Single listing
For one business with a selectable duration.
1 month
All amounts exclude VAT.
- Publish 1 listing
- Anonymous or visible contact details
- Save as draft possible
No payment before publication.
For one business with a selectable duration.
1 month
All amounts exclude VAT.
No payment before publication.
For regular sellers with several listings.
3 active listings
Billed yearly. All amounts exclude VAT.
No payment before publication.
When selling Licences, the listing should quickly show what is transferred, in what condition and under which terms. Licences need clear facts on scope of use, term, territory, transferability, restrictions and ongoing fees. Concrete information helps attract better inquiries without publishing sensitive details too early.
Licence agreement, rights scope, exclusivity, territory, term, costs, required approvals, documents and termination rights matter. These details help buyers understand the substance of the offer and decide whether an inquiry is relevant.
Potential buyers include manufacturers, retailers, software providers, franchise-like concepts and buyers wanting to expand existing rights. The copy should stay factual, avoid exaggerated claims and explain the commercial value of the asset clearly.
The handover should define licensor approval, documents, access, fees, reporting duties and usage limits. Depending on the offer, Sell product rights and Sell software can also be relevant.
Licence agreement, rights scope, exclusivity, territory, term, costs, required approvals, documents and termination rights matter.
Potential buyers include manufacturers, retailers, software providers, franchise-like concepts and buyers wanting to expand existing rights.
Yes. Direct contact details, internal data and sensitive documents do not need to be published in the listing.
The handover should define licensor approval, documents, access, fees, reporting duties and usage limits.
No. The listing should give understandable orientation; sensitive details can follow after a qualified inquiry.
No. company.ch provides listing, visibility and inquiries, but is not a contracting party and does not replace due diligence.
Yes. Depending on the offer, Sell product rights or Sell software can help cover the commercial scope more clearly.