DealSupplies/strategic plan
● Strategic Plan · Phase 2 Priority · May 2026

The deals marketplace,
rebuilt for the AI era.

DealSupplies.com is being rebuilt from the ground up as a modern, eBay-style multi-vendor deals marketplace — with embedded financing, AI-powered seller tools, and a deal engine Shopify could never support. This document is the operating plan and the investor brief.

BrandDealSupplies.com
StagePre-relaunch · Phase 2
Current Inventory1,005 listings (legacy)
OperatorNicolas — SimpleNet portfolio
FrameworkMentorMe C-Suite
Section 01 · Status

Where we are — and where we're going.

An honest read on DealSupplies today and the path forward. Decision-makers need to see the gap before they back the plan.

Rebuild Progress · Pre-Phase 2 Launch
5%
5%
Stage 1 · Now
Strategic Plan
Stage 2 · 30 days
Platform & Migration
Stage 3 · 60 days
Seller Onboarding
Stage 4 · 90 days
Public Relaunch
⊘ Where We Are Today

A legacy Shopify storefront that can't do what we need it to do.

  • Built on Shopify — which structurally cannot support a Groupon-style deal engine with expiration timers and group-buying mechanics
  • 1,005 product listings, the majority showing as Sold Out — kills SEO authority and conversion trust
  • No seller-facing dashboard — vendors cannot self-manage listings, pricing, or fulfillment
  • Manual product listing — no bulk upload, no SKU autopopulation, no scan-to-list workflow
  • No embedded financing or BNPL at checkout — leaving cross-portfolio revenue on the table
  • No deal/coupon engine, no expiration timers, no cashback or rewards system
  • No automated sales tax — every state must be handled manually as we scale
  • Outdated UI/UX — does not match the modern eBay or Amazon experience buyers expect in 2026
→ Where We're Going

A modern, AI-powered marketplace where sellers run their own stores.

  • Multi-vendor architecture — purpose-built for deals, group-buying, and limited-time offers
  • Modern eBay-style UI with Amazon-grade product discovery, search, and filtering
  • Embedded Shopify-style seller dashboard — each vendor manages their own catalog, pricing, and orders
  • AI bulk-upload — scan a SKU/barcode, auto-populate title, description, images, and pricing suggestions
  • CSV bulk import + AI listing migration to onboard the 1,005 legacy products in days, not months
  • All financing options embedded at checkout: MidPay split-pay, MidBank BNPL, Affirm/Klarna, crypto via Changelly
  • Native deal engine: countdown timers, group-buy minimums, daily deals, flash sales, cashback/rewards
  • Automated sales tax across all 50 states (TaxJar or Avalara via Italo's affiliate code)
  • Cross-portfolio synergy: MidBank financing, MidPay payments, MidpointOne traffic, SimpleNet support
The honest read.  DealSupplies as it exists today is not a Phase 2 asset — it is technical debt with a domain attached. The strategic decision is whether to rebuild it as a modern marketplace that compounds with the rest of the portfolio, or to sunset it. This plan makes the case for rebuild.
Section 02 · The Pitch

The 15-second elevator pitch.

Memorize this. Open every meeting, every email, every cold conversation with it. Investors decide in the first 30 seconds whether to keep listening.

★ Memorize This Pitch ★

DealSupplies is the modern eBay for deals — where small sellers list discounted inventory in minutes using AI, and shoppers pay any way they want, including financing, crypto, and split-pay. We're rebuilding the Groupon model for the AI era, and we already own the full payments stack underneath.

— Read this every morning. Say it out loud once a day. Every conversation plants a seed. Every seed becomes a customer, a seller, or a partner.
Variant A · Investor Open

"We're rebuilding the Groupon model — multi-vendor deals marketplace — but with the entire MidBank + MidPay payments stack already integrated. The deals category is $450B globally, Groupon owns 3-5% of it, and the model is wide open for an AI-native challenger."

Variant B · Seller Pitch

"List your inventory on DealSupplies in under 60 seconds. Scan the barcode, our AI writes the listing, and you reach buyers who pay any way they want — credit, debit, BNPL, crypto, split-pay. Lower fees than Shopify or Amazon, and you get cross-promoted across our entire portfolio."

Variant C · Coffee Shop Friend

"You know Groupon? We're building the modern version — sellers can list a deal in a minute, shoppers can pay with anything from a credit card to crypto, and we make money on every transaction. It's part of a family of businesses I run that share the same payments engine."

Section 03 · The Compass

Why · How · What.

The Why and the How are durable for a decade. The What evolves as the business evolves. People buy the Why first. They pay for the What.

WHY

The deal economy is broken. Groupon is in terminal decline. Small sellers have nowhere modern to dump excess inventory at a discount. Shoppers are starved for real deals from real sellers, not just SEO-optimized affiliate spam. We exist to give independent sellers a modern, AI-powered marketplace where deals live — and to give buyers a destination they can trust for honest discounts, paid for any way they want.

HOW

We rebuild the marketplace experience from scratch on modern infrastructure — bypassing Shopify's structural limits with a purpose-built multi-vendor stack. We give sellers AI tools that turn 30-minute listing chores into 30-second tasks. We embed our existing MidBank + MidPay payment infrastructure into checkout — credit, BNPL, split-pay, crypto, financing — so every transaction maximizes conversion and we collect rake on the rail.

WHAT

A multi-vendor deals marketplace at DealSupplies.com. Sellers pay $0 to list. We take a 5-10% transaction fee plus optional listing promotions. Buyers get a modern eBay-style discovery experience with deal timers, group-buy mechanics, cashback rewards, and every payment method imaginable. Phase 1 launches with 1,005 migrated legacy products + 25 hand-recruited new sellers. Year 1 target: $1M+ GMV.

Section 04 · Operating Team

The C-Suite that runs this build.

The MentorMe framework gives every brand a five-person executive team. Each role owns specific deliverables. Nicolas is the CEO. The other four seats are configured AI clones backed by the operating system below.

★ CEO
Nicolas
Owns vision, seller relationships, cross-portfolio synergy. Anchors every decision to the Core: independent sellers deserve a modern marketplace.
CMO
Brand & Positioning
Modern eBay positioning. Negative-review intelligence against Groupon, Wowcher, RetailMeNot. SEO migration plan for legacy URLs.
CFO
Unit Economics
Take-rate optimization. Vendor payout schedules. Stripe + MidPay rail economics. Cash flow modeling per scenario.
COO
Platform & Migration
Platform selection (Yo-Kart vs CS-Cart vs Medusa). AI bulk-listing migration. Seller onboarding workflows. Sales tax automation.
CRO
Revenue & Sellers
Seller acquisition pipeline. Cross-promotion via MidpointOne, MidBank, TravelDRD. Deal curation strategy for the first 30 days.
Section 05 · Market Opportunity

A $100B+ category with a vulnerable incumbent.

The market data tells the story. The deals category is enormous, the social-commerce tailwind is real, and the dominant player is structurally weak.

$450B
Global online deals market size
Source · AInvest (Dec 2025)
3-5%
Groupon's current market share — leaving 95%+ open
Source · AInvest
$126B
2026 US social commerce market
Source · SellersCommerce
10.4%
US social commerce CAGR through 2030
Source · SellersCommerce
$498M
Groupon 2025 annual revenue — flat or declining
Source · Tracxn / Simply Wall St
$10–40
Groupon analyst price target range — wide skepticism
Source · Simply Wall St (May 2026)

Why now

  1. 01
    Groupon is in structural decline. Q3 2025 EPS shortfall, international operations being scaled back, market cap collapsed to $550M, and analyst coverage dropping. The incumbent is wounded and distracted by its own turnaround.
  2. 02
    AI has collapsed listing cost. What took a small seller 20 minutes per listing in 2020 (photo, title, description, pricing research) now takes 60 seconds. The seller-acquisition economics of a marketplace are 20× better than they were when Groupon scaled.
  3. 03
    Buy-now-pay-later is now table stakes. 2026 US shoppers expect to be able to split a $200 purchase into four payments at checkout. Groupon does not natively do this. We already own the financing rails through MidBank and MidPay.
  4. 04
    Social commerce is pulling discovery away from search. TikTok Shop, Instagram Shopping, and Facebook Marketplace have trained shoppers to discover deals through feeds — not Google. A modern deals marketplace that integrates with social distribution beats one that doesn't.
Investor Read The deals category is not a hot growth market — it is a turnaround opportunity. The capital question is not "is this category big?" (it is) but "is this team capable of taking share from a wounded incumbent?" The answer rests on operational execution, not market belief.
Section 06 · Competitive Position

How we stack up.

Honest scoring against the three closest competitors. Where we lose today. Where we win once Phase 2 ships.

Dimension DealSupplies (post-launch) Groupon Wowcher RetailMeNot
Pricing for sellers 9 3 4 6
Modern UI / UX 9 5 5 6
AI-powered seller tools 10 3 2 3
Payment options at checkout 10 6 5 5
Embedded financing / BNPL 10 4 3 2
Crypto payments 10 1 1 1
Deal engine (timers, group-buy) 8 8 7 5
Brand recognition 2 9 6 7
Cross-portfolio synergy 10 2 2 3
TOTAL 78 / 90 41 / 90 35 / 90 38 / 90
The honest read.  We lose hard on brand recognition — and we will keep losing on that for 2-3 years. We win on every other operational dimension. The strategic bet is that AI tooling + an integrated payments stack + a modern UI compounds faster than Groupon can rebuild on a 17-year-old codebase.

The Three Open Doors — what to attack first

01
Seller acquisition cost
Groupon spent years pitching every local business one by one. We let any seller list in 60 seconds with AI. Our cost-per-listed-seller will be a fraction of theirs.
02
Payment friction at checkout
Most competitors offer Visa, Mastercard, PayPal. We offer those plus BNPL, split-pay, crypto, and financing through MidBank. Conversion lifts on a deals site are exponential when financing is offered.
03
Sold-out inventory across category
Every legacy Groupon-style site is full of expired and out-of-stock listings — destroying SEO and buyer trust. A fresh marketplace with real, live, in-stock deals is structurally more competitive.
Section 07 · Structural Differentiator

The one thing competitors cannot copy.

A real moat is not a feature. A feature gets cloned in a quarter. A structural moat is something the competitor would have to rebuild their entire business model to match.

The Moat

We don't just operate a marketplace. We own the payment rails underneath it — MidBank for financing, MidPay for processing, Changelly for crypto, MidpointOne for cross-marketplace traffic.

For Groupon or Wowcher to match this, they would have to acquire (or build) a merchant services company, a lending platform, a crypto processor, and a sister marketplace. That is a 5-10 year capital project for them. For us, the integrations are weeks of engineering, because the rails are already in the family.

Defensibility over time

Year 1

Edge from speed and modern tooling. Sellers join because AI listing is 20× faster. Buyers convert because financing is embedded.

Year 3

Edge from cross-portfolio data — buyer behavior across DealSupplies, MidpointOne, TravelDRD becomes the underwriting signal for MidBank lending.

Year 5

Edge from network effects — large seller base + large buyer base + financing means every transaction is more profitable than competitors can match.

Year 10

Edge from category authority — DealSupplies becomes the default deals destination for sellers who don't want to be on Amazon or Shopify.

Investor Read The structural differentiator is real, but it is contingent on the rest of the portfolio (MidBank, MidPay) being operationally healthy. A single-asset bet on DealSupplies alone would not survive Groupon's distribution advantage. The portfolio thesis is what makes this defensible.
Section 08 · Platform Decision

The build vs buy question.

Five platform options were evaluated. The recommendation is below — but each path has real tradeoffs.

Platform Cost Multi-Vendor Deal Engine Customization Recommended For
⭐ Yo-Kart (recommended) $999–$7,999 one-time Native ★★★★★ Built-in Full source code Best for Groupon-style deal model with built-in seller tools, no monthly fees, scalable to 1M+ products.
CS-Cart Multi-Vendor $1,250/yr or $3,299+ one-time Native ★★★★★ Built-in promotions engine Full source code Strong alternative — slightly higher G2 rating but more expensive add-ons.
Medusa.js (headless) Free (open-source) + dev cost Plugin-based Build custom Unlimited Best for a fully custom build if 6-month timeline and $30K+ dev budget are available. Not recommended for 90-day launch.
Sharetribe Flex $199–$369/mo Native ★★★★ Limited Frontend open / backend hosted Already in use for MidpointOne — proven internally. But weak on deal mechanics.
⊘ Shopify (current) $29–$299/mo Plugin only ⊘ Structurally cannot Limited by Shopify rules Not viable for the Groupon model. This is what we are migrating off of.
Recommendation:  Yo-Kart at the Enterprise tier (~$1,499–$2,499). It is the fastest path to a working multi-vendor deals marketplace with the lowest total cost of ownership over 24 months. CS-Cart is a credible backup if Yo-Kart support proves weak after a trial.
Investor Read Buying off-the-shelf marketplace software is the right call for Phase 2 — speed to revenue matters more than custom architecture. The Medusa.js path becomes attractive in Year 3 once the business has revenue to justify a $100K+ rebuild. Premature custom builds kill marketplaces.
Section 09 · 90-Day Roadmap

The plan, week by week.

Every week has one job that, if completed, makes the week a win — even if nothing else gets done.

Phase 1 · Days 1–30 · Foundation
Phase 2 · Days 31–60 · Sellers
Phase 3 · Days 61–90 · Launch
1
Days 1–7 · Foundation Week

Decide the platform. Reserve the contracts.

Win condition: Yo-Kart license purchased, hosting set up, dev environment live.

  • Buy Yo-Kart Enterprise license + secure 1-year support contract
  • Provision hosting (Hostinger NVME — same infrastructure family as TravelDRD)
  • Lock domain redirects from Shopify to staging environment
  • Wait on Italo's TaxJar/Avalara affiliate code before signing up
  • Brief design partner on eBay-modern visual direction
2
Days 8–21 · Build the Engine

Migration script + AI listing pipeline.

Win condition: 1,005 legacy products migrated to staging with AI-rewritten descriptions.

  • Export full Shopify catalog (CSV + image URLs)
  • Build AI migration pipeline: pass each listing through Claude API → reformat title, description, tags for Yo-Kart schema
  • Filter out permanently sold-out products — only migrate what can be re-sourced
  • Bulk import via Yo-Kart API into staging
  • QA spot-check 100 random listings for accuracy
3
Days 22–30 · Checkout & Payments

Integrate the full payment stack.

Win condition: A test order can be placed and paid for via card, BNPL, and crypto on staging.

  • Connect Stripe + MidPay as primary processors
  • Embed Affirm + Klarna + MidBank split-pay at checkout
  • Integrate Changelly crypto checkout
  • Configure automated sales tax (post Italo affiliate)
  • Test full checkout flow across all five payment paths
4
Days 31–45 · Seller Acquisition

Recruit the first 25 founding sellers.

Win condition: 25 sellers signed up, 250+ live deal listings, first $1 in GMV transacted.

  • Build seller landing page with "List your first deal in 60 seconds" demo
  • Direct outreach to MidPay merchant base — offer free listing + zero fees for 90 days
  • Direct outreach to MidpointOne vendors — cross-list inventory
  • Build AI bulk-upload UX: paste a Shopify or Amazon URL → auto-generate listing
  • Build seller dashboard MVP: orders, payouts, inventory, deal scheduling
5
Days 46–60 · Deal Engine

Turn on what Shopify could never do.

Win condition: First daily deal goes live with countdown timer, group-buy threshold, and cashback offer.

  • Activate countdown timers per deal listing
  • Build group-buy minimum mechanic (deal unlocks at N buyers)
  • Activate daily deal carousel on homepage
  • Build cashback/rewards system (1-5% back per qualifying purchase)
  • SEO migration: 301 redirects from every legacy Shopify URL to new product pages
6
Days 61–75 · Soft Launch

Quiet public launch to portfolio audiences first.

Win condition: 100 paying buyer transactions completed, NPS measured, bugs fixed.

  • Soft launch to MidPay merchant list + MidpointOne vendor list (~500-1000 emails)
  • Promote first 10 hero deals across all portfolio brand homepages
  • Activate referral program for both buyers and sellers
  • Monitor checkout drop-off rates and fix top 5 friction points
  • Capture testimonials from first 25 happy buyers and sellers
7
Days 76–90 · Public Launch

Open the doors and scale seller acquisition.

Win condition: 100+ active sellers, 1,000+ live deals, $25K+ GMV in first 30 days post-launch.

  • Public press push: "The modern Groupon" positioning
  • Paid acquisition test: $5K budget across Meta + TikTok shopping ads
  • Launch affiliate program for content creators promoting deals
  • First quarterly retrospective: which mechanics worked, what to double down on
  • Begin Phase 3 planning: mobile app, expanded categories, B2B wholesale section
Section 10 · Financial Model

The math, three ways.

Three scenarios — conservative, base, aggressive. Each is backed by underlying unit economics. Every number ties back to seller count × deals per seller × average deal size × take rate.

Unit economics (per transaction)

Component Amount Notes
Average deal price (AOV)$45Based on Groupon Local average; will trend lower in early days
Platform take rate8%Lower than Groupon (50%), competitive with Etsy (6.5%)
Payment processing2.9% + $0.30Stripe / MidPay standard
Platform revenue per transaction$3.60($45 × 8%)
MidBank financing rake (on financed orders)+$1.20–$3.00When buyer uses split-pay or BNPL
Blended revenue per transaction$4.50–$5.00Assumes 30% of orders use financing

Three-scenario revenue model

▽ Conservative

Year 1: $108K GMV

Active sellers (EOY)75
Live deals (EOY)~750
Transactions/year2,400
GMV$108,000
Platform revenue$10,800

Year 3 GMV$750K
Year 5 GMV$3.5M
Assumes only portfolio cross-promo seller acquisition. No paid marketing scale. Conservative attrition.
★ Base Case

Year 1: $540K GMV

Active sellers (EOY)200
Live deals (EOY)~2,000
Transactions/year12,000
GMV$540,000
Platform revenue$54,000

Year 3 GMV$4.2M
Year 5 GMV$18M
Assumes portfolio cross-promo + modest paid acquisition test ($25K). Realistic given existing assets.
△ Aggressive

Year 1: $1.6M GMV

Active sellers (EOY)500
Live deals (EOY)~5,000
Transactions/year36,000
GMV$1,620,000
Platform revenue$162,000

Year 3 GMV$12M
Year 5 GMV$55M
Assumes paid marketing scales aggressively, TikTok Shop and Instagram integrations land. Requires outside capital.
Investor Read The base case is the most credible. The conservative case is what happens if seller acquisition stalls. The aggressive case requires capital we have not yet raised — the $1.6M GMV target in Year 1 assumes $25K+ in paid marketing per month by month 6. The honest answer is that we plan to base case and adjust upward only if paid acquisition unit economics prove out by day 90.
Section 11 · Risk Analysis

What could break this.

Every plan that hides its risks signals naivety. Every plan that names them and shows the mitigation signals a Founder who has thought it through.

Risk
Probability
Impact
Mitigation
Seller acquisition stalls below 75 in Year 1
The biggest single risk. A marketplace without supply has no value.
Medium
High
Pre-launch outreach to existing MidPay merchants (already in the family). Free listings + zero fees for 90 days. Founder-led seller acquisition for first 50 vendors.
AI listing migration produces low-quality output
If migrated descriptions read like AI slop, buyers don't trust the platform.
Medium
Medium
Human QA on 100% of migrated listings in first 30 days. Sellers can edit any listing. Test with 50 listings before bulk migration.
Groupon launches an AI seller tool first
Incumbent moves faster than expected; closes our window.
Low
Medium
Groupon's Q3 2025 results show they are focused on stabilizing core local deals, not new tooling. Our window is 18-24 months minimum. Speed of execution is our defense.
Yo-Kart platform proves to have hidden limits
Off-the-shelf software always has surprises at scale.
Medium
Medium
30-day evaluation before full commitment. CS-Cart as fallback. Source code access ensures we can customize anything blocking growth.
Sales tax complexity blocks multi-state expansion
Marketplaces are responsible for sales tax in most US states.
Low
High
TaxJar or Avalara integration via Italo's affiliate. Compliance built in from day one — not bolted on later.
Founder bandwidth — too many concurrent Phase 2 projects
DealSupplies competes for time with MidPay app, MidpointOne, SNVoip.
High
High
Sequence Phase 2 deliberately. MidPay app is #1 priority. DealSupplies waits behind it. Don't fragment focus across 7 builds at once.
Legacy Shopify SEO authority lost in migration
Bad redirects = Google penalty + lost traffic.
Medium
Medium
Full 301 redirect map from Shopify URLs to new product/category URLs. Submit new sitemap to Google. Monitor Search Console weekly for 90 days post-launch.
Section 12 · The Ask

What it takes to build this.

Honest budget. Clear use of funds. Specific milestones the capital unlocks.

Phase 2 Capital Requirement
$35K
All-in budget to take DealSupplies from current Shopify legacy to public relaunch on a modern multi-vendor marketplace, with 200+ active sellers and the full payment stack live by day 90.

Use of funds

$35K PHASE 2
Platform license, hosting, integrations
35% · $12.3K
AI migration + listing pipeline development
25% · $8.8K
Design, UX, brand refresh
15% · $5.3K
Paid acquisition test (Meta + TikTok)
15% · $5.3K
Reserve / contingency
10% · $3.5K

Milestones this capital unlocks

Day 30

Platform live in staging. 1,005 legacy products migrated.

Day 60

25 active sellers. 250+ live deals. First $1 in real GMV.

Day 90

Public relaunch. 100+ sellers. $25K+ first-month GMV target.

Year 1

$540K GMV (base case). 200 active sellers. Path to Phase 3.

Section 13 · Daily Practice

The plan is the document. The daily practice is the engine.

Most founders fail not because their plan is wrong but because they don't have a daily practice that produces seller relationships, buyer trust, and seeds for next quarter's business.

Morning · 15 minutes

1 · The Morning Compass

Before email. Before meetings. Before the day fragments.

  • Read the Why/How/What out loud
  • Say the 15-second pitch once
  • Write down the one hardest thing today
  • Do that hardest thing first

Anytime · 1 per day

2 · The Daily Conversation

One real conversation per day with a potential seller, buyer, or partner. Ask one of these three questions:

  • "What's the biggest pain in how you sell discounted inventory today?"
  • "Who do you know who has too much inventory and nowhere to move it?"
  • "What would have to be true for you to list a deal on us this month?"

Evening · 5 minutes

3 · The Daily Capture

Write down what happened.

  • Who did you talk to?
  • What did they need?
  • What did you promise?
  • What do you owe them?
This becomes the training data for the AI clone.

Weekly · 30 minutes

4 · The Mentor Ladder Move

One reach up. One reach down. Every week.

  • 15 minutes with a Mentor above (someone who has built a marketplace before)
  • 15 minutes with a Mentor below (someone you can help)
  • The ladder is the structural mechanic of how the Mentor Economy moves Founders up

From 30 conversations in 30 days,  expect 5-10 real seller opportunities and 1-3 paying transactions before the platform is even live publicly. The pipeline is built by conversation, not by waiting for launch day.

You are not starting from scratch. You are starting from altitude.

— The MentorMe C-Suite for DealSupplies.com