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SaaS business for sale: an inside look at Invotory

5 min read

Most posts on this blog are written for shop owners. This one is for a different reader. Invotory, the product this site runs, is listed for sale, and this post is the acquisition brief we would want to read if we were sitting on the other side of the table: what the product is, what makes it worth owning, and what a buyer actually receives.

The fastest way to judge a product is to watch it work. Here is a full walkthrough:

What Invotory is

Invotory is a B2B SaaS for small businesses that unifies the paperwork of running a shop or service company in one workspace:

  • Invoicing with a full lifecycle: draft, issue, send, record and reverse payments, clean PDF output, and recurring invoices on a schedule.
  • Inventory with real controls: stock levels, low-stock thresholds per product and location, transfers, and every movement recorded in an audit trail.
  • Quotes customers can accept online, converting to invoices in one click.
  • Purchase orders that receive stock directly into inventory.
  • Expenses with categories and an approval workflow.
  • A point of sale that decrements stock and generates invoices automatically.
  • Reports for sales, outstanding invoices, inventory value, low stock, and COGS.
  • Teams with six roles, secure invitations, and per-workspace data isolation.

What makes it valuable as a business

  • Genuinely bilingual: full English and Modern Standard Arabic with right-to-left layout throughout the product, the marketing site, and this blog, held to a written terminology glossary. Arabic-first SMB software is a thin market, while e-invoicing mandates across MENA (ZATCA in Saudi Arabia, JoFotara in Jordan) keep pushing small businesses to digitize.
  • A complete product, not an MVP: the feature list above is shipped and working, including MFA, role-based permissions enforced at the database level, and audit trails, the things buyers usually discover are missing after acquiring.
  • A stack one developer can run: Next.js 16, React 19, and Supabase (Postgres with row-level security), with subscription billing already integrated through Lemon Squeezy at three price tiers ($9 to $39 per month, 14-day free trial).
  • Accessibility as a differentiator: semantic pages, keyboard-friendly workflows, and screen-reader-ready status regions, rare in this category and increasingly demanded in public-sector and enterprise procurement.
  • SEO groundwork already laid: structured data, canonical URLs, a sitemap, and a bilingual content marketing base targeting high-intent queries.

What is included in the sale

  • The complete codebase and the invotory.com domain.
  • The bilingual marketing site and blog content, English and Arabic.
  • Brand assets and the production deployment setup (Vercel and Supabase).
  • Handover support, with exact terms on the listing.

Who this fits

  • An indie hacker who wants to skip the year of zero-to-one and start at distribution.
  • An agency or consultancy serving small businesses that wants a product of its own.
  • An operator with distribution in MENA, where the Arabic-first experience is the moat.
  • A developer looking for a serious portfolio business with real surface area to grow.

Serious about it? Start here

Watch the walkthrough above, then open a free trial and poke around the real product. The listing below has the terms, and questions through the listing are welcome; due diligence is expected, and the code and metrics are there to be examined.

View the Invotory listing on SideProjectors

Put it into practice with Invotory

Invoices, inventory, expenses, and POS in one clean workspace. Start a free 14-day trial, no credit card required.

Learn the reorder point formula (with safety stock), work through a real example, and avoid the mistakes that cause stockouts and dead cash.

The 9 details every invoice needs, a numbering system that scales, and the five mistakes that quietly delay payment.

A practical inventory system for small teams: five building blocks, a 20-minute weekly routine, and the signs you have outgrown spreadsheets.