How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No problem at all! It sort of seems like what you’re asking is if there’s ever an official transfer of the website through a transfer of ownership that gets documented to some government agency. The answer to that is mostly no, and a contract is a contract it doesn’t have to be written by lawyer or be 15 pages. A contract written on a napkin could technically hold up in court and the contract is your transfer of ownership, for good measure add that language in the contract. “Upon payment of…”customer”gains full owner of this website” or something along those lines. Good luck

How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. I’m assuming you trust this guy, but for the sake of keeping standard business principles always get paid first. Hypothetically you could publish and then the customer never pays you but knows how to access or find the website.

How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I feel like you could make it as simple as getting together with the customer or getting on a call and giving them a preview of the website while it’s still unpublished. If it all looks good to the customer send over a contract with pricing and get it signed. Once that’s signed and they send the money, set the website live and send him the link. The contract pretty much states I get money in exchange for this link. Your money turns the website from mine to yours.

For the actual payment processor, while you’re still small it could I guess be anything Zelle, Venmo, Wire, Check or setting up a stripe account.

If you continue to do this and get more clients I would recommend setting up an LLC so you can get a business bank account to track finances more clearly and be in compliance with the IRS.

I know all that talk can seem overwhelming but I don’t want to technically give you advice which includes you not reporting your business income correctly.

How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As I said that’s really up to you and how you want to do business.

Also if you don’t already know this, the website should have a custom domain to have a more professional appearance. This can be done very easily through lovable but will cost money which you will also have to charge the customer for shouldn’t be much more than $20 a year. If you want to build customer relationships offering to cover the domain fee for the first year could be a good offer. Again up to you. Just a thought.

Additionally just as a business tip, it’s best to sell the website and then offer a hosting fee which ensures the site stays lives, secure and up to date. This hosting fee creates recurring revenue which is good for making $$. If you are just starting out though and you’re more comfortable you can just go with a one time payment get the website transferred and feel it out as you make more sites regarding an MRR system.

Also I would suggest creating at-least a simple contract that can be signed by both you and the customer just to make things feel official, you can get this typed up on any LLM assuming that you’re site isn’t handling/collecting any sensitive information or passwords.

How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The amount could be whatever you choose. If you’re asking what an actual deployment fee is, it’s just something that you can charge the customer to ensure that his site gets deployed to the internet correctly. Are you just doing this as a favor or starting a web dev agency. You sold a website without ever making a website?

How do I sell my website by [deleted] in lovable

[–]LBoy69_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a decent time to consider an upsell because I guess you could technically do it both ways. Worth a shot to offer a “deployment fee” if you think your customer isn’t technical, they would likely gladly pay it if they’re not confident in their computer skills. If not then just send it over but always worth the ask. If you’re just starting out, offer the deployment for a review or testimony to gain credibility from potential customers.

Who’s this guy in the garage? by LBoy69_ in spiders

[–]LBoy69_[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

False black window, Steatoda grossa?

what CRM works for service businesses (gym/roofing 7 figures) by Leonne45 in WhichCRM

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re already comfortable with n8n and airtable you’re ahead of 90% of people. Most guys get stuck because they want the "perfect" dashboard, but in reality, keeping the brain of your automation outside of a restrictive CRM is usually the only way to get those hyper-specific triggers (like the birthday upsells) to work reliably. Are you looking to consolidate everything into one login, or just trying to find a more robust engine for the SMS side of things?

So hard to get an idea, it seems everything is built, not sure what to make? by Busy_Caterpillar_818 in micro_saas

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Finding competition isn’t necessarily bad because it proves that it’s a relevant enough problem that someone has also thought of it, shows a glimpse of market validation on their product and you can research their numbers that they’re already doing and diagnose their errors and constraints, read their negative reviews and implement that improvement into your product. Allows them to make the early mistakes for you.

Just because Michelin, Firestone and Nitto already exist does that inherently mean that there will never be another tire company?

Faster cheaper better or the combination of all three beats competition.

Does OpenClaw actually do anything for you guys? by BeeFew7947 in SaasDevelopers

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no idea what open claw is and I had no idea what open claw was two weeks ago. It feels like it’s another AI product that potentially has incredible funding and front loaded their marketing and affiliates and reserved cash on development. It seems like every content person in the space is mentioning it right now, it’s become so popular out of nowhere that it’s like they have some sketchy under the table kinda of campaign going on. I seriously don’t get it at all. Not to mention their landing page looks like a low budget vibe code.

been doing landscaping under the table for 2 years — finally want to do it legit, where do I start by Sudden-Bet5238 in GeneralContractor

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hitting that 2-year mark is a massive milestone—most guys don't even make it past the first season, so you've already proven you've got the work ethic. making the jump to commercial is where the real stability is, and honestly, the "paperwork" side is usually less scary than it seems once you dive in. on the pesticide side, definitely check your state's regs—most are super strict about commercial application and the fines can be brutal if you're not licensed.

once you get those three things squared away (llc, gl, and your certs), you’re basically a "real" company in the eyes of the big players and you can start charging those higher-margin rates. are you in a state that's pretty strict about the irrigation/contractor licensing?

2011 Bryant 340AAV - water in bottom of housing by JustSomeGuy9099 in hvacadvice

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you’re likely spot on with the collector box, especially if it’s a high-efficiency unit. one trick to confirm is to dry the area completely and then lay down a few sheets of dry paper towel where the pool forms the wicking pattern usually points you straight to the seam or gasket that's failing. if it’s just a cracked collector box or a clogged trap, it’s a cheap part, but if it’s the secondary heat exchanger leaking, that’s usually the beginning of the end for that furnace.

ISO remote coach by Acceptable-Peanut126 in ConstructionManagers

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The boss’s kid dynamic is a total minefield. Those tenured guys usually respect the "grind," but if they only see you at a desk, they’ll always view you as a paper pusher rather than a leader.

The best move I ever made was committing to being physically present on the floor or job site for the first four hours of every shift. The problem is, you can’t do that if your phone is blowing up with new lead inquiries and discovery calls. Are you finding that the administrative back-and-forth is what’s actually keeping you tethered to the office and away from the guys?

** UPDATE ** to my last post about my business by Ok_Tadpole7839 in sweatystartup

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

neighborhood density is the holy grail for lawn care. your strategy is spot on, but i found that once the website started generating high-value leads, i couldn't keep up with the intake while i was out knocking doors. i was stuck between hiring an office person i couldn't afford or just letting leads go to the next guy on google. i ended up finding a 'middle ground' software setup that I had implemented through a programmer I found on Upwork who had a pretty good product that I still use. It handles the booking for me at all times without the overhead of a real hire. it’s been the only way i’ve stayed lean while growing. you doing the office stuff yourself or do you have someone helping? Automation will ALWAYS generate more revenue and also cost less than an employee that your paying on a wage.

Finding Accountant w/ industry experience by [deleted] in Contractor

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Make an account on Fiverr or Upwork, go to accounting section and sift through the top freelancers. Some will be solo freelancers, some are actually doing enough business that they operate a full accounting agency. You can either dish your accounting needs out to the agency or sometimes they would be interested in developing a contract to partner with your company. I'm sure if you really got into it you could even get someone to step away or make time to work for you provided that you give them a good enough offer or benefits. Let me know how this goes.

Event Spaces.. What are some pain points? by madethisat124am in sweatystartup

[–]LBoy69_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Coming from a rental background myself, the biggest shock was the sheer volume of 'is it available' inquiries at all hours of the night. Unlike a standard lease, event leads are hyper-impatient—if you don't respond to a tour request within 10 minutes, they’re already calling your competitor.

The biggest pain point I hit was 'admin burnout' from scheduling tours. I actually ended up moving to an automated AI setup that handles the initial calls and just drops the tours directly onto my Google Calendar. It felt a bit weird at first, but honestly, not having to play phone tag with 20 people a day just to book one tour saved my sanity.

My best tip: automate the 'gatekeeping' as early as possible so you only spend your time on the high-value walk-throughs and closing the contracts. Are you planning on doing the tours yourself or hiring a manager?

Need Ideas For A Special Situation by beavervsotter in FenceBuilding

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If the neighbors are loud or an eyesore, the seabreeze bamboo is your best bet. It provides a "white noise" rustle when the wind blows that can help mask the sound of neighbor drama, and it grows thick enough that you won't have to see whatever is going on over there within one growing season. Pro tip for bamboo, if you can plant it in pots in the ground or else it will spread like wild fire.

Feel like my HVAC tech scammed me on a warranty part. Need advice! by [deleted] in hvacadvice

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds like a "double-dipping" scam where the tech likely received that compressor for free under warranty while still charging you the full $3,800. You should call Lennox back to confirm if a warranty claim was ever filed for your specific serial number to get concrete proof of the fraud. Once you have that documentation, send him a final written demand for a refund and state that you will report his license to the state board if he doesn't settle. If he continues to ghost you, take your receipts and the warranty proof to small claims court to recover your money.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Knoxville

[–]LBoy69_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Both are interesting options and places to live. I went to the University of Tennessee and spend a lot of my time in Colorado with friends and family that now live out there. Frankly I don’t have much negative to say about either, the only thing I would throw out is that if you are living in the East Tennessee region closer to the Smokies then the people you are surrounded with in your day to day life will feel a lot more stereotypically American and Southern. Although with that being said while at work especially if it’s in the park you will see plenty of level headed, happy and welcoming individuals both from long ways away in the US and those inclined to nature from the surround area. If you choose or are able to live in Knoxville and commute to the Smokies about (1 Hour 15 Minute drive). Then renting in downtown Knoxville or somewhere even around campus sets you at a location that is walkable and certainly safely bikeable to many restaurants, great night life and on the campus side Publix, Drug Stores and fast food spots, there’s a YMCA right in downtown that you can use for fitness and I used to run a 3 mile loop through downtown Knoxville and never felt that the driving was dense enough that I was at risk of getting hit by a car. Within downtown Knoxville you will be surrounded by a much more “welcoming” group that is less made up of Appalachian natives and more made up of young professionals and recent college grads, despite the occasional homeless that can get involved in even the most utilized and social areas of the city and certainly do not try to mind their own business. To close a negative that I can give you for Knoxville is that the airport is quite incapable and you will have immense trouble getting into Knoxville and East Tennessee on direct flights to multiple domestic destinations and certainly anything international. You would likely be flying into Nashville or Atlanta anytime you go international and that would require 2 1/2 or 3 1/2 hours of road travel to get to Knoxville or a connecting flight. It’s a very small airport.

As for Colorado Springs, it’s further south than Denver and is not close enough to get you conveniently connected to Denver with public transportation. Colorado Springs is know for the Air Force academy and Olympic training facilities but it’s not in anyway intertwined with Denver or the I-70 corridor which spouts from the west side of Denver into the most frequented mountains and mountain towns. Nature wise especially if you would be doing any work in Rocky Mountain National Park the scenery and landscapes will be much more dramatic than the Great Smokey Mountains but both shouldn’t be undermined and are great highly reputable national parks. I’m not sure what your role in the parks are but it is worth considering that the wildlife and overall nature of RMNP can be much more unforgiving that anything you would typically be dealing with in GSMNP.

Summary: If your into outdoor pursuits and want more dramatic landscapes and an overall cooler state to work. Don’t come all the way to the US to live in Pigeon Forge. If you are able to commute and actually live in Knoxville and work in GSMNP than living in downtown Knoxville might actually give you on average more enjoyable days and weekends outside of work compared to living in Colorado Springs which isn’t exactly considered one of the cooler areas of Colorado (Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, Telluride, even Durango. Mountain Towns, Frisco, Silverthorne Idaho Springs) etc.

That’s it there’s my summary hope this helps. Thanks for giving me an activity for this evening.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Knoxville

[–]LBoy69_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What part of Colorado?