Pre-Offer Review
Before you make an offer on a web business, let's review it together.
You've found something worth considering. The listing looks good, the numbers seem fine, and now you're trying to decide whether to make an offer — on a business you didn't build, described by the person selling it.
This is the call to have before you do.
In one focused hour, I go through what you've got — the listing, the seller's numbers, whatever's been shared — and tell you what I see. Where the risk is hiding, what doesn't add up, the questions that'll make the seller's evasions visible, and whether this is worth taking any further.
You don't need a technical background. That's the whole point. I translate.
What you bring
The listing or sale page, any traffic or revenue numbers the seller has shared, and what you already know about the business. The more you bring, the more I can see.
What you leave with
- A straight read on whether this deal is worth pursuing
- The red flags visible from the outside — traffic, revenue, platform, ownership
- The exact questions to put to the seller next
- Whether you need a full Pre-Purchase Tech Audit before you commit
What it costs
$250. One hour, one-on-one. And if you go ahead with a full Pre-Purchase Tech Audit, I credit it toward that — so if this turns into a deal worth digging into, the call costs you nothing. Book your Pre-Offer Review.
Where this fits
Not ready to talk yet? Start with the free guide, Don't Buy a Landmine. You can grab it further down on this page.
Ready to go deep on a specific target? That's the Pre-Purchase Tech Audit.
The Pre-Offer Review is the step in between — a fast, experienced gut-check before you spend real money or real time.
Get The Guide
Buying a web business? Start here.
I wrote down the checklist I'd run before letting anyone wire the money — the questions that make a seller's evasions visible, in plain English, no technical background required.
It's called Don't Buy a Landmine.
Why me
I'm self-taught, 30 years in, and I've spent two decades inside one business watching it change hands again and again. I know what sellers leave out — not because they're all dishonest, but because the knowledge lives in their heads and nobody writes it down.
I follow the threads. I find what's load-bearing and what's about to fall. And I tell you what it means in language you actually use — because the whole point is that you understand what you're buying before it's yours.
