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Thesis · Verified leads

What a "verified lead" is — what we check, and what we don't

What Niixo delivers is a "verified profit lead." The words sound strong; the substance is mundane. What matters is being clear about what is checked and what is not (not guaranteed). Blur that line and you slide into "you'll definitely make money" hype. So, plainly:

1. What a lead is

It is the result of looking and matching: "this one item, sourced domestically and sold abroad, should leave positive take-home even after fees and shipping." What is sold is information, not the object. And there is only one unit.

2. What "verified" covers — three things

3. What we do not check — or guarantee

That it will sell at the same price in the future, that it will certainly turn a profit in your hands, that the listing clears overnight — these are not guaranteed. Markets move. So profit is shown as a conservative range, never as a claim. We don't use "guaranteed" or "anyone can." What was checked is a past fact, not a promise about the future.

4. Why it helps the buyer

Running one item through to take-home is quietly heavy work, and only a fraction of what you dig through stays in the black (→ what we found doing it ourselves). You buy that already-checked single item for a slice of the profit. And above all, a margin you've found disappears as someone else takes it while you wait. So securing it quickly, for one pro only, has value.

5. Three promises of honesty

If any of these three breaks, the word "verified" becomes a lie. That is why we guard it as the core of the business.

6. Currently in preparation

Trading has not started. We begin carefully, with a closed beta on a single corridor — JP → US eBay — first. If you're interested, see early access on the sourcing research (preparing).

The service is in preparation. Profit statements here are estimates based on past matching and do not guarantee future profit.