An Open Letter to Every Business Owner in Britain
"How a simple pixel on a national map is giving thousands of British businesses the one thing Google, Facebook and every tech giant has always denied them — a permanent home, matched to their exact postcode, with 40+ local business support resources they never knew existed."
Dear Fellow British Business Owner,
Let me ask you something uncomfortable.
How much money have you spent on digital advertising in the last 12 months?
Google Ads. Facebook Ads. Boosted posts. "Sponsored" listings that cost you a fortune every single month and vanish the moment you stop paying.
Now ask yourself honestly: what do you actually own from all that spending?
Not a thing.
Not one pixel. Not one listing. Not one square inch of the internet that is permanently, irreversibly, unconditionally yours.
Every campaign you've ever run has evaporated. Every pound you've fed into the algorithm machine has disappeared into the pockets of companies headquartered in California — companies that have never heard of your street, your town, your postcode. Companies that couldn't care less whether your business survives or goes under.
But here's what really keeps me up at night on behalf of British business owners.
It's not just the wasted money.
It's this:
I'm not talking about vague government schemes buried on a website nobody visits.
I'm talking about verified, real, accessible funding — matched to your exact postcode — that you have almost certainly never heard of.
In NE1 alone, there are 40 verified local business support providers available right now.
Forty.
How many of them do you know about?
If the answer is "not many" — or "none" — then you are not alone. And it is not your fault. This information exists in scattered council websites, half-built databases and PDF documents nobody can find. There has never been one place — one map — that shows you what support exists in your exact part of Britain.
Until now.
It's called Billion Pound Page.
And before I explain what it is, I need to tell you what it is not.
It is not a directory where your listing expires next year. It is not an advertising platform where your visibility depends on your budget. It is not a social media page that the algorithm buries when you stop posting.
Here is what it actually is:
One purchase. No renewals. No ongoing fees. No algorithm. No landlord.
When you claim your postcode pixels on Billion Pound Page, that patch of the map is yours. Permanently. Irrevocably. Mapped to the exact area where your business actually operates.
And every person who visits the map — whether they're in your postcode or searching for businesses near yours — can click your logo and land directly on your website.
Step One. You visit billionpoundpage.com, type in your postcode, and find your territory on the live UK map.
Step Two. You drag to select your pixel block — minimum 10×10 pixels — upload your logo, add your website link, and pay once. That's it. Your logo appears on the national map of British business. Permanently.
Step Three. Because you purchased pixels, you are automatically unlocked as a Kurios buyer. This means you gain immediate access to every verified local business support provider in your area — finance options, grants, workspace, mentoring, enterprise networks — all matched to your exact postcode.
Three steps. One purchase. Two things that money usually can't buy you: permanence and local intelligence.
I'm glad you asked that. Because this is the heart of everything.
Think about how Britain actually works.
Your postcode determines which school your children go to. It determines your council tax bracket. Your NHS GP is assigned by it. When you order anything online, the first thing they ask is your postcode. Your insurance premium — your postcode. Your credit score assessment — your postcode. Where emergency services send help — your postcode.
Your postcode is not an administrative convenience.
Your postcode is how this country identifies you.
And yet — in twenty years of the commercial internet — there has never been a national map of British business built around that fact. There has never been a place where you could look up SR4 or NE1 or M1 or CF10 and see which businesses belong there — permanently, visibly, with their logos planted in their digital home turf.
Google knows your postcode. They use it to serve you ads.
Billion Pound Page lets you own it.
Padocare didn't buy advertising. They bought territory.
Their logo sits on the national map of Britain — in their postcode — permanently visible to every visitor to the page. They can never be outbid for that position. An algorithm can never bury it. A competitor with a bigger budget cannot take it from them.
That is ownership. That is what £100 buys you on Billion Pound Page.
That progress bar tells you two things simultaneously.
First: this is real. People are already buying. Postcodes across Britain are already being claimed. Padocare owns NE1. Layla & Kays owns their patch. Real businesses, real postcodes, real permanence.
Second: 99.7% of the map is still available. Including, almost certainly, your postcode.
Almost certainly.
I'll tell you the honest answer, and it might make you angry.
Because local businesses don't have the budget to play by the internet's rules.
Google's search algorithm favours websites with thousands of backlinks, massive advertising spend, and full-time SEO teams. Facebook's algorithm rewards whoever pays most for reach. Every major digital platform is designed, fundamentally, for scale — which means it's designed for large businesses.
The independent café. The family-run garage. The healthcare staffing company. The barber who's been cutting hair in the same chair for fifteen years. The dressmaker. The accountant. The plumber.
These businesses are the backbone of every town and city in this country. They are the real economy. And the internet — despite everything it promised — has never properly served them.
It has served them adverts. It has sold them listings. It has rented them visibility, by the month, at ever-increasing prices.
But it has never given them a permanent home.
Until Billion Pound Page.
The average small business in the UK spends £3,000–£8,000 per year on digital advertising.
That money is gone the moment you stop paying. You own nothing. You keep nothing.
Billion Pound Page costs £100 minimum. Once. And that position is yours forever.
Every postcode in the United Kingdom contains a finite number of pixels on the Billion Pound Page map.
When those pixels are claimed, they are gone.
Not temporarily unavailable. Not going back on sale next quarter. Gone. Permanently owned by whoever bought them first.
This is not artificial scarcity invented by a marketing department. It is the physical reality of a map. The UK has a fixed size. The map has a fixed number of pixels. Each postcode area contains a limited block of that map. When it fills, it fills.
I will not pretend to know when your specific postcode will be claimed.
But I can tell you this: every day you read this letter and do nothing is a day someone else might read it and act.
And if they claim your postcode before you do — they own that digital territory. Not you.
You don't get a second chance on this. There is no "I'll come back to it next month." Next month, your postcode might belong to your competitor.
Minimum 10×10 pixels · One-time payment · No renewals · North East from £1/pixel
Pricing varies by region — because the map reflects the real economics of Britain. North East pixels start at £1 each (minimum £100 for a 10×10 block). Greater London is £3.34 per pixel. Yorkshire, North West, East Midlands all between £1.27 and £1.40.
Whatever region you're in, the offer is the same: one purchase, permanent ownership, immediate access to your local support network.
Once you purchase your pixels, they belong to you. Not for a year. Not until you stop paying. Forever.
Your logo will remain on the national map of British business for as long as Billion Pound Page exists. We do not expire listings. We do not rent pixels. We do not sell the same patch twice.
Your postcode. Your territory. Your permanent property on the internet.
I want to speak to something that doesn't usually get said in business writing.
You built something. You got up early and you stayed up late. You took the risk. You hired someone, or you did it alone, or you started from a kitchen table or a car boot or a spare room. You made something real in a world that rewards scale and punishes the small.
And you did it in a specific place. Your town. Your street. Your postcode.
That place is part of who you are. SR or NE or M or LS or B or CF — wherever you are, that postcode is not just an address. It is identity. It is belonging. It is the community that sustained your business and the streets your customers walk on.
Billion Pound Page says: that matters.
It says that the businesses built in the North East, in Yorkshire, in the Midlands, in Wales, in Scotland — they are not footnotes to the London story. They are the story. And they deserve a permanent home on the national map.
Before someone else does.
billionpoundpage.com
The national pixel map of British business. Permanent. Postcode-matched. Yours forever.
© Billion Pound Page · Sunderland, North East England
Questions? hello@billionpoundpage.com