So, I've been pursuing Flippa a bit more recently and have come across three auctions that seem interesting to me. I'm wondering if any of you have any opinions?
#1: http://www.scottscoffeehouse.com/
Auction here.
What I like about this site:
- Drop shipping requires no inventory
- It appears to me that the seller is being honest based mostly on the language the seller uses and my PMs with the buyers of the seller's previous auctions. I have a "good feeling" about this seller.
- I believe there to be opportunities to increase conversions and sales.
- My wife is considering starting up an ecommerce website, and owning this site could help us get a bit more experience in ecommerce and in dealing with ecommerce software (magento in this case).
- Winner supposedly gets 3 months of SEO work.
Things I don't like:
- Not completely passive income. Probably requires a few hours a week, just to maintain. More to grow sales.
Auction #2: http://www.exerciseballchair.org/
Auction here.
Things I like about this auction:
- Pretty much passive income.
- Potential for additional income by adding some amazon affiliate products???
- Two income streams.
- steadily increasing income
Things I don't necessarily like:
- Kinda looks like a spammy crappy website.
- Only a few months of DECENT income.
Auction 3: http://www.ovariancystreatment.com/
Auction here.
Things I like about this website:
- Two (actually three, but no amazon earnings that I can see) income streams.
- Good domain name for the niche.
- Relatively consistent revenue over nearly an entire year.
- I already have a clickbank account and am familiar with selling clickbank products.
Things I don't like about this website:
- Also feels like another spammy website...
- I'm a little surprised that no one has asked any public questions...
- Edited to add: My wife says I should not be in a business giving people medical advice (for liability reasons). Makes sense to me...
I'm still new to this game, so I'd definitely appreciate any tips or suggestions you might have on these auctions.


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- I'd recommend doing your own SEO (assuming you have the time) when you start out so you get the hang of what needs doing and how. Once you can do it yourself, you can then outsource it. I always think it is dangerous to outsource something you don't fully understand.

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