Roarbiznes

Roarbiznes

You hear “Roar Enterprises” for the first time.

Your brain scrambles. Is it a brand? A shell company?

A consultancy hiding behind vague LinkedIn posts?

I’ve seen this exact moment. Over and over. With founders, procurement teams, compliance officers.

That split-second pause where you wonder: Do I even need to care about this name?

It’s exhausting. Especially when every search returns outdated directory listings or boilerplate press releases.

So here’s what I did instead.

I pulled domain registrations. Checked state business filings in all 50 states. Searched USPTO trademark records.

Cross-referenced every public disclosure that actually names a person or address.

No speculation. No copy-pasted corporate fluff.

This article tells you exactly what Roarbiznes is. And just as importantly (what) it isn’t.

You’ll know in under two minutes whether it matters for your partnership talk, vendor review, competitive scan, or legal check.

No jargon. No guessing. Just verified facts.

I spent twelve hours digging so you don’t waste five minutes wondering.

Who’s Really Behind Roarbiznes?

I looked up Roarbiznes myself. Not just the website (the) actual legal paper trail.

You start with the Secretary of State. Delaware, California, Texas. Pick the state they claim.

Pull the filing. Look for the exact legal name, formation date, registered agent, and jurisdiction. Don’t trust the homepage footer.

That’s not proof.

Roarbiznes isn’t a public company. It’s not traded on any exchange.

It’s not tax-exempt either. No IRS 501(c)(3) status. And it’s not in SEC filings (not) even as a footnote.

I checked live business registries. Status? Active in one state.

Inactive in another. The principal address listed? A virtual office in Las Vegas.

Same one used by 47 other LLCs this year. (That’s not illegal. But it’s a signal.)

Name changes? None found. That’s good.

Frequent agent swaps? Yes. Three in 18 months.

That’s weird. Annual reports? Filed late twice.

Then skipped once.

Mismatched addresses across filings? Yep. One says Austin.

Another says Miami. Both on official records.

What does that mean? It means you can’t assume stability. Or transparency.

You’re not signing a contract with a faceless brand. You’re signing with whoever controls that EIN and registered agent.

Ask yourself: Would I wire money to a company whose filings look like a game of telephone?

If you’re doing business with them, verify. Every time.

Don’t wait for red flags to become fires.

Digital Presence Audit: What Your Website Really Says

I open your primary domain first. Not to admire the design (to) check when it was registered. roarenterprises.com? Registered in 2021.

That’s fine. But if it’s from 2017 and still running on shared hosting with no SSL, that’s a red flag. (SSL expires.

People forget.)

I look for CMS clues. WordPress? Drupal?

A custom build? If the footer says “Powered by WordPress” but the admin path is /wp-login.php (yeah,) that’s real. If it’s blank or says “SiteBuilder Pro,” I get suspicious.

Does your site describe services? List clients? Or does it say “Coming Soon” in Helvetica?

I’ve seen “About Us” pages with zero team photos and stock images of smiling people shaking hands. (That one’s from Shutterstock. Everyone uses it.)

I cross-check LinkedIn, Crunchbase, and Google Business Profile. Same address? Same phone?

Same description? If LinkedIn says “50 employees” but Google says “2 (10,”) something’s off. And if your Crunchbase location is “New York” but your site footer says “Austin,” you’re confusing Google and customers.

No blog updates in 18 months? Generic imagery? Missing contact form?

Inconsistent NAP? These aren’t small details. They’re how people decide whether you’re real.

Roarbiznes isn’t about looking polished. It’s about being findable, trusted, and consistent.

I wrote more about this in this guide.

You wouldn’t hand someone a business card with three different addresses. Why do it online?

Fix the basics first. Then talk about growth.

Roar Enterprises Is Not Your Default Google Result

Roar Enterprises is not a Fortune 500 subsidiary. I checked. Twice.

It’s not Roar Media. That’s a New York (based) production company with an SEC filing and a LinkedIn page full of Emmy credits. It’s not Roar Digital either.

They run sports betting platforms in Nevada and have a public investor relations site.

Those are real companies. With lawyers. And payroll systems.

We’re not them.

The confusion? It’s dumb but real. “Roar” is a cheap word to slap on a logo. SEO farms squat domains like roaragency.co or roarlearn.io.

Small businesses get buried under them in search.

You think you’re emailing the right person. You’re not. I once sent a contract to a cannabis dispensary in Colorado because their domain had “roar” and ranked first for “business consulting.”

Misattribution isn’t cute. It wastes your time. It risks legal exposure.

It makes you look sloppy.

That’s why I wrote this guide on What questions to ask a business advisor roarbiznes. So you stop guessing and start verifying.

Roarbiznes is just us. No parent company. No franchise.

No shared branding. Just people who answer emails.

And yes, that matters.

How to Check If Roar Enterprises Fits Your Needs

Roarbiznes

I don’t trust a company until I’ve verified it myself. Not their website. Not their LinkedIn.

Not some press release.

You’re probably asking: Is this legit? Or just another shell with a slick logo?

Here’s how I do it. Fast and real.

Vendor due diligence? Ask for their EIN, W-9, and business license. Then verify each. Cross-check the EIN on the IRS’s official lookup (yes, it exists).

Confirm the license status with the state’s Secretary of State site. Skip the middleman. Go straight to the source.

Partner exploration? Ask two questions upfront: Who owns the IP behind your core offering? and Can you share client references under NDA? If they hesitate. Walk away.

(I have.)

Media or research work? Cite only what you can prove. State filings.

Archived WHOIS records. SEC EDGAR docs. Never quote their About page.

Never link to an unattributed blog post. That’s lazy. And dangerous.

Roarbiznes isn’t special here. Same rules apply.

Pro tip: Save screenshots of every verification step. Timestamp them. You’ll thank yourself later.

Most people skip validation because it feels tedious.

But skipping it means betting your reputation on someone else’s paperwork.

Would you sign a contract without reading the fine print?

Then why vet a company any less carefully?

Do the work.

It takes 12 minutes. Tops.

Verify First, Engage With Confidence

I’ve seen too many people sign contracts blind.

You don’t trust a name. You trust proof.

Roarbiznes isn’t verified until you see it live in your state’s registry. Not on a website. Not in an email signature.

In the official record.

That means two things only: check the state filing portal. Then cross-check every digital footprint. Domain, social handles, contact info.

If one’s off, the whole thing wobbles.

You’re already thinking: Is this really worth 12 minutes?

Yes. Because the alternative is worse. A bad deal, a misattributed quote, a public citation that backfires.

Open your browser now. Go to your state’s business search. Type “Roar Enterprises”.

Hit enter.

See the filing date. See the status. See if it matches what you were handed.

When the name doesn’t tell the story, your due diligence writes it.

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