagon and thought “Alright! Where do I start?”

As passionate as I am about the concept and opportunity here, buying and selling websites is not for everybody.

I have been involved, in some way shape or form, with websites and online businesses for the past 8 years. I have gotten advertising accounts banned, failed big at launching a forum, purchased a business already penalized by Google, wasted thousands of dollars on SEO services, gotten scammed by overseas customers, and (uh-oh) have sold a website for a sizeable loss. My point being, there are a lot of things to learn.

Before you are ready to get serious about building an online business or website, you should carefully consider these 5 downsides and risks of doing so:

1. Even the most passive websites still require some time commitment

There is no such thing as a “no maintenance” website. Yes, you can find extremely low maintenance websites, but every website will require some maintenance. For example, even if I didn’t ever write another blog post for my BMW site, I would still need to spend probably an hour a month on general site maintenance.

The downside here is almost two-fold: first you need to be willing to at least invest a minimal amount of time into the website and second, you need to know how to perform the maintenance necessary. The second part is the easier of the two; finding the motivation to maintain a website is where we see a lot of owners fail.

And the bottom-line is: if you want a website to grow, you have to spend time on it. If I want my traffic to keep going upwards on my BMW site, I have to continually add content. And that takes time. Down the road we will get into things like outsourcing and turning high maintenance sites into passive investments, but for now we will stick to the basics.

However, even without a ton of time or knowledge, investing in highly passive websites is still a great investment strategy/opportunity – just know that there isn’t a such thing as 100% passive or “auto-pilot”.

2. They are highly illiquid

You can’t sell your website or online business and have the cash in 2 days like you can with stocks. Websites and online business take a considerable amount of time and exit to successfully sell, and it usually takes a few weeks to a few months. Although, I will note it is still a lot easier than exiting a real estate investment or a traditional “brick-and-mortar” business investment.

Generally speaking, the larger your business is, the longer it will take to find a buyer. But even for smaller (less than $25K) sites, it commonly takes 2-3 weeks.

Given the illiquidity of website investments, I don’t recommend using every dollar you have to purchase one. Make sure you have enough discretionary cash leftover to support yourself for a few months if you suddenly lose your job or have unexpected expenses.

3. Selling costs are high

In addition to the lack of liquidity, the cost of liquidity is high. Selling your stocks simply costs a $5 broker commission. Selling a website has broker commissions as well, but they tend to range from 10-15% of the total sale price of the business.

Unless you are negotiating directly with the seller/buyer and setting up your own transactions (which we don’t recommend), you should expect to only receive 85% of the sale price into your bank account.

This means that your site has to return at least 15% or appreciate in value by more than 15% for you to breakeven or turn a profit on the investment. It’s a high hurdle rate and can be a serious investment return killer.

4. Online business is an art, not a science

There is no master formula to never fail, there is no master formula to generate $1,000 of product sales in a day, or get 20,000 visitors a month with just 1 hour of work. And NO, Tai Lopez’s 67-steps aren’t going to have you driving a Lamborghini in 3-months. 

Like I mentioned at the beginning of this post, I’ve messed up a ton of times. Fortunately, I’ve been able to learn from each mistakes. But that’s what this process is: it’s failing, learning, failing, learning, finally succeeding and then repeating. Hopefully you can learn from my mistakes and maybe fail one less time than you would otherwise.

There’s a ton to learn, but that’s also what makes it an exciting journey. There isn’t any get rich quick opportunity – it takes work and continuous learning and improvement.

5. You really have to know what to look for, and spend a lot of time on due-diligence

I was reading a BBB (better business bureau) complaint the other day against an old (no-longer active) business listing website. It was similar to Flippa, but a bit shadier in terms of the quality of sites posted on it. In the BBB complaint, the guy said he purchased a $5,000 that was supposed to be making like $2,000/month. Well, after he purchased it, he quickly realized the site didn’t make any money at all, and that most of the financial and traffic stats that were shown in the listing weren’t consistent with what he was getting while owning the site.

He figured he just got “unlucky”, so he unloaded another $5,000 into a similar website. You can guess what happened with this one too.

Now he’s filing a complaint against the site that allowed the website to be listed for sale. But at the end of the day, these brokerage sites like this one and even Flippa too, have no liability for the sites that sell on their platforms, and they do no verification, vetting, etc.

So, all of the due diligence work is left to the purchaser of the website. For someone unfamiliar with websites and what to look for, it is extremely easy to get taken advantage of.

Good news: you can read my super in-depth due-diligence blog post to make sure this doesn’t happen to you! (Currently being written)

Why Buying Websites is a Great Investment Strategy

May 15, 2019 By jake Leave a Comment

5 Reasons Why Buying Websites is a Great Investment Strategy

Hi guys, I build and buy websites to generate passive online income. Website investing is the concept of buying profitable (cash flow positive) websites, fully monetizing them to maximize their monthly profitability and cash flow, and then using that income to do whatever you desire in life. (help pay the bills, travel the world, quit your job, buy a lamborghini – my dream, etc.).

The value of my websites makes up about 60% of my total investment portfolio. The other 40% lies primarily in equities in my eTrade account. However, 90% of the income that my investment portfolio produces comes from my websites.

Websites are some of the most lucrative investment opportunities. Here are 5 reasons why I invest both my time and money into website opportunities:.

1. Websites generate monthly income, regardless of how many hours you work

If you look at my BMW website you’ll notice I haven’t posted a new article since April 1st (which is bad). Outside of generating content for the website, I maybe spend an hour a month on it just making sure the plugins are updated, comments are approved, etc.

So in the past 5 months I’ve probably spent 3-4 hours actually working on the site. But it’s still generated over $2,500 in that time frame.

Most people in the world make money based off of the amount of time they work. This is a perfect example of how passive website investments go to work for you, instead of the other way around.

The majority of websites have extremely low operating costs, usually just a few bucks for hosting, so almost all of the money they generate is profit.

Of course, different online business models have varying operating costs and time requirements. Our goal is to find investment opportunities that are extremely passive and generate stable monthly income. In a later blog post I’ll cover my favorite online business models and the types of investments I look for to achieve this goal.

But can’t you buy ETF’s or stocks and get monthly income too?

Sure. And it’s more passive than buying websites. Any website is going to take at least a little bit of time to maintain on a monthly basis, and even more time if you want to grow it. Buying an ETF takes maybe 30 minutes of research and then you never have to put in any more time. So why buy websites instead of ETF’s?

Bullet two will go a lot more in-depth, but simply, websites generate a lot more income than any ETF or traditional stock/bond investment does.

On my About Me page, I told you how the two websites I purchased generate me 2.2% (of the purchase value) of income on a monthly basis. If you multiple that by 12, that’s 26.4% per year. You might be able to find an ETF that pays 5-6% annually. At those percentages, a $10,000 investment in websites will make you $2,640 in income on a yearly basis vs. $600 of income for the ETF.

However, the caveat is that websites are extremely more risky. Read my article on The Risks of Website Investing to learn the downside risks of buying websites.

2. Valuations are attractive

Websites are valued based off how much money they put in your pocket on a monthly or yearly basis. They typically trade anywhere from 1-3x yearly profits, or 12-36x monthly profits.

A lot of people look at this multiple as a payback period whereas a 2x yearly multiple means a 2-year payback period. Theoretically, that payback period is correct, but it’s a terrible way to look at a website investment.

Why? When you put your money in a bond ETF that pays a 5% annual dividend, do you think “Oh that’s a 20 year payback period”? Probably not, because you know that you can always sell the ETF to get your original cost back (not taking gains/losses into account). You can sign into your trading account and see it’s value, and liquidate it whenever you want.

You might not be able to see the value of your website on a day-to-day basis, but it always has value so long as it is still running. It’s a lot less liquid than traditional investments, but they are also significantly cheaper. If you pay 2x for a website, that means you are getting a 50% return in year 1. So long as the website maintains its profitability over that year long period of time, it is still worth exactly what you paid for it, if not more.

The historical average price/earnings ratio (PE ratio) of the S&P500 is 16x. And corporations don’t pay 100% of their earnings out in dividends. A website will sell for a 1-3x “price/earnings ratio” AND you get every single dollar it generates.

3. Returns can be far better than the stock market

I compare most things on here to the stock market, because we look at websites as investment opportunities. I don’t buy a site for fun, I buy a site because it makes me money – so logically I compare things to the alternative where most people put their money to make money: the stock market.

2017 was a fantastic year, the S&P500 was up 24.1%. A lot of people were probably pretty pissed when they realized 50% of their investment portfolio was in fixed income which was flat, so their overall return was only 12%. As we head further into the longest bull market in the history of the stock market, we are inching closer and closer to a recession.

Websites are generally less volatile and less affected by global economic trends such as recessions. If you run an eCommerce store that sells $10K Rolex’s, this might not be the case. But for most online businesses, this is true. When the market takes a nice 20-30% decline, my BMW website will still get 20,000+ unique hits per month and will more than likely still make $500/month.

So even in 2017 when the markets were up 24%, my website investments outperformed the markets. And when the markets are down 20%, rather than only beating the market by 10%, I will be beating the market by 40-50% because I won’t see any revenue declines.

4. They can give you lifestyle freedom

What is lifestyle freedom? Lifestyle freedom is having the ability to design your life how you want to. Meaning you have the ability plan YOUR 24 hours how YOU want to. Do you want to work from the beach or an office? With running a website, all you need is the access to the internet. For example, one week you could be working out of Bali and the following week you can be in a villa on the beach in Morocco. If you don’t want to travel the world, you don’t have to. If you’re a homebody, owning a website gives you the ability to work whatever hours you want. Don’t want to wake up at 6 to go into the office? Don’t. Work from your bed on your laptop. Don’t want to work weekends? Don’t.

Whether your investment strategy is to generate enough income where you don’t have to work, or to accumulate as much wealth as possible, investing in a website can achieve both. For example, if you need $50,000 to live your ideal lifestyle, if you invest in the stock market you would need $1,000,000 (using a realistic 5% yield). However with investing into websites, you could theoretically achieve that same $50,000 in annual income with just $100,00 – $150,000.

5. They are easier to buy into and sell out of than traditional direct business investments (such as real estate)

One caveat to website investments is that they are generally less liquid than public markets. But, they are still significantly more liquid than other traditional, direct business investments. Real estate is a common investment that we can compare this to.

The acquisition process for real estate is far more cumbersome than it is for websites. Once I find an opportunity I am ready to undertake, I can purchase and be in full-control of the website within a matter of days. With real estate, it is usually a month long process, if not longer. Not to mention needing to be physically present to sign documents, inspect the property, etc.

But it seems like everyone wants to invest in real estate. Why? It is passive and can generate nice passive profits. Websites are exactly the same, but you can operate them from anywhere since since you just need a computer and wifi. And when selling time comes, you can exit them a lost more cost effectively and time efficiently since there is a huge website investing marketplace on the internet. Your buyers aren’t only in the location of your physical real estate, they’re all over the world.

Complete Due Diligence Guide to Buying an eCommerce Website

May 14, 2019 By jake Leave a Comment

How to Perform Due Diligence for eCommerce and Shopify Websites

When it comes to online business and websites, launching an eCommerce store is the most popular side-hustle for earning income online. With the explosion of the internet and online purchases by consumers, there is a ton of opportunity.

But there is also a ton to watch out for.

eCommerce websites can be started for next to nothing nowadays with dropshipping and Alibaba, which means there is a ton of competition, and frankly, a ton of terrible businesses out there.

There are a ton of fraudulent people out there trying to sell bad eCommerce stores to beginner buyers who don’t know what they are doing.

Table of Contents:

This article is near 5,000 words and I’m not ignorant enough to think anyone reads more than just the headlines. So here is a table of contents so that you can scroll to whatever section is most important to you. There are two types of diligence we are going to run here:

Smell Test Diligence: does this smell right?

  1. The Golden Rule of Buying an eCommerce Store
  2. The Worst Buyer Excuse
  3. eCommerce Business Models to Watch Out For (MUST READ)

Analytical/Financial Diligence: are the numbers and SEO good?

  1. Domain Name Due Diligence
  2. Auditing Website Traffic
  3. SEO Audit
  4. Analyzing the Financials
  5. eCommerce Specific Metrics to Pay Attention to
  6. Email Marketing Tactics to Watch out for
  7. Suppliers and the Age of Dropshipping
  8. eCommerce Website Valuation

The Golden Rule of Buying an eCommerce Store

 If the deal sounds to good to be true, it’s 100% too good to be true.

If someone says their store is making $10k of profit per month and that they will sell it to you for $20k, run away! Even if they said they would sell it to you for $100k, you need to always be very skeptical.

Ask yourself this one question: “If I were making $x of profit per month, how much money would I need to give up that steady income?”

We will dig into valuation further, but we analyzed over 800 transactions and learned that eCommerce businesses on average trade around 24x average monthly profits, or 2x annual profits. BUT this rule does not apply to all eCommerce businesses, especially the ones to watch out for below.

The “I don’t have time to run it” Excuse

This is the worst excuse ever. Especially when they try to tell you it only takes them 5 hours per week to manage.

If something takes you 5 hours a week to manage and makes you $5k+ don’t you think you would make time to manage it?

Always dig in hard on the buyers reason for selling it. With eCommerce businesses it is usually because the advertising is no longer profitable, competitors popped up and started selling the same product, or they don’t think the business can continue its success for much longer.

I was looking at a business that made $350k in 2018 and the owner told me his bottom dollar was $50k. He needed to sell it cause he was more excited about this new business he was launching and that was taking up all his time. LOL. The Golden Rule applies here.

eCommerce Business Models to Watch Out For

1. Advertising Arbitrage Aliexpress Sites

These eCommerce sites are are called “advertising arbitrage” sites because their business model is simply taking advantage of cheap Facebook advertising.

They will find a $5 product, offer it for $25 on their site and send thousands of dollars of paid traffic to the site per month. They know they can acquire a new customer for $10. So their total cost of a sale is $15 and they sold the product for $25.

This sounds smart, but the issue is the cost of acquiring a new customer will increase eventually and become unprofitable. It is not evergreen!

Lets walk through an example of one of these businesses I found on Flippa:

Here is a site that is profiting $6k per month, and it can be yours for just $39k, what a steal!

bad ecommerce sites to buy

If we take a look at the website, it is selling the most random assortment of products. A kids snorkel mask, bird fountain, acupuncture pen, what???

how to buy an ecommerce website

And then we take a look at the P&L:

how to buy an ecommerce business

Notice the massive ad spend in October, November, and February, and the big ad spend dropoff in December and January. Advertising likely wasn’t profitable in these months due to holiday shopping, so the owner had to pause the spending until it was profitable again.

Another big issue with these sites is you not only have the purchase the business for $39k, you then need to have another $7-15k to pump into your first month of ads.

Characteristics of Advertising Arbitrage eCommerce Sites:

  • Huge and variable ad spend from month to month
  • Random assortment of products (or sometimes a single product)
  • Dropshipping from Aliexpress – zero value add!
  • Low return customer rates
  • All traffic and sales are from paid ads, virtually zero organic or natural traffic
  • Usually less than a year old with a huge ramp up in revenues in the first few months followed by declining revenues

How to Create an eCommerce Store Yourself Instead of Buying One of These

These sites have virtually zero value-add and are all selling products from Aliexpress. Go find the products on Aliexpress, sign-up for Shopify for $30/month and spend 10 hours building a decent looking website.

Now put $10k into Facebook ads and drive traffic to the site. Voila, you just replicated this business and its success for $10k instead of buying it for $39k and putting the same $10k into advertising.

Analytical, Financial, and Quantitative Diligence:

1. Domain Name and Website Age

Older websites are trusted more by Google, which helps with SEO. And an older business are typically more stable and have more history which gives us more comfort in investing in it.

I don’t touch sites that aren’t at least 18 months old unless I have an existing site I can combine it with or the traffic profile and trends are extremely positive.

Use Godaddy’s WHOIS database to check domain age:

how to check the age of a domain name

Also use Archive.org to see how long the domain name has been used as an active website. You could have a domain that is 10 years old, but it has only been a real website for 1 year. This is a cool tool that lets you see what websites used to look like, all the way back into the 90’s.

Nothing here is a huge red flag for buying an ecommerce site, its just good to know how old they are to fact check the owner. I prefer sites with 2-3 years of traffic and revenue history.

Takeaway: Older websites have more history and are more likely to continue their success into the long-term.

2. Auditing Website Traffic

Always get access to Google Analytics! If they don’t have them installed, ask why. Every website owner should. If they don’t, ask for Shopify or WooCommerce access so you can look at the traffic stats on there. Don’t ever buy a website without understand where the visitors come from.

Things to watch for:

-Heavy paid traffic: if more than 50% of the traffic comes from paid advertising, I’d be concerned. This means they spend a lot on advertising and if you stop paid ads, half off your business will dissapear.
-Heavy social media traffic: Social media traffic can also mean paid social advertising. But other social media traffic is usually one time. Your pinterest post goes viral and drives a bunch of traffic to the site, but once it gets old and dies down, the traffic is gone and won’t come back until the next viral pin.
-Traffic from India, China, Africa, random countries, etc.: Unless your business is international, you want the majority of the traffic coming from the United States or whichever country you are targeting. Tons of traffic from foreign countries is usually a sign that the owner bought fake traffic!

Check the “What pages do your users visit?” section of Google Analytics:

buying shopify websites

Make sure all of the traffic is spread out across products (sorry the snip is of my blog, not an ecomm store) and different pages of the site. All the traffic going to one single page means the customers or visitors are only looking at one product and then leaving the site.

Also, be careful about tons of blog traffic if its an ecommerce site. Blogs are a great way to drive traffic to your site, but a site that gets 10,000 uniques per month probably doesn’t convert well or generate much revenue if 9,000 of those visitors are to the blog pages only.

Takeaways: 1) Organic traffic is king! 2) Always get Google Analytics access.

3. Checking for bad SEO

Bad SEO can absolutely kill a business. If you get a penalty from Google and are un-indexed, you will feel the pain.

Use Moz’s Link Explorer and check the “Spam Score” tool:

SEO when buying a website

This is for the site I mentioned from Flippa earlier. Yikes! It has virtually no SEO value.

Sites with very few links and low domain authority typically generate zero organic traffic.

You can click the “Inbound Links” and “Linking Domains” section to see the actual backlinks.

Here is what a bad site looks like:

bad ecommerce seo

That’s a dangerously high spam score. If you look at the “Inbound Links” you’ll notice how bad and spammy they look:

buying websites

Takeaways: Look for sites high with DA/PA, lots of inbound links from relevant sites, and stay away from sites with bad links and high spam scores.

4. Analyzing the Financials

If the site has been operating for 24 months, it should have 24 months of financials you can look at. If the owner says “I don’t have any” or “I only have them for the last 6 months” then just walk away.

We want to buy professional sites that have been run properly and any good business owner keeps financial stats.

Here is what you should look for in the financials:

  • How have the revenues been trending?
  • Are there any large spikes or drops in revenue? If so, what caused them?
  • Advertising Spend: watch out for high spend and variability. Ask why they spend $14k on ads one month and then $1k on ads the next month.
  • Check gross profit margins, they should be consistent over time.
  • Are there large and recurring web development costs?
  • IMPORTANT: What expenses are recurring on a monthly basis?

It is common for brokers or individuals to include “add-backs” on their financials. Add-backs are expenses that are one-time in nature and will not reoccur once you take over the business. Adding these expenses back gives you a better understanding of what the true profits will be for you once you take over.

List of acceptable and common add-backs:

  • Owners salary (but no employee salaries)
  • Website re-designs/development, so long as it is truly one-time in nature
  • Licenses/subscriptions purchased that are good for life
  • Legal fees or consulting fees

PayPal Screenshots can be faked! Always get access to Shopify/WooCommerce/etc. to verify the revenues are coming from real customers!

Verify that there aren’t any expenses that the owner is telling you about by getting access to the backend of the site and seeing what plugins/apps the website is using. 

5. eCommerce Metrics to Look For

A. Returning Customer Rates

High levels of returning customers is great! It means you have a brand, not just an eCommerce store. It also means that the business is less reliant on paid ads or acquiring new customers since you have a strong list of existing customers who you can target and sell to.

B. Product Return Rates

The average eCommerce store has a return rate of 20%. Returns suck to deal with and usually result in losing money.

If a store has a >20% return rate it probably means that their products aren’t very good. Stay away! I like <5% return rates.

C. Average Order Value

Target business with high AOV. If your AOV is $10, that means you need to fulfill 100 orders per month to do just $1,000 in revenues. That’s a lot of orders to fulfill every day and month.

I look for sites with average order volumes over $100 so that I can ensure I’m making at least $20 of profit for the amount of time it takes me to fulfill the order. (I don’t mess with stuff with less than 20% net profit margins since they aren’t worth the time)

D. eCommerce Conversion Rates

This is the holy-grail of eCommerce metrics. If a store has a 1% conversion rate, it will receive 10 orders per 1,000 visitors. If it has a 2% conversion rate, it will generate 2x the orders, revenues, and profits without having find ways to get more traffic!

 

ecommerce conversion rates

You can also look at conversion rates by traffic source and compare them to these averages above.

I don’t mess with stores that have lower than 2% conversion rates.

6. Email Marketing No-No’s

Email lists are great and can drive a significant amount of revenue. But be careful about relying on an email list.

If the owner is sending out more than 1 email per day to his list, he is ruining its value. Too many emails results in more spam reports which makes all emails eventually end up in your lists spam box. You can also only squeeze so much revenue out of your list.

Things to watch for:

  • Check the amount of new sign-ups to the list on a daily or monthly basis. Check whether these are people who purchased a product or just who signed up for the list but didn’t buy. If you are selling a one-time product or something with a really long useful life, then the email list can be almost worthless if it’s only filled with customers who have bought a product.
  • High spam report rate
  • Low open rates and low click rates
  • Too many emails being sent
  • Purchased email lists – purchasing lists is illegal and will likely result in your email getting blacklisted

Don’t ever let someone tell you you need to buy the email list separate from the business. If the email list is used to generate revenues, it is part of the business. Send them my way if they try to argue otherwise.

I always ask for snips of open rates, click rates, and spam report rates before buying a business, especially if email generates a lot of revenue! A big email list that doesn’t get used frequently can be a huge bonus, but too many eCommerce owners abuse their list which deteriorates their brand.

7. Who are the Suppliers?

Too many eCommerce stores nowadays are using Alibaba to bulk buy products or Aliexpress to dropship them. I wouldn’t touch any of these. If a website doesn’t have unique suppliers or some sort of exclusivity on the product it is selling, I stay away.

If other people can find the products you are selling and buy them too, you will have competitors knocking on your door in 2 weeks.

People are a lot less likely to copy you or steal your idea if you have:

  • Custom designed and manufactured products
  • Suppliers who require a legal US business and valid sales and use license (cuts out all international fakes)
  • Private label products that the supplier agrees in writing they will only sell to you and no one else

If your products require money to be spent upfront, you are eliminating so much competition. 

Plenty of people out there will try to teach you Aliexpress dropshipping. Stay away unless you want to build a site for 3 months and then have it get murdered. Focus on evergreen business models that China and India won’t copy.

8. eCommerce Website Valuation

We analyzed data from 42 dropshipping businesses and 107 eCommerce (physical products) businesses and determined what averaged monthly profit multiple they sold for based off of: the price they sold for, how old they were, how many pageviews they got, and how many hours per week they require.

Here is the data for Dropshipping businesses:

dropshipping business valuation multiples

Analysis: the average dropshipping business sells for 26.2x average monthly profits from the trailing 12-months. Bigger sites sold for higher multiples. Sites requiring less hours per week sold for higher multiples. Sites with more traffic sold at higher multiples. Older sites data is a bit variable.

NOTE: This data is from businesses sold through brokerages which means they are high quality sites! Advertising arbitrage sites don’t sell anywhere near these levels and usually sell for less than 12x with heavy seller financing.

Here is the data for physical product fulfillment ecommerce sites:

ecommerce website valuation multiples

Analysis: physical product ecommerce sites are valued less than dropshipping, with an average of 22.5x. This is because they cost more money, and usually take more time to manage (although data here isn’t great to support that). Consistent with above, bigger sites sell for more, and sites with more traffic sell for more. These sites were also on average older than dropshipping sites since most of them sold unique or custom products that took time to develop and create.

NOTE: same as above, these sites are also all brokerage sold businesses.

Contact me if you want me to do a custom valuation for a site you are looking at buying. Also happy to do a full due-diligence screen and provide you with a recommendation on whether you should buy it or not.

When You Should Sell Your Website or Online Business

October 23, 2018 By jake Leave a Comment

When Should You Sell Your Website or Online Business?

An often-over-looked aspect of online business investing is creating an exit strategy to determine the right time to sell your website. Exit strategies may be complicated to put in place since it will vary from person to person and business to business. After all, how do you truly know the right time to sell your website before you are even ready to sell? In this post we intend to highlight important questions you should ask yourself in the process of creating your exit strategy.

Why Did You Start Your Online Business?

This is an excellent first question to ask yourself; what were your motivations behind building an online business? Some people start businesses for the hope of a big payout one day, some do it for passive income for years to come, while others are not interested in the money but rather do it as a passion. Of course, we cannot summarize all online entrepreneurs into three categories, but consider which of the following closely represents your motivation behind your business.

I’m ready to get rich overnight!

We know. We know. No one is truly getting rich overnight. You’ve grinded hundreds of late nights working on your business with one goal in mind: “I want to sell my business eventually and receive a lump sum payoff”. If this is you, you likely have some form of exit strategy in mind. You know that you want to sell your business, but you may not know exactly when.

I want to generate passive income

You started your online business to create passive income for the foreseeable future. In most scenarios, you likely put in a considerable amount of work up-front with the hope that the business would grow into passive income.

I have a passion for this topic/industry

One of your passions sparked the motivation to start your website. You didn’t start the business with profit as the main goal, however, you began to monetize your website as the opportunities arose. Although you are now making a profit from your website it is simply a side benefit to doing what you love.

As previously mentioned – not every online business owner will fit into the above three categories. However, the important overarching questions remain:

  • Why did you start your online business?
  • What were your goals? Have you reached them?
  • Are you in it for the passion, passive income, long-term growth, or something else?

Am I Ready to Consider Selling My Website?

Once you determine your own answers to the aforementioned questions it is time to examine your answers in depth to begin creating an exit strategy for your business. Now is the time to use your answers to focus on the following: When is the right time to sell my business?

Business Owner Type – “Get Rich Overnight”

For online business owners who began their business to “get rich overnight” the right time to sell is likely driven by monetary goals. You may have goals such as, “I want to sell my business once it is worth $100,000”, or “I will sell my business once I maximize the traffic and profitability”. If you have yet to come up with an exit strategy you should consider:

  • How much is my business worth?
  • Can I increase the value further?
  • Is the work required to grow the business further worth the time, or can I use the money from the sale of my current business to invest in a more promising opportunity?

It may be a good opportunity to sell your website now if you believe you have grown the business to its furthest profitability and traffic. You might not have the time available or want to put in the time required to take the business to the next level. On the contrary, if you can continue to grow and develop the business its likely not be the right time to sell. You may have the opportunity to increase the businesses valuation in order to sell for a higher value down the road.

The Passive Income Investor

Website owners who started their business with the idea to create a longer-term stream of passive income will likely want to consider the passivity of their business. You may have a goal like, “I want to grow my business to $3,000 per month while working less than 20 hours per month”. The following questions will help point you in the right direction to determining an exit strategy:

  • Is my business earning the passive income goal I had in mind?
  • How many hours am I putting into the business? Is it as passive as I would like?
  • Can I sell my current business and invest the money into more passive and/or more profitable opportunities?

You may want to consider selling your business if it is not as passive as initially expected. Maybe there is too much work involved in growing the profits and traffic to your goals. Perhaps there is an opportunity to sell your website and re-invest into a business that will provide higher profits and more passivity. However, if your business is providing your desired profit and amount of work then you likely are in a position to hold onto your business, unless there are other factors at work.

The Passionate Business Owner

Those who began their online business to follow their passion and do what they love may find it tougher to come up with an exit strategy. As opposed to making money, your goals are likely more aligned with doing something you love and helping your readers/customers/subscribers. However, maybe your website has grown so large you cannot resist the payout from selling, or you have lost interest in your passion. Some things to examine are:

  • Do I still love what I do? Is it still a passion?
  • What is the value of my website? Would I be happy with that amount, or would I be depressed if I sold my website?
  • Has my website grown so large I no longer have the time?

Assuming you are still passionate about your business it may be tough to decide on whether to sell your website. If you were to find out your business is worth significantly more than you ever expected, would you sell it? Maybe your business has grown too large and you are losing interest in your passion because the business side is sucking up too much of your time. These are tough questions to answer and vary significantly from person to person. At the end of the day you should consider what is right for you as there is no generalized right or wrong answer.

How Much Is My Website Worth?

For some, this is potentially the most important question. This could be the final deciding question for all three categories of online business owners. The value of your business might be tempting enough to convince you to exit and move on. Without further ado, let’s jump straight in and begin to examine the basics behind website valuations.

Valuing your Online Business using a Market-Driven Multiple

The most widespread practice in valuing an online business is applying a market-driven multiple to your trailing 12-month (TTM) profits averaged to a monthly number. Most online businesses fall somewhere in the range of 20-28x monthly profit. To highlight this in an example:

Past 12 Months Profit: $48,000

Average Monthly Profit = $48,000 / 12 months = $4,000 Per Month

Low Multiple: 20x

Low End Valuation: $4,000 x 20 = $80,000

Median Multiple: 24x

Median Valuation: $4,000 x 24 = $96,000

High Multiple: 28x

High Valuation: $4,000 x 28 = $112,000

Using this approach to website valuation shows the median value (24x multiple) of $96,000. In other words, a business netting $4,000 profit per month is worth roughly $96,000. However, it is important to note some factors that go into determining whether a multiple on the higher or lower end are used in website valuations. Additionally, there are some outliers that may generate valuations over 30x, while others may fall below 20x.

How to Determine the Correct Multiple

This is where things become slightly tougher as it is not easy to perfectly weight the factors that may raise or lower the multiple applied to your businesses monthly profit. Several factors to consider include:

  • Hours required per week – generally more passive online businesses will see higher multiples, while time consuming ventures see lower multiples
  • Trailing 12-Month (TTM) Profit Trends – lower multiples apply to a business with profits that are trending down during the TTM. On the contrary, a higher multiple will be given to business trending up.
  • Monetization Method – how is the business monetized? Amazon FBA, affiliate, e-commerce/dropshipping, and SaaS are among the various monetization methods. Multiples vary depending upon the form of monetization, as well as the number of monetization methods used
  • Age of the Business – Typically older websites with more stable profits are given more favorable multiples

Please note – this is by no means an exhaustive list of factors that affect the multiple and valuation of an online business. Each unique business will vary depending on its current situation, so the important take away is that most valuations fall somewhere between 20-28x.

Additionally, please do not hesitate to reach out to us to receive a free valuation of your website.

Or click here to contact us 🙂

Beware of crappy value websites out there, however, if you are looking for a simple solution, check out this website value calculator.

Determining when to sell your website is ultimately up to your goals…let us help!

Determining the right time to sell your website and creating an exit strategy vary on a case by case basis. Start with clarifying your goals for the business. Examine whether there are potential opportunities to continue growing the business, or if you have maximized the profitability of the website. At the end of the day, it is up to you to put a plan in place and decide what is best for you. Most websites sell within a multiple range of 20-28x monthly profits averaged over the TTM. Using this number range will provide you with a rough estimate of the value of your website, however, the correct multiple for your website depends on several factors. If you have decided now is the right time to sell your website, please do not hesitate to reach out to us to receive an in-depth valuation.

Why I paid 81x Monthly Profits for an Outdated, Ugly Website

September 28, 2018 By jake Leave a Comment

aged domain search engine optimization

Why I paid 81x Monthly Profits for an Outdated, Ugly Website

I spent $6,050 on a website a few months back (chevytrucks.org). After fees, because I paid with a credit card (be careful if you do this), the total price was $6,225. The website was generating, on a trailing 12-month average, $82 per month. I pay about $7, for hosting, so the value to me was $75 a month.

If you take that $75 a month and divide it by my clean purchase price (true value of the website since fees shouldn’t be accounted for) of $6,050, you get an 81x multiple. And if you divide it by my total purchase price of $6,225, its 83x.

Let’s put that into perspective…that’s a 6.75 year “payback period”. 

Most people would shit bricks from seeing that number. Most websites sell for 12-36x monthly profits. Anytime you pay above a standard market price for a website, which I did by more than 2x in this case, you are paying what we call a growth multiple. In simplest terms, a growth multiple is when you are paying for the amount of money the business could be making instead of how much the business is actually making. If I just roped you into the concept of a growth multiple, you can read more about it here: What is a growth multiple? When you should, and when you shouldn’t pay one.

Anyways, lets get into the good stuff, here are the reasons I paid 81x for this website (in no particular order):

1. The website is old enough to order a beer at dinner…it’s 21 years old

Jokes aside, this business is almost older than I am, which has a ton of value from a search engine optimization standpoint. Since 1997, this website has been online. Google loves that and trusts that.

Websites 3 years and older make up for 60% of first-page rankings. Sites younger than that take the remaining 40%. Not terribly skewed towards older sites, but it is a factor. Additionally, Google’s thought process on this one is “this site has been around for 21 years, why wouldn’t we expect it to continue to be around for the next 10 years?”.

Aside from all of that, 21 years is simply a lot of time to build a great SEO profile. Without any SEO having been done on my part, or any of the past owners, the site has accumulated nearly 50,000 backlinks, from 1,000+ domains. End result: it ranks for 626 different keywords, and takes the top spot on google for a number of them.

aged domain search engine optimization

2. The traffic is extremely consistent

The way a blog typically works is: if you consistently update it and create new content, the traffic goes up; if you let it sit and don’t create new content, the traffic goes down. Websites that get more attention rank better, generate return readers, and therefore generate more traffic.

There hasn’t been a new article posted on this website in about 10 years, and traffic is about as flat as I’ve ever seen with a website!

search engine optimization traffic

The website was consistently making $70-90/month with an average of $82. The profits are all ad-based, so traffic is the primary factor for profitability. If the site averages $82 per month, and the traffic is consistently flat, why wouldn’t it continue to make $82 per month? It will. To prove that, in the 3-full months I have owned it, it’s profited $74 per month (remember I pay $7/month for hosting). So it is $1 off of the $75/month average that I anticipated when I purchased it.

My 6.75 year payback period might scare the shit out of some people, but I’d bet this thing will be as flat 10 years from now as it is today. And as the site gets older, it gets more valuable, so I am confident that I’ll always be able to get my initial $6,050 back out of it when I want to.

3. It’s a static html website: opportunity!

If you haven’t ever looked at archive.org, it’s kinda cool. It shows you what websites used to look like, going back to the beginning of the internet. My Chevy site goes back to May of 1997 on archive.org, and from looking at all of the archives, I can tell that the design of this website hasn’t changed since 2002.

Websites have gotten so much faster and efficient since the early days of the internet. This website is coded as a static html website, which is how the first ever website was built. Today we have WordPress, Wix, etc. which are designed, coded, and optimized for speed and search engine optimization. There is a huge opportunity to upgrade this site to WordPress and boost its search engine ranking factors, such as mobile usability, and load speed – which are huge factors in 2018!

Today, the majority of search engine searches are made through smart phones and mobile devices. In July of 2018, Google started penalizing websites who did not have mobile-friendly web pages, and actually began ranking sites off of their mobile website, rather than browser website. Because this site isn’t mobile optimized, it’s capabilities are being suppressed by Google and it’s ranking more poorly than it would otherwise.

My plan is to get this site on WordPress, optimize it for mobile usability, and optimize it for search engine optimization. None of this has been done or really can be done, simply because it is a static html website. I believe I will see a good traffic and ranking boost once this site is more up-to-date, which also includes a fresh design!

4. Keywords in the domain name

I don’t know if I need to even write anything for this, Google’s own answer box tells you all you need to know:

importance of keywords in your domain name

Alright, I’ll say a few words. ChevyTrucks.org has a fantastic domain name because Chevy Trucks is exactly the keyword this site is trying to rank for.

63% of the top ranking sites in their industries have their keywords in their domain name, per SearchEngineWatch.

5. It’s under-monetized and neglected

As previously mentioned, this site hasn’t had a new piece of content in nearly 10 years. NEGLECTED. For blogs and information sites, Google pays attention to how frequently new and fresh content is being published. More new content = better rankings. It’s also essential to build a recurring reader base. If I never posted another article on here, you’d probably stop coming here, right?

So goal 1: add fresh content. I will likely outsource an article a month or so.

This website has 2 Adsense ads published on it – one in the header and one in the footer. With all the advertising options in 2018, you could say this is under-monetized. I think the main opportunity is to do affiliate offerings. Most people visiting this site are looking to fix or build their own Chevy, so it’s the perfect opportunity to load up an affiliate deal where I can link to Chevy truck parts for purchase.

Once traffic is back on an upwards trend, and fresh content is being added, I’ll reach out to business for private advertisements and guest posts. The traffic is extremely targeted and niche, so a lot of opportunities exist.

This leads me into my investment thesis:

This website can easily profit $200-300/month, with limited work needed on my end.

“So why isn’t it making $300/month now that you’ve owned it for 3-month?”

Yeah yeah, good question. This website isn’t going anywhere and it’s making the amount of money I was expecting it to, so it just naturally got pushed to the bottom of my to-do list.

I probably won’t ever buy a <$10,000 website again, because it simply isn’t valuable enough to me (I have a good day job) for me to care to really put a lot of work and effort into it.

However, I am about a weekend away from getting the site to where I want it to be from a design standpoint (moving it to WordPress). From there it’s just testing out monetization methods.

So it’s almost there! Just going to have taken 4-months to get it where it should be rather than 2-weeks.

Which leads me to another point….

I’m a long term website investor. If I were a website flipper (learn about the difference here), I would have gotten this thing fixed up in 2-weeks, gotten it on trend for $300/month within 4-weeks, and then would have tried to resell it 2-months later. I invest for the long-term and will own this website for a long time so sitting on it for a couple months really doesn’t hurt my holistic investment thesis.

Did I overpay at an 81x multiple?

Probably. But I think it has long-term potential to make a lot more than $2-300. I could see it turning into a chevy truck forum in the future or something of that nature, and generating some significant cash flow. I already own 3 other automotive websites, so there is value to me in making it a fourth. For example, I can go to Carmax, or whoever, and say “advertise with me, I get 100,000 unique visitors a month across BMW, Porsche, and Chevy related websites.”

At the end of the day, I have confidence in my $2-300 number. At $200 my multiple decreases to ~30x, and at $300 it’s 20x, which is a lot more reasonable.

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