There’s a reason so many ordinary people have built seven-figure net worths through blogs, apps, newsletters, and small software tools. It isn’t luck, and it isn’t always genius. It’s arithmetic. Specifically, it’s the math of valuation multiples combined with the math of global market size.
How a business becomes a number
When someone buys a business, they aren’t really paying for the inventory or the desks. They’re paying for the future cash the business is expected to produce, compressed into a single price using something called a multiple. A multiple is just a multiplier applied to a business’s profit or revenue. If a business earns $100,000 a year in profit and sells for $250,000, it sold at a 2.5x multiple. If a similar-looking business sold for $750,000, it sold at 7.5x.
That multiple isn’t arbitrary. It reflects how predictable, scalable, and durable the buyer believes those earnings will be. A business that depends entirely on one person showing up every day and doing manual work tends to get a low multiple, because the cash flow is fragile. A business that runs on software, has recurring subscribers, and barely needs the founder at all gets a much higher multiple, because the cash flow looks closer to a bond than to a job.
This is where the 2.5x and 7.5x examples become useful, because they show how differently two businesses can reach the same million-dollar outcome.
The 2.5x path: content and e-commerce
Picture a niche content website or a small e-commerce brand selling a single product line internationally. Businesses like this commonly trade in the 2.5x to 3x range on annual profit, because while they’re real and profitable, a lot of the value is tied to one person’s traffic relationships, supplier deals, or content output.
To be worth $1,000,000 at a 2.5x multiple, that business only needs to generate $400,000 a year in profit. That sounds like a lot, until you go deeper. If the average customer is worth $40 a year, after costs, the owner needs about 10,000 paying customers globally, in a single year, to hit that number. Out of a worldwide internet population in the billions, even a tightly defined niche, say people who own a specific kind of musical instrument, can easily contain millions of potential buyers. Capturing a small percentage can make you rich.
The 7.5x path: software and subscriptions
Now picture a small software-as-a-service tool, a subscription app, or a membership community. These businesses often command multiples around 7x to 8x revenue or profit, because the income is recurring and the founder’s day-to-day involvement matters less.
At a 7.5x multiple, the same $1,000,000 valuation requires only about $133,000 a year in profit, roughly a third of what the content business needed. If subscribers pay $15 a month, that’s $180 a year each, so the founder needs fewer than 750 paying subscribers to clear that bar. Out of the global population of people online, the number of distinct micro-niches large enough to support 750 paying customers is enormous. A tool used by independent bakers, or youth soccer coaches, for example, could easily be used by 750 people.
Why the internet changes the denominator
The reason this math works at all is that the internet collapses geography out of the equation. A bakery can only sell to people who can physically walk in. An online tool, a digital course, or a subscription app can sell to anyone on the planet with a card and an internet connection. The addressable market doesn’t grow by a percentage, it grows by orders of magnitude, from tens of thousands of nearby people to billions of distant ones.
That shift changes what “a small slice of the market” means. A 1% market share sounds insignificant until you realize that on a base of a billion people, it’s ten thousand customers. Multiply a realistic price per customer by that number, then apply a market-appropriate multiple, and the seven-figure outcome isn’t a moonshot.
That’s the real lesson behind the 2.5x and 7.5x examples. The multiple tells you how much profit you need; the internet tells you how achievable that profit actually is, because your customers are no longer the people who happen to live near you. They’re the people, anywhere in the world, who happen to need what you built.