No. 01 — The morning brief
They need insurance, a bookkeeper, and a bank this week. We put their name on your desk the morning they file — before anyone else has it.
Cancel anytime · First edition not useful? Full refund · Sourced from public state records.
§ 01 — Why this exists
Every name in Fresh Filings is already public record. The State of Florida posts new business registrations every working day. Anyone can download them. Almost nobody does — they're a wall of fixed-width text most people never open.
So agents keep paying $40 a "lead" for names that have already been dialed ten times. By the time a new business shows up in the big data brokers, it has an agent, a bookkeeper, and a bank.
"A two-week-old lead isn't a lead. It's a follow-up to someone else's sale."
Fresh Filings reads the filings the morning they post, cleans them up, and sends you the new businesses in your counties — while they're still deciding who to call.
§ 02 — This week's edition
This is the kind of sheet that lands in your inbox — name, entity type, owner, city, and the state document number. Examples shown.
§ 03 — The readership
A new LLC needs general liability, workers' comp, and a commercial auto policy in its first month. You'd rather be the quote they remember than the fourth voicemail.
Brand-new owners haven't set up their books, payroll, or sales tax yet. Reach them in week one and you keep them for years.
Every new company opens an operating account somewhere. Be the banker who called before they walked into a branch.
§ 04 — The arrangement
Tell us where you write business. That's the entire setup — one reply, once.
We pull the state's daily record, keep only the fresh, active new businesses, and clean up the names and addresses.
The full week's list arrives as a plain spreadsheet — sorted, deduped, ready to call. You make the first move.
§ 05 — A note from the desk
I'm Noah. I built Fresh Filings after watching good agents lose deals not because they were worse, but because someone called first.
The information was sitting in a public file the whole time. It just wasn't readable, wasn't fast, and wasn't sorted by where you actually work. So I made it readable, fast, and local — and now I send it out every Monday.
No dashboard to log into. No app to learn. A list, in your inbox, of people who don't have your competitor's number yet.
§ 06 — Subscribe
Founding rate, held for as long as you stay. No contract, no setup fee.
§ 07 — On the record
Public records published by the Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz). It's public business-registration information — never private or consumer data.
The public record always includes the business name, owner name, and mailing address. Verified emails aren't always available; when we can confirm one, it's included. The name and address alone are plenty for a call or a letter.
Yes — that's the only setup. Reply after you subscribe with the counties you work, and every edition is tailored to them.
From the billing link in any receipt, or just reply to an email. No contract, no phone call, no retention maze.
Yes. Redistributing public records is permitted; we follow Florida's data-usage guidelines and never resell private consumer data.
Tomorrow morning, a few hundred more will file. Be the first call.