Show HN: Venturu – Zillow for the market of local businesses

25 pointsposted 6 hours ago
by lifenautjoe

28 Comments

phyzix5761

3 hours ago

I wish I could see more info about the businesses like cash and cash equivalents, total debt, and free cash flow over the last 5-10 years broken down by year. Would help me do a quick back of the napkin valuation based on my own goals to decide if I'm interested in taking the next step.

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

Hi phy!

We actually have that level of financial detail for many of our listings from our broker partners. The challenge has been figuring out the best way to present it. putting raw financials out publicly isn't the right move for the sellers.

So our next big build is a secure data room. The goal is to use that verified data to create richer, dynamic visualizations and financial summaries that a seller or broker can share securely with a qualified buyer. it's a big priority for us.

Great feedback, it's exactly where our heads are at.

dzonga

2 hours ago

how far are you with creating data summaries ? ideating stage, testing ?

& how are you getting the data / verifying from the businesses that are selling.

lifenautjoe

2 hours ago

hey, thanks for the follow up question dzonga!

To answer your first one, we're past ideation and are actively building the data room now. We have the financial data in-house for a large number of listings, this is about writing the code to present it in a secure and dynamic way.

As for where the data comes from, there are two main paths:

- The vast majority of our listings come from direct partnerships with brokerages. We integrate with their systems to sync their inventory, so the data is professionally vetted before it even gets to us.

- For the smaller number of 'For Sale By Owner' listings, it's a manual process for now. We check and reach out to verify the numbers, and we always connect the owner with a professional broker to help guide them, which adds another layer of validation.

So a good rule of thumb on the platform right now, if you see a broker on the listing, they've vetted thoroughly the data.

It's in our roadmap to automate the process for sell by owner case so that we can hook directly integrate with accounting / tax / hr software and present live numbers.

lots of work to do but making good progress!

mNovak

2 hours ago

Site looks nice, best of luck!

I'd be curious just to learn more about who's the typical buyer of brick and mortar local businesses -- not something I've ever thought about

lifenautjoe

an hour ago

Thanks mnovak, that’s a really good question and something we’re putting a lot of work on answering accurately.

The buyer landscape is more diverse than most poeple think. It's really a mix of a few key groups:

- There's the classic one, the person who's climbed the corporate ladder, has some capital, and wants to buy back control of their own time.

- Then you have the employee who's ready to be the owner. Think of the head cook who wants to buy a restaurant after working at one for 10 years.

- There's also a new wave, partly driven by social media, of people looking for a "low maintenance" business like a laundromat to create cash flow. They quickly find out that even a 'passive' business is a real job, but it's a growing trend.

And on the more sophisticated end, you have roll-up funds and private equity groups who see the massive opportunity in that $10 trillion wealth transfer and are looking to professionalize this space.

To us, it’s honestly a mind-bending cross-section of the economy. Thanks for asking!

edoceo

3 hours ago

How do you qualify the buyers? IME there are loads of wannabe buyers, who aren't ready (experience, capital) and just waste broker/seller time.

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

That is in fact a million-dollar question. it's a huge pain point we've heard from nearly every of the 100+ brokers we've talked to.

Right now, it's a mix. we do basic "I'm a human" verification with e-mails and phoone numbers, and our team manually reviews inquiries to filter out the obvious noise before it hits a broker's inbox.

Longer term, we're exploring a concept we're calling a 'Venturu Passport.' It would be an optional one-time-thing-setup for a serious buyer to verify their funds, experience and readiness upfront, so a seller knows they're talking to someone credible.

It's just an idea for now, but we are very much obsessed with solving this. Would love to hear your thoughts on an approach like that.

opengrass

2 hours ago

Realtors list these as lease takeovers, franchises like Anytime Fitness have their own buy and sell portals.

lifenautjoe

an hour ago

Hi opengrass! thank you for the comment.

That is true but these are two really distinct parts of the ecosystem.

A realtor is fantastic for the 'where' the lease and the physical space. We're all about the 'what' the actual operating business with its brand and cash flow. It's the difference between taking over a location and buying an income stream.

And yes, big franchises are their own walled gardens but our world / approach is the millions of independent businesses, the local coffee shop, the family-owned auto repair that make up the vast majority of the market.

That's the massive slice that's been left behind by modern tech.

browningstreet

2 hours ago

"for the market of local businesses" sounds like awkward AI speak

lifenautjoe

2 hours ago

oof, we spent over 2 hours debating what the title should be.. Zillow for local businesses, A zillow for main street, a Main street marketplace, a Local business zillow... we ended up going to "market of local businesses" because we though "zillow for local businesses" could be misinterpreted as a tool that we offer to local businesses exclusively, rather than a market..

browningstreet

2 hours ago

so an ebay of local businesses? :-)

personally, having done these kinds of exercises too many times, i think you're over-committing to the two pillzars of "zillow" & "market". zillow is a kind of market, at least in the elastic zone of marketing associations.

lifenautjoe

2 hours ago

:'-) feedback much appreciated and taken!

alexshuhu

3 hours ago

Great work! The Zillow analogy really resonates — the small business buying space has needed this kind of transparency for a long time. I like that you’re removing upfront fees and moving toward verified data rooms; that balance between accessibility and trust could be a real edge. Excited to see how the platform grows and how transaction-level data shapes the next stage.

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

very suspicious comment, but even if you're a robot, thanks!

huherto

3 hours ago

Congrats Joel! This is such a great and useful idea! Godsped!

bitxbitxbitcoin

3 hours ago

First impression: Bizbuysell with extra LLM.

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

we get why it might look that way on the surface

the real difference though is the monumental effort happening behind the scenes. We're building direct partnerships with brokerages, one by one, to sync their entire inventory onto Venturu.

For many of them, it's the first time they can put all their listings online without getting hit by massive per-listing fees. It might not sound like a huge deal, but we believe this will eventually reveal the true size of this hidden market.

It's a world still built on handshakes and business cards, and we're just trying to help pave the way.

we do use some generative models for mundane things like headlines to make that free discoverability possible, but our core tech, like the valuation tool, is "old school".

My cofounder, Luis, built that model over years in a spreadsheet from his experience buying businesses. My job was to turn it into code and supercharge it with historical data and location-specific variables.

Fun fact, the model was actually born first, Venturu came later

jon1628492

4 hours ago

How many businesses have sold?

How do you make money?

lifenautjoe

4 hours ago

Hey, jon, thanks for the questions

on sales, it's still a bit early for us to know the final number of closed deals. The average business takes 6-12 months to sell, and we've only been seeing a real flow of leads for the last 4 months (we've been live for 6). what we can say is we've generated 182 qualified leads for sellers and their brokers.

You've actually hit on one of the core problems we're trying to solve. Right now, deals go offline into private systems and the data gets lost. Our long-term goal is to build the rails for the entire transaction.

As for how we make money, our model is basically zillow's. It's completely free for an owner to list their business and for buyers to search. We make money by connecting sellers with our network of professional brokers. Brokers can then choose to pay for more visibility in their local zip codes.

It lets us keep the marketplace itself open and free for everyone.

edm0nd

4 hours ago

so is this just like Flippa or Acquire.com but for local brick and mortar businesses?

lifenautjoe

4 hours ago

In the sense that we're trying to make buying and selling businesses as efficient as possible, yes!

however local businesses transactions have their own specific challenges, state dependent regulation, messier financials, emotional rollercoasters, a lot of secrecy, distrust, longer timeframes. It's really inaccessible for most people right now, and that's what we're trying to change.

TZubiri

3 hours ago

Reminds me of DealStream

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

There's definitely some overlap

I think the main difference is our core philosophy on what should be free.

Their model is built around monetizing the buyer's access, with things like "locked deals" and daily inquiry limits on the free plan.

Our whole bet is that this market only gets unlocked if discovery is completely open and frictionless for everyone, buyers, sellers, and brokers.

So on Venturu, there are no locked deals, no paywalls to see listings, and no limits on inquiries.

We give all that away for free and will build our business by helping our broker partners succeed, similar to the Zillow model

2Gkashmiri

3 hours ago

You have filters for online only business? SomeSomething that non us people could invest in for example

lifenautjoe

3 hours ago

Our focus is both fortunately and unfortunately 100% on local, main street businesses because that's the world my cofounder and I know and the problem we experienced ourselves. We think platforms like Acquire.com already do a great job for the online/SaaS world.

That said, a long-term dream of ours is to explore ways to let people co-invest in businesses in their own communities. It's a ways off, but it's part of the bigger vision.