Closing my website

Scottishgifts4u

Free Member
Jul 6, 2017
191
58
I’ve had a website running since 2003 just as a hobby. It makes a profit but to be honest we’ve just let it drift along.

I’m now retiring from my full time job and considering getting rid of the online business as well.

I’ve got a few thousand pounds worth of stock so what is the best way to run it down?

Try to get someone to take it over ( and how would I even go about that) or just have a massive sale and keep reducing prices till most of it has gone?

Or is there another better way?
 
D

Darren_Ssc

If you have proof of earnings and web traffic you could probably sell as a going concern on flippa, provided you are realistic about valuation (1 year's net income at the very best).

I know flippa is a terrible place to buy websites (before anyone jumps in) but sites like yours do tend to sell and (no offence) often for far more than they are actually worth. I have sold sites on flippa in the past and you can get lucky sometimes because if someone decides they want the site then all logic goes out of the window.

The only problem you'll have is having to deal with a lot of time wasters and idiots. Then, assuming you sell, a lot of handholding and instructions to the buyer who will likely not have a clue what they are doing. This can go on for months.

However, it's worth a shot since, realistically, you're only other option is to run down the stock over a period of time and sell the remainder as a job lot on ebay? The site on its own isn't worth anything really since there is no content as such other than product listings.
 
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Clinton

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    Unless there are substantial other assets your best bet is to sell the stock.

    I don't encourage people to use Flippa, it's one dodgy place!

    If you have other assets, a premium domain name, a high traffic website, a large and responsive mailing list etc., then it may be worth trying to sell as a going concern.
     
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    Tin

    Business Member
    Nov 14, 2005
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    www.tinsoldierdesign.co.uk
    How about running a couple of market stalls in a local town? It might be a quick, simple way of getting rid of your products then close the site down as Alex has suggested. Ebay is another option but depending on what you're selling it can take a while to shift your stock. If you've got decent, regular traffic to your website then hold a 'Gigantic Once Only Sale'.
     
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    antropy

    Business Member
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    Aug 2, 2010
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    www.antropy.co.uk
    How about running a couple of market stalls in a local town? It might be a quick, simple way of getting rid of your products then close the site down as Alex has suggested. Ebay is another option but depending on what you're selling it can take a while to shift your stock. If you've got decent, regular traffic to your website then hold a 'Gigantic Once Only Sale'.
    Looking at the OP's site I think a mixture of market selling, car boot sales, ebay, amazon and a 'all stock must go' sale should all cumulate into your stock being all sold. Alex
     
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    Alan

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  • Aug 16, 2011
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    I have been through a similar process, and after failing to attract any interest I sold the stock, first at discount on the website, then on ebay ( creating bulk packs for the cheaper items ), and then I started listing on facebook market place and got lucky and found someone that would buy the residual stock ( the non moving by definition ) at 50% of trade price. I still have the website and domain name - maybe I'll sell it one day, but it owes me nothing.
     
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    crackerjackcommerce

    Free Member
    Aug 1, 2019
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    How would you price the online business?

    Domain name value?
    Established indexing in the SERP's.?
    IPO registered brand name?
    Mailing list?
    Established ebay/Amazon account?
    Stock value (20% of your original cost price)?
    Contracts/ agreements with suppliers?

    I would be interested to know how it gets valued.

    I would be interested as I am working on a new ecommerce site, but taking over a running one with stock sounds good.

    Send me some figures?

    I agree, in theory this could be a better option.

    ---

    provided you are realistic about valuation (1 year's net income at the very best).

    Is this a common valuation/ ball park figure?
     
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    Clinton

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    I would be interested to know how it gets valued.
    Why? Just idle curiosity?

    Any valuation applied to his business is unique to his business and to the buyer who's doing the valuation, it provides no guide to the value of your website or any other.

    So why are you interested in knowing how it was valued (especially as that will involve sharing with you a lot of confidential information on net asset values, working capital etc etc)?

    Is this a common valuation/ ball park figure?
    Over the last 20 years I've written tens of thousands of words on valuation and I've advised in literally thousands of cases.

    And it still bugs me when people talk about common valuation formulae, or ballparks.

    Neither one exists. There is no "common" way to value a small business. There is no "ball park". One business may sell for 50x earnings, another might struggle to sell for even 1x earnings.

    So, there you go. If you want an easy valuation formula take the average of 50 and 1! Sorted?
     
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    crackerjackcommerce

    Free Member
    Aug 1, 2019
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    Why? Just idle curiosity?

    Yes, just making conversation and would be interested to know what aspects are considered and ranked important. I listed a few of my thoughts above on what I think might be contributing factors to the valuation. Just my humble opinion.

    I do not expect any confidential data to be put on the forum, I was just trying to contribute to the post and out of my own curiosity.

    Over the last 20 years I've written tens of thousands of words on valuation and I've advised in literally thousands of cases.

    And it still bugs me when people talk about common valuation formulae, or ballparks.

    My intention was to contribute to the discussion on the forum and for me to learn some knowledge. I will read your blog for further info.
     
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    netweavers

    Free Member
    Nov 12, 2010
    2
    0
    Caithness
    If it's profitable then sell as a going concern - website and stock together as a pre-packaged business ready for someone else to take over and potentially take to the next level.

    Talk of selling your stock and closing the website is nonsense if you have a even semi-profitable business. There's always a buyer, perhaps even as a part-time concern for someone.

    If you do decide to sell, I too, would be interested in seeing what you've got to offer,
     
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    Scottishgifts4u

    Free Member
    Jul 6, 2017
    191
    58
    Well it's gone!! (or at least the stock's gone, we still have the domains)

    We started with a 40% off sale which at this time of year proved very popular.

    Then we had a real stroke of luck when a local high street gift shop offered us what was basically a pasting table in the window of her shop to run our retirement sale in conjunction with hers.

    After a few weeks she realised that our stock was better quality/selling better than hers so she bought the lot off of us. :)

    Right place...right time but maybe an option for anyone else doing the same.
     
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