Advertising degree plus one magic bean

Tell us what you want to sell. We help turn it into a page you control.

Ten Thirty Two helps people sell real products from static, SEO-ready pages on their own domain. No rented feed owns the shelf. No social platform gets to move the door. You type the request, approve the page, and keep the keys.

Organic all natural honey for sale

The clean version.

Local honey should feel local. A product page can collect ZIP code, jar size, pickup or delivery preference, and customer notes. Then the seller confirms price and availability before Venmo payment.

Open the Bella Bees marketplace
Organic All Natural Honey

Small-batch honey routed through real beekeepers. Ask for jars, cases, gift orders, pickup, or delivery. We check availability, confirm the quote, then send payment instructions.

Sweet enough to sell. Honest enough to explain.

Funny ad shelf

Original tiny comics for products that need a doorbell.

Panel 01

The product whispers from a cardboard box.

"I am artisanal, but I live under a folding table."

Panel 02

The website puts on boots.

"Relax. I have schema markup, a form, and just enough dignity to ask for a ZIP code."

Panel 03

The magic bean files a work order.

"Grow upward. Convert honestly. Do not say limited-time unless time is actually limited."

Panel 04

The ad degree adjusts its tie.

"Congratulations. Your honey is now discoverable without yelling at strangers in a comment section."

SEO comic wall

Strong little ads beating up bad little ideas.

Original comic bits for product pages, local SEO, quote forms, honey sales, creator pages, and all the weird places a real business needs to be found.

Search gobbledygook

"My product is amazing. It is called Product."

The ad degree coughs into a napkin. The magic bean whispers: "Try words humans use."

Domain ownership

"Can my page live somewhere I control?"

Yes. That is the shelf. Social media can be the flyer. Your domain is the building.

Honey search

"Organic all natural honey near me."

The page stands up, combs its hair, and says: "ZIP code, jar size, delivery preference, quote before Venmo."

Catalog panic

"I have products but no store."

Cool. We make a static catalog first. It is a table of contents with shoes on.

Video gravity

"My videos are scattered."

Embed them on your page. Add titles, summaries, links, and a next step. Suddenly the videos have a kitchen table.

Plain request

"I want this."

That is enough. The computer does not need a ceremony. It needs a clear ask and permission to build the first draft.

Zinn

A page is a field with a path through it.

People do not always need more noise. Sometimes they need a quiet place where the offer is plain, the form is simple, and the next step is not hidden behind twenty rented distractions.

Type it, then build it

Several ways a plain request becomes a page.

I wanted this

"Sell organic honey near Greenfield."

Then that becomes a honey order page with ZIP code, jar size, pickup or delivery, quote-first Venmo language, local SEO, and a receipt packet.

I wanted this

"Make my one-page site collect serious leads."

Then that becomes a focused landing page with a plain offer, proof, intake form, email route, thank-you copy, and follow-up notes.

I wanted this

"Use my YouTube videos without making YouTube my homepage."

Then that becomes a page with embedded playback, descriptions, titles, internal links, and a reason for viewers to visit your domain.

I wanted this

"I have a product but no catalog."

Then that becomes a static catalog with product cards, quote requests, search-friendly copy, structured data, and a workflow you can approve.

Your page, your shelf

We want to assist you in selling your products on a page that you control.

Bring GitHub, a domain, and the roughest possible version of the idea. "I want to sell honey." "I want to collect orders." "I want my videos and products in one place." That is enough to start.

Start the free page request