Showing posts with label Entrepreneur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entrepreneur. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

The power of people: Genuine Networking Entrepreneur

We've all heard the expression "it's all about who you know" in some form or manner at least once. We all probably have different opinions on how much your network plays into the advancement of your professional life. We all have networks of varying sizes and degrees in our personal and professional lives.

I aim to ramble about networking. Here we go.

I often thought:

"Meeting new people and trying to make acquaintances for the purpose of financial gain (ultimately) seems disingenuous. I don't want to pretened to be friends or like other people just in case I can leverage my connection with them."

Networking can be genuine. By being genuine, you will network with other poeple you find interesting, and not necessarily because of their status or what you can gain from them. This means you will connect with people in your industry/niche/discipline, your levels of success will be roughly the same, and both parties will find the relationship valuable. Tongue in cheek smiles and feigning interest to try to force a connection will end up badly.

Guys and gals, life is short. There's a lot of amazing and interesting things to experience in life, but talking with even the tiniest fraction of the billions of people on earth is definitely worth it - People are interesting. Sure, not everyone will be interesting to you, but you should be naturally focusing on people that do. And sure, you may not be an "A" type personality - but that doesn't mean you can't be interested in other people and their work. I would be very surprised if you DIDN'T want to talk with and learn from other people trying to do the same or similar thing as you. You won't be friends with Bill Gates, but you can learn valuable pieces of information from almost anyone you meet.

I believe it's more about quality than quantity. You don't need a huge network of 100+ people. It's great if you are a graphic designer and only have graphic designer connections, but what if you had taken an interest in chatting with the python developer who's father needs a new logo done for his law firm?

Your network isn't everything and doesn't replace work ethic or product. It will just make your life as a business owner feel less lonely, make you more knowledgeable, and open doors for you. No amount of friends in management will get you a job/contract if you are bad at what you do.

How?

Be amicable and respect other people. This is a great rule to live by anyway.

If you want to "start" networking, just be inquisitive and friendly! Do it in person, on the phone, email, etc. and tell people why you think they are awesome, and ask them questions! People love telling their story. The internet has made this process very easy. Like someone's website, product, etc? Tell them and then ask for some time to chat. If you both find some value in your conversations and relationship, you both win! If either of you doesn't, that's ok!

Networking isn't a job - It will happen naturally due to your genuine interest in other people's work. You just need to reach out. There's not many things you can do to speed up networking besides going to conferences and meetup groups. One of your most beloved connections might be a friend of a friend that you happened to meet while shopping for a new refrigerator.

I urge you to go out and talk with people that are interesting to you.

TLDR; People are interesting. Life is short. Connect with people that interest you. It's invaluable to business.



Submitted August 24, 2017 at 12:58AM by 0verwork http://ift.tt/2wz2m1F Entrepreneur

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Product distribution 101 - advice needed Entrepreneur

Hi redditors,

I've got a pretty complex question but all opinions and advice are very welcome.

TL;DR: Thanks to a friend of a friend, my family got a chance to partner up with a small Italian frozen pastry/baked goods company and organize distribution of their products in the Czech Republic (that's where we live currently). It's an amazing opportunity not only to gain some money, but to learn about business - but I simply have no idea where to start. What we basically have to do is to make a list of local hotels/shops/restaurants which might be interested in buying and selling these goods, then contact them and strike a deal, and then organize transportation from Italy.

Sounds pretty easy, but I bet there's a lot of nuance here - and sadly I don't have enough time to read a couple books about international trade. Perhaps you can help me? A few questions to begin with:

  • Is there a way to gather information and contacts of potential customers quicker than just manually googling each and every freaking restaurant/hotel/supermarket around and calling/mailing them?
  • What might be other options apart from hotels and restaurants? Perhaps some large companies which sell frozen goods? (it might be a bad idea because they could refuse our deal and then contact the Italian company on their own, robbing us of the opportunity)
  • Selling stuff is an art in and out of itself. Are there any specifical problems/things we should definitely mention or know about when trying to sell frozen goods like pastries and cakes, or food in general? Should we offer them discounts of any kind? Are there any tricks companies use to negotiate better prices or generally get a better deal that newbies like me have no idea about? How to make the first contact - send an email, call them, turn up in person with a printed out catalogue?
  • What about transportation? We got prices for palettes of goods and the name of the town in northern Italy from where the goods will depart, but that's pretty much it. I presume they've got their own trucks with refrigerators, but even that's not known for sure yet. What are some troubles to be expected when organizing transportation?
  • Also, are there any websites/YouTube channels where these topics are discussed in a way that suits beginners, so I can jump into it with at least some basic knowledge?

Thanks a lot in advance, I appreciate any help.



Submitted August 13, 2017 at 04:51PM by darmanius http://ift.tt/2vutBsq Entrepreneur

Monday, July 31, 2017

Help eBay dropshipping? Entrepreneur

So what I've been doing is what I learned from a guy I follow on Instagram and Snapchat named Jeffrey Bunting. So what he describes he did as a teenager, and still does, is find products on Walmart or another website and list the same product on eBay and dropship it. I thought, what the hell, I could do that. So I listed three different products over a span of about a week and I'm getting a max of around 20 views and I've only recieved one offer for less than what I would have to pay. Am I listing the wrong products? I listed a tee ball bat, refrigerator water filter, and some cheap sunglasses. How can I get to where I can actually start making some money?



Submitted August 01, 2017 at 07:28AM by metalfungo http://ift.tt/2hiWsLg Entrepreneur

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

My Trump site blew up thanks to Reddit, how do I handle orders? Entrepreneur

Ok I bite off a lot more than I can chew last week! I posted GummyTrumps.com last week. Day 1 I had more than $8,000 in sales (cc sales only https://goo.gl/LQuQ9P). I was expecting only a few, 20 tops for the day and that would be pushing it. The numbers haven't been as strong since launch day, but I also haven't done anything since then as I've been hammered with orders.

The issue is I've dug myself in a hole. I am doing all these orders myself and it seems impossible to catch up. What's some advice on fulfilling all the orders I've been receiving? I make all the gummies myself and it's taking far too long to do all orders. To create gummies is quick, it's the cooling off in the refrigerator and packing that is a killer.

To top it off I made a huge mistake with international shipping. I somehow ran calculations prior to launching that shipping a package of these gummies would only cost around $3. Well come to find out placing the gummies inside actual packaging it runs up to $8 for outside United States. I include free shipping on all orders so I've been losing $5 basically for each international order. I just changed it yesterday to where international customers have to pay for shipping now.

The total cost is $15 for a customer. Domestic shipping cost $2.24 and Intl $8. Expenses per package is $2.63 and that includes both gelatins (flavored/unflavored), citric acid, packaging bag, and padded envelope. So it's around $4.87 in expenses which doesn't include ink, water, and paper note. You have to throw in the fees from Stripe (2.9% + 30¢) and PayPal (4.95%).

It has turned into let’s just randomly make gummies, to now this consumes my life and it's driving me crazy. I have to buy more pots and a separate refrigerator. Are my numbers right? Should I be charging more or less? Any advice on how to move forward with catching up on my current orders? I do not include tracking with orders as that is about 25 cents more expensive, should I start including that?



Submitted April 19, 2017 at 10:29PM by giftedhands81 http://ift.tt/2osEWCG Entrepreneur

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Dropshipping from China is not your only option to learn online business fundamentals without spending a fortune Entrepreneur

Hello, first of all I want to say that I have nothing against dropshipping business model, but most people are too hyped up about shipping products from China, so I've decided to put together a list of other things you can do to make money online without spending a fortune to start up and what advantages there are of using such models compared to dropshipping from China. That can still be done correctly, but NOT with 2h spent on product "research", website "setup" and no plan for the future.

Note: None of these are easy to do and require you to do proper research, put a lot of time and effort into it.


Here is a list and reasons why it's better than dropshipping from China:

1) Find dropshippers in US, Canada, UK or Australia and ship it from there much faster and with much lower competition = have much higher chance of actually learning stuff, because it carries lower risk. Not as many people are interested in dropshipping from these countries or aren't willing to put enough effort into the research of manufacturers. Either way, read my last sentence of the post above. Like I said, it can be done successfully, but requires you to still treat it as a proper business and put enough time, effort into this.

People are willing to pay 5x-10x or even higher price for a premium product or with a tag "made in US" if done right. For example there are watches that sell on Aliexpress for ~$3-5 a piece + some have free shipping, other's do not, but let's even say $7 (max) a piece. People sell them for $25 or so if shipped from China and have more issues with it than someone like MVMT watches that do thousands of sales a day at $125+ a piece with really similar style watches made in US (not all of them are made in US) and that are put in a much nicer package, have much better shipping times. There's nothing wrong with making a premium product made in US and I've been doing it for 7 years without having issues on a single one of my businesses. There have always been people with 3+ times lower product prices than what I sell them at, I don't really care because I'm not competing on price point when I have a lot of added product value.

Let's take something like influencer marketing now as an example. What do you think are the chances of influencers promoting your product that 100 more stores sell, where it arrives to them in a plastic bag with Chinese tags all over it and all the materials look low quality. You'd have to pay quite a lot extra for someone to promote that, which adds extra expenses as well. Compare that to them receiving a nice package with personalized note, english + many other language instructions and a unique product. That has 50+ times the chance to be promoted by an influencer than any of your bullshit $2 products from Aliexpress (i'm not including "influencers" that have grown their "following" with bots, follow automation or any of the other shit, because those have "followers" that are not converting at all).

Another thing - price. Let's say you can get that same watch I've mentioned before for $7 a piece. If you want to sell it at a competitive price, then it should be sold at ~$15, but for the sake of this let's give it a sale price of $25. Now take a watch from US that costs $20 to make + roughly $5 for nice package and shipping, but can be sold at roughly $100 because of high added value, not as much direct competition, much higher quality, much better presentation, shipping times, etc. So on the shitty $7 watch you have $18 to acquire a customer while for the next one you have $75. Yes, I do agree that the second option might have lower conversion rates, but you'd have way more profit in total (with same amount of time and effort used to sell both). Also you would advertise to completely different audience, but that's not my point. You can have much higher customer acquisition costs and still make way more money while actually building a reputable brand known for high quality products and not some shitty Chinese products. On top of that when people receive a better quality product, they can make return purchases in the future, so you'd spend remarketing budget much more efficiently than with Chinese products that noone is going to purchase again.

Let's take the highest converting advertising method out there (by far) as another example. That is word of mouth by friends / family members. Which product do you think people are more likely to recommend for their friends / family members? I think it's pretty obvious and I don't need to answer this. So that's a huge additional boost of highest converting traffic out there.

2) Create a digital product. This way the product is completely free (assuming you make it yourself). It can be as simple as a collection of ad formats, overlays or something like that on Photoshop. Really easy to do, just look at some samples and learn very basic use of Photoshop. Also you don't have to take care of shipping at all, so you stay in full control of all business operations while having much lower risk than dropshipping business.

It is as hard as having a dropshipping business and requires quite a lot of work (if not more) put into setup. The only difference - upselling a little, no shipping and 100% profit. People selling these will have higher conversion rates (depending on the niche, but usually it is), have no chance of getting their funds frozen by paypal, skrill, stripe or any other payment provider, because they are in full control of the product and don't have to worry about shipping. Additionally people wouldn't have 50 more businesses selling same products and directly competing with them with the same product pictures, really similar descriptions, same manufacturer, similar ads targeting same audience, etc. because all products are going to be made by you or someone you hire.

This also protects you from funds potentially being frozen by payment provider, all the hassle of shipping out wrong products, to wrong addresses (which you have no control of when shipping products from China).

Once again, coming back to influencer example. Since the product costs you nothing to make, you can literally give away products to as many influencers as you want, do giveaways on their outlets (blogs, magazines, social media, youtube, etc.) which creates a lot of hype = lots of sales. Best of luck doing the same with dropshipped items from China, where they'd arrive in a shitty way, are more than likely low quality and not as many people would agree to promote them + you have to spend some money to actually pay for the products and send them out.

I have tried sending my photo-related products to 150 people in 2 months since I've opened up. All of them have blogs with lots of photos in them. 102 of them agreed to work with us without any additional payment (i just gave away more copies for free to their readers). Some of these blogs brought in 100 sales, in total I've made 2900 sales in 1st 2 months without paying anything for it. (just a website setup and that's it). Once again, not saying it was easy at all to get in touch with them and to communicate, to select which ones to target, etc, but I've sold products with average purchase price at $63. You can make some calculations to figure out how much that made me. And 31 of them still work with me, have affiliate links now set up to my site and constantly talk about my products on their social media and blogs, bringing in 350 sales a month on average. I have not spent a dime to pay them for doing that (other than affiliate $ based on sales that come from their channels, but that wasn't in place during 1st promotion that all these bloggers have done).

Good luck replicating that same thing without paying thousands in advertising fees with Chinese product dropshipping business, not matter how much effort or time you put into the setup.

3) Sell affiliate products. Not much to be said. Once again, don't have to carry actual inventory, worry about shipping and still can make enough if you put the time to research on how to set this up properly. Doesn't even have to be Amazon product sales, I know some companies that pay up to 25% in commissions on their products, but they don't advertise it as much and you'd need to do your own research, outreach, etc.

We have never used PBNs, bots or anything of that sort in our entire lives, haven't done any blackhat, haven't set visitors up to buy any courses and at the moment we are in the most competitive niches online - esports, fantasy football, poker news (not selling any guides to be successful with poker, nor do we have any affiliate poker website signup links. We just report on news and earn through different kind of physical product sales).

Obviously we didn't start with these, but that's what we've grown to do. I have to admit that there are quite a lot of PBNs in this market and a lot of competition, that's why I've always said - most important and time-consuming step when setting up affiliate website - niche selection. If a wrong niche is selected or not enough time is put into it, then it might take you years to make anything, but there are niches where it doesn't require nearly as long.

4) Do some item flipping. Most basic model that doesn't require you a huge money investment.

This is how I started. In a little over 1 year I went from flipping phone chargers, to flipping cars and this is where I got my 1st money to invest into future businesses. It all comes down to effort and time you put into researching ways of doing this, researching products, etc. I know several people that do this on a much smaller scale and make ~$1k a month on the side (spending roughly 10-12h on this a week). They are not trying to scale it to to make it replace their work, but could do ~4-5k a month if they worked full-time. If that's no scalable, then I don't know what is. In a couple of months doing this on small scale, you can start doing cars and make usually ~1-2k per car sold. Once again, not saying it's easy or that it doesn't require time or knowledge, but it can be scaled.

If you wanna talk about things that have very low risk, then there are several ways of doing it without trading small-cost items. There are bigger items like broken washing machines, refrigerators that people do give away for free as long as you collect it from their place. You can take it apart, sell some parts, take the rest to scrap yard. Could also make a couple grand a month just doing this (a good friend of mine tested this) with 95%+ being profit, because you get items for free and all you pay for is gas. This isn't the only thing that can be done flipping items, but most people are too afraid to try or don't put enough effort into this.

5) Testing out a product and interest in it without actually having it manufactured. If done properly, it will show you how many highly interested people there are out there and you can make an MVP (minimal viable product) for usually a couple of hundred dollars, run with it, see how they actually sell. If they actually sell well, then you can start ordering more and more.

This can be tested with something like $10 or $15 in your pocket.


Once again, let me say that I have nothing against dropshipping from China, I just know there are better ways of making it work online with minimal investments. Also I've only used influencers as an example of why these are better than dropshipping from China. I could go on with similar stuff for social media, publications in blogs, magazines, organic traffic through search engines, etc. but then you'd have to read another 20 paragraphs on the topic.

NONE OF THESE ARE EASY TO DO OR RESEARCH!!!


If you have any questions, then send me a PM and I will get back to you as soon as possible.

P.S. There is no link to my blog, youtube or business? What is this sorcery?



Submitted February 01, 2017 at 04:17PM by im_pulsing http://ift.tt/2kQuBjm Entrepreneur

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Buying a local, small town coffee shop Entrepreneur

Hello!

In a few weeks I will be purchasing a local coffee shop in a small town in Ohio. This will be my second food business (sold my first in June) and I am looking for some advice from any other coffee shop owners out there.
Some of the shop details - Double espresso machine, two commercial grinders, double sided brewer, oven, panini press, refrigerator kitchen cart with cutting board, lots of coffee syrups.
It's set up in an old house with four different rooms as seating areas. Town has about 3,000 people and there is a college with another 3,000 students.

  • Best sellers?
  • Favorite espresso drink?
  • Busiest time of day?
  • Best advertising platform?
  • Any other advice you think would help a new owner

I appreciate any help and feedback!



Submitted October 18, 2016 at 07:15PM by gchapman20 http://ift.tt/2ehzdvm Entrepreneur

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Starting a grocery delivery service Entrepreneur

I am hoping to start a grocery deliver service.

Does anyone know the kinds of insurance I will need? Business permits? etc?

Does anyone know the types of insurance I would need to enter a property without the owners or renters being present? To stalk the refrigerator when no one is home.



Submitted July 31, 2016 at 03:08AM by SPF12 http://ift.tt/2amhuTQ Entrepreneur

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Owners of affiliate/product review sites, do you actually test out your products? if not where do you get information for reviews and ratings? Entrepreneur

Example: Someone is running a site out of their NYC apartment that reviews refrigerators, or handmade artisan toilet seats. I doubt that they are physically testing out each and every model that they may review. How do most people find data for sites like this and how much value do they provide to the customer?



Submitted January 26, 2016 at 11:32PM by casablunka http://ift.tt/1PAXU6d Entrepreneur

Monday, January 4, 2016

I have an idea... Entrepreneur

I was waiting for my Genius Bar appointment at the Apple store today and had an idea.

This idea is VERY raw and I want to start a discussion and learn if I'm crazy or if it has some validity.

Imagine your kitchen. Largely unchanged for decades, if not centuries. Basic functions of storing food, cooking food, cleaning dishes and utinsils are what it does best. Now, what if the the cabinets and refrigerator that store food could be eliminated? You'd think that that would be the primary benefit of this idea, but it's not. It would simply mean more storage for dishes/cooking utensils. But what if? What if you could get rid of all of the food in your kitchen? Where would it go you ask? How would you cook? Wouldn't it be nice not to have to store food, throw away containers, stock the refrigerator? Or worry about expiration dates and wasted money on food that's gone bad? How could we solve these problems?

Move the food to the basement or store room near an outside wall. Let me explain.

What if all food in your home was controlled, stored, measured, sorted and dispensed from a single robot like vending machine out of sight? What if when you wanted juice, you selected juice on your iPhone and it came out the dispenser in your kitchen? Imagine those coke machines that allow mixing of any kind of flavor but for water, milk, wine, beer, bubbly water, half/half, etc. Now when we start looking at solid foods like cheese, butter, bread, meat, etc. the solution is a simple dumb waiter like elevator or conveyor system that moves the order from the hidden storage and sorting machine/robot/vending machine into your kitchen for retrieval. Again, these are awesome things, but not even the best part.

Wait for it.

Automatic replenishment of your food - in bulk - without an appointment or without needing to track the inventory of your food, and without packaging - eliminating significant amounts of waste.

This is accomplished through the connected vending machine/dispenser communicating with the food replenishment company. When inventories are low, the delivery vehicle AUTOMATICALLY! comes and hooks up to the exterior food delivery ports on the outside of your home and simply delivers the food to the vending system in your home. The system records the new inventory and dates and you are billed for the service. No bags, no containers, no waste. The best part is that you don't have to be home!

Again, there are more benefits.

Lets say you aren't able to eat all of that heirloom tomato before it went bad. Never mind throwing it out, the system automatically blends it down into a slurry that can be disposed of through the sewer system. Boom.

This entire system could be controlled via your smart phone or tablet.

Some challenges to exist - integrating it into existing homes, setup costs, how the food would be delivered without containers into the vending system,

Discuss!



Submitted January 05, 2016 at 08:14AM by jcpoling http://ift.tt/1PJxC0e Entrepreneur

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

7 different styles of affiliate websites - A detailed look at each. Entrepreneur

I often get asked this question:

What is an example of a great affiliate website

Seems like it would have a simple enough answer, right?

Not entirely so. You see, affiliate marketing is JUST MARKETING. This means it can be applied to just abut any existing website and see some return.

But…

You definitely see website templates repeat themselves.

So I am going to take you through a few of these styles. But first, a brief introduction:

Who am I?

I am an online marketer who makes his entire income from a portfolio of websites. These websites are primarily monetized through various affiliate schemes and give me a lot of financial freedom.

Yesterday’s earnings for just one website: http://ift.tt/1Q4PuDa

Some of you will remember me from a case study I did last year where I grew a website from scratch to 4k/month in under 6 months.

This is an industry I know inside-out and wanted to share some of that knowledge.

Unfortunately, affiliate marketing is an industry plagued by “guru’s” like Pat Flynn and Spencer Hawes who actually know very little and make most of their income “showing you how to do it successfully” rather than doing it themselves. Spencer was so unsuccessful with his previous “monster authority site” (learnu.org) that he swapped out to white labeling.

Over the coming months I will be doing a series of posts on affiliate marketing analyzing parts of the industry in detail before launching a new case study where I will build a site earning 50k/month in under a year (hopefully), part time from scratch, without leveraging an existing brand name or influencer.

No strings. No advertisements. Just case studies based on my experience and opinion.

Why affiliate marketing?

Affiliate marketing has a low barrier to entry, low overhead and if done right, can be passive. The lack of overhead means that if you strike it big, you keep almost all the money you make (besides the taxman taking a chunk, but this will differ depending on where you are located in the world). No major costs except for your time.

It is a great starting point for beginners to dip their toe into online marketing. Even if your website is somewhat of a failure, you will pick up some very useful skills that are transferable to other industries. Whether a product or service, everything needs to be marketed.

Why start now?

The internet is very much still the wild west; plenty of gold and plenty of crooks. Those of you who think back and wish you took advantage of the .com boom will be doing the same 10 years from now about 2015. It is currently easiest it has ever been to rank a website without blackhat techniques, doing little more than adding value and solving problems.

It can be done. Many readers of r/entrepreneuer are running successful websites bringing in 3k/month with three even earning over 35k. Many of these people have zero experience in online marketing. They just stuck at it, provided quality and have been rewarded for their efforts.

With the intro out of the way, lets take a look at some common affiliate marketing style websites.

1. TWIB CLONE

What is it?

This is a style of website made popular by the website of the same name (thisiswhyimbroke.com) The reason for the popularity is the owner actually hosted an AMA on here and has spoken openly about the earnings in the past (cannot find the exact quote as it may have been deleted but at one stage he was earning 600k/year IIRC).

How it grew

Back in the day reddit advertising used to be cheap. Crazy cheap. Running campaigns site wide cost next to nothing. If you used reddit a few years ago you will definitely remember NSFW(allet) being smeared all over reddit. This ad was simple and incredibly effective, taking a commonly used reddit acronym and combining it with content that was instantly sharable and likeable. TIWIB was perfect for reddits core audience and meshed perfectly, resulting in huge brand awareness for minimal spend.

Pros of this style

  • Little work, easy to make a good looking website without being tech savvy.

Cons of this style

= Let’s get one thing straight, because of how little content is makes up a website like this, your chances of appearing on googles coveted front page is virtually zero. This means that social/influencer marketing is the only way you will be driving traffic and as you are no doubt aware, it is tough to start this from scratch.

How you can make it

Googling [Masonry Theme] will reveal many grid based themes and are perfect for those of you with basic CSS/HTML knowledge. Those of you completely clueless about tech can use webicator [ http://webicator.com/ ], a paid theme designed to imitate TIWIB with minimal input from you.

Examples of copycats

Too many to list. These literally pop up every day because you can have a site with products up and running in just a few hours. Some that have recently popped up include:

http://ift.tt/1Q742iM http://ift.tt/1Q4PuDc

Your chances of success

Little to none. The exception to this is if you are experienced in social media marketing or have a pre-built social following/email list.

But do not give up hope, if you can offer something new or unique then you can still see a good success. Drunkmall.com is a great example of this, making himself 500 from just one day on amazon through his website going viral.

2. The price table website

What is it?

A pricing table is a comparison of a few of the more popular products in any given niche. The pricing table generally appears above the fold on each page, so that it is the first thing a reader sees. Clicking any of the products in the pricing table takes the reader straight to amazon.

Underneath the pricing table will be a much more detailed write up on the products. This extra content helps with ranking on google but because the purpose of this style of website is to get readers to click the pricing table ASAP, the content is generally of poor quality, but this doesn’t matter since the majority of your audience wont read it.

Example: http://ift.tt/1NPfA9Z

This style has been around since forever, but went mainstream when Spencer Hawes used this on his survival knife case study. While this website is no longer available (tanked due to use of PBNs) the style lives on.

Pros of this style

  • Easy to set up on any theme, there are numerous pricing table plugins for wordpress that allow you to quickly and easily insert a pricing table at the top of your blog post.

Pricing tables convert like crazy

Cons of this style

= This style of website largely relies on organic search to drive traffic. This style is slowly going out of fashion

Example of a site that does pricing tables well:

http://ift.tt/107tCJI

Example of a site that does pricing tables poorly:

http://ift.tt/1NPfBKV

Chances of success:

Better. Because this style of website allows you to incorporate a large amount of copy into your post, it is more likely to be picked up by search engines. Quality is key and the sites that do well provide incredibly insightful content below the pricing table.

3. The top ten

Literally a website that revolves around posting the top ten [insert product here].

Example: http://ift.tt/1Q4PuDe

If you are even remotely new to online marketing you will be hugely aware of just how much users love lists.

Pros of this style

  • People love lists. Browse social media at any hour and you will see posts like “top ten ways to stop your ass eating your underwear” or “ten tricks to strike it rich through the power of raccoon hair”. List posts work and they work well.

  • While they may not convert as well as a pricing table, they still convert incredibly high since the whole subject of the page is promoting different products. Lists are quite easy to promote on social media if spun from the right angle.

Cons of this style

= It is difficult to do a list post well. All product images need to be sized and presented the same. Content needs to be on point and enough of it that it will get indexed by search.

= Done to death. If you are just listing posts like “top ten strollers” then no one will come.

Example of good top ten:

http://ift.tt/1NPfAa2

http://ift.tt/1Q4PuDg

Example of a poor top ten:

http://ift.tt/1NPfBKX

http://ift.tt/1Q4PuDh

Chances of success

You only get out what you put in. Top ten lists still work well for incredibly unpopular items (say epilators for instance) or if you spin the top ten list a different way say “top ten pet cages that are impossible to escape from”. “top ten beds” just wont cut it. The more effort you put into crafting each post, the more likely you will be to success.

4. The review site

What is it?

When you go to buy a product, you want to buy the best, right? The first thing many consumers do is look up “best [product here]” Or “[product here] review”.

A review style website consists of multiple pages devoted to single products. Scattered throughout these reviews are places you can buy these items (your affiliate links).

The good new is you do not need to physically touch a product in order to review it. Many MANY sites review products just using the pictures from amazon and rephrasing the reviews from the amazon comments section.

Pros of review sites

  • Sets you up as an expert in the industry, making it incredibly easy to market yourself to other influencers and bloggers.

  • If done correctly, builds trust with your reader and easy to build a social following.

  • Your audience is likely at the buying stage.

  • If you actually buy your own products to review it is a much higher barrier to entry.

  • Potential to earn HUGE.

Cons of review sites

= Requires second most work out of any affiliate style site. Your research needs to be on point and presenting misinformation will lead to readers calling you out for the sham you are.

= Requires you to know the native language in order to effectively get your opinion in the product across

= Must be able to convince others you have used the product, even if you have not.

= Difficult to build a social following around a product at first

= Must know your audience. If you do not answer the questions they want, they will look for the answer elsewhere.

Examples of review sites that physically touch the product:

Cnet.com Wirecutter.com

Examples of affiliate websites that rewrite amazon reviews:

Reviewmyshaver.com Weedeaterjudge.com

Chances of success

Better. The more you research and know your niche inside out and know your audience, the better your review will be. This style of website is all about providing value. The more details and information you can provide the better.

Writing more will see you likely get picked up by google (in conjunction with link building and marketing efforts) especially for long tail keywords.

Just don’t be fooled by how much work it takes to set one of these up.

5. The “premium” website

Basically a higher end guide. The focus is on a premium theme that looks up market with large detailed pictures. Do not be fooled, these websites are surprisingly easy to set up and use their good looks to woo visitors.

Example: hiconsumption.com

It is literally little more than big pictures, a few sentences and affiliate links. But the website SCREAMS premium. And because of this, it has built a loyal social following, a hoard of backlinks and appears quite well in google search (they often target “best [keyword] longtails.

It is amazing the difference an image makes. If you look at the image son hiconsumption.com all they have done is photoshopped the image onto a greyscale background but boy does it look classy. Take this guide for instance:

http://ift.tt/1HhdwCL

It’s little more than an affiliate list.

Gearpatrol.com does something very similar. So does manofmany.com. By building a loyal readership you can sell to the same userbase again and again.

Pros of this style:

  • Very easy to set up.

  • Looks great

  • Not overly difficult to build a social following

cons of this style:

= in order to properly present a theme a good knowledge of html, css and a little javascript goes a LONG way

= Photoshop skills are a must

= Social media game needs to be on point

= Need to be an expert at crafting compelling copy.

Chances of success

Worse. Who doesn’t want to get the same result with less work. While it may be simple to set up, driving traffic to a brand new website can be surprisingly difficult. Focus on long tails and unpopular products for a much need boost in google.

6. The cover-all

The cover all is literally a blog post that attempts to answer every single question a user may ask abut a particular product, service or everyday problem.

Cover-alls can be broken up into a entire site where each blog post answers a different part of the niche or an exhaustive 2-10k word article on a single product.

Example of a single page cover all:

http://ift.tt/1Q4Pvag

http://ift.tt/1NPfAa4

Example of a site wide cover all:

http://ift.tt/1KycKXR (this has since grown to include other things unrelated to shaving like workouts and house products).

pros of cover-alls

  • Allow you to really flesh out a niche, hitting long tail keywords by accident (trust me, it will happen).

  • Become an industry expert

  • Long form content currently does the best on google

cons of cover-alls

= Very time consuming

= Boring, especially when it comes to writing about niches you have no interest in

= Requires a lot of research

= Can be difficult to promote on social, particular for multiple single page coverall sites.

= Difficult to outrank existing coveralls.

chances of success

Better. As always, you only get out what you put in. To do a cover-all you have to research and write extensively about a product. If done correctly you WILL become an expert on what you write about, making it incredibly easy to pose as an expert when presenting your site to influencers and bloggers. Just do not underestimate how time consuming and boring this is.

7. Guru Websites

You know the saying “sell shovels in a gold rush” ? well guru websites do that. Although their shovels are more like pitchforks.

Examples include:

Nichehacks .com

Smartpassiveincome .com

And by far the most clueless:

Nichepursuits .com

If you want to check them out, remove the space before the .com but be warned, most of the info is complete rubbish (I have so little respect for these players I will not give them the benefit of a backlink from this post.)

These people all make the majority of their recommending programs and services to help you create a successful affiliate website.

pros of guru websites

= A minor success is all you need to claim to be a guru, the rest is smoke and mirrors.

= Affiliate programs for SAAS (backlink checkers, keyword finders etc) all have incredibly high margins

= Easy money, you are preying on those desperate to be rich that will eat up whatever you throw at them.

= Easy to get on the radar, guru websites are the easiest to pitch guest posts at.

= You will be able to fill your website with guest posts, less writing for you (largely how nichehacks .com operates)

Cons of guru websites

= You need thick skin and to be okay with lying to people

= You need to build a minor success to show off, or have some kind of in with online marketing (working for a big firm for example).

= Highly competitive industry

= Potential to earn is less than building a product-centric website.

= If you do not like to outreach this is not the industry for you, you will be required to piggy back off existing gurus for quick growth.

Chance of success

Worse. In what is already a incredibly saturated market, there is not a whole lot to add, since they are basically an extension of any online marketing blog with they key difference being that they reveal some figures along the way.

Here is someone who started recently:

Nichesiteazon .com is one of the newer “guru style case study” websites to pop up. Mike has since skipped his September income report (now that it is November), so I am assuming he has given up on it or his sites stopped earning (most likely the latter). He was last seen raging about his site being down on twitter - that’s what you get for using bluehost, mike :)

Despite mike being utterly clueless about online marketing (instead relying on PBNs to build websites) he was able to carve out a good income driven from his blog.

conclusion

These are the most common setups of websites that wish to take advantage of affiliate marketing. In reality your website could be a combination of any of the above layouts.

I recommend everyone at least try affiliate marketing. Reaching out to others to promote something you have made is a necessary skill that translates to almost any industry.

But before I leave:

Affiliate marketing is darn boring and draws on a wide range of skills:

  • Photo editing
  • Copy Crafting
  • Pitching to others
  • Seo
  • Basic coding (html, css, some javascript)
  • knowledge of hosting and cpanel
  • Learning to use a CMS (likely wordpress or drupal)

The good news is that you can pick this up as you go, learning valuable skills along the way. Just do not think that you can throw a website up and be rewarded with instant riches. Those days are definitely gone.

Affiliate marketing is hard work. It is boring. There is little sign of progress for months and you will have to spend hours sitting on you butt writing about things you don’t even remotely care about. It is definitely hard work but the gains (knowledge and earning) are potentially huge.

Case study update: I know I said I would start my new case study in November, but I am taking a month long vacation in December, which will see the entire month count for nothing and I am spending most of this month swapping out expired links and obsolete products in preparation for the Christmas period on my existing websites.

So ultimately I came to the decision to put it off off until January, so that I can dedicate a whole calendar year to it.

Over the coming months I will be doing more posts like this one, focusing on different parts of the industry, pending how this post is received. Let me know if you liked this post and want to read more.



Submitted November 04, 2015 at 10:24AM by Humblesalesman http://ift.tt/1NPfBL0 Entrepreneur

Saturday, October 10, 2015

How can I generate some extra money from an unused garage? Entrepreneur

Okay my entrepreneur brothers and sisters, I need some ideas on how how to utilize a detached garage to generate some income via a side business. The apartment complex that I'm moving into has plenty of parking and I have to have a garage with the apartment. I don't really care to park in the garage though. Below are some ideas I have in areas I am either interested in or have some knowledge on.

Side note: It's a higher end apartment complex and the garage has a separate door besides the main garage door. There are about 150 apartment units. I am comfortable spending $2,500-$5,000 on putting in some high traffic carpet, desks, a couch, TV, portable heater, portable AC, and I have a nice refrigerator and microwave already that I can use for the space. The space is roughly 10' by 22'.

Ideas for the space:

Basic office space rental.

Photography studio rental.

Sports lounge? Fee to come in and watch the game and the beer is free? I know this one is dancing around all kinds of liquor laws lol.

Computer repair business for the apartment complex.

Thanks for reading!



Submitted October 11, 2015 at 08:22AM by flashcatjones http://ift.tt/1LoILRI Entrepreneur

Monday, August 24, 2015

Product idea I was hoping to get some opinions on! Entrepreneur

Hi guys! This started off as a "how do I make a Proto type of this? " question but I'm also interested in a "what do people think about this idea?" as well.

My invention would be a chest of sorts that has both cooling and warming components built-in for storing blankets in. The thought came to me one night while my wife and I were struggling to fall asleep because it was so dang hot in our apartment and the AC just was not getting where it needed to go. I had luckily found a blanket underneath the bed that was still that perfect coolness and when I put it on I was out in under 10 minutes. I think a chest that you could have a blanket that was either nice and toasty or that perfect chill that you can grab whenever you needed. Also would be great for fevery kids or just reducing energy bills from not needing to run the entire AC unit

The energy required seems like it will be fairly low just because you don't need a refrigerator level of cold for the blankets. I know they have cooling blankets but I like the idea of being able to use your own comfy quilts and not needing to have it physically plugged in to use while I'm sleeping.

Thoughts?



Submitted August 25, 2015 at 02:42AM by daitenshe http://ift.tt/1NQkthX Entrepreneur

Friday, February 27, 2015

Been working on a new idea and wanted some opinions/feedback Entrepreneur


1) What is your product: little tiny square colored magnets used to create pixel art on a refrigerator or other magnetic surface. 2) What motivated you: I was drawing pixel art on the white board at work, thought this product must exist, went to buy it and couldn't find it. (I have since found other small competitors) 3) How long have you been working on it: On and off for 8 months 4) 6 month plan: finish getting quotes from suppliers, launch kickstarter, see how well it goes and re-asses from there. If Kickstarter is successful, approach thinkgeek 5) Most memorable experience: Making the prototype myself, and seeing the "finished product" 6) I haven't encountered anything YET that I would do differently


Samples: http://ift.tt/1BIH2Uk http://ift.tt/1DiHByR http://ift.tt/1BIH3aB


I welcome any feedback on the product, and will answer almost any questions you may have, I just didn't want to post an unneeded wall of text.


Product is so far un-named but I do have a few ideas being tossed around







Submitted February 28, 2015 at 01:56AM by Bissquitt http://ift.tt/1BIH3aG Entrepreneur

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

11 steps to making innovation work - An Experience of Guy Kawasaki Entrepreneur


Guy Kawasaki, an early Apple employee


How do you get innovation off the ground and really working in your organisation? Guy Kawasaki, chief evangelist of Canva, shared his working life experience in innovation as an early employee of Apple at the Gartner Symposium on the Gold Coast.


Here are his steps for making innovation work:


1. Make meaning


Don’t be lured into the false dream of innovation meaning big bucks. Do it to make meaning or to change the world in some way, and that should be your main driver behind innovation, said Kawasaki.


“I would make a case that if you make meaning, you will also probably make money. But if you focus on simply making money, you will probably not succeed. And you will probably not succeed because you’ll attract the wrong kinds of people.”


He gave some examples of successful, wealthy companies that have highly disrupted the world in some way through meaningful drivers. Google, Apple and eBay are companies that have all democratised their business and have broken down huge barriers to accessing information, computers and commerce, he said.


Because of Google, information is not limited to a select group of people, as everybody has access to knowledge being created every day. Apple’s computers weren’t just for the exclusive large companies and universities. And with eBay, now you don’t have to be a giant retailer to successfully reach a wide consumer audience to sell your stuff, as anybody can do this online, he said.


2. Make a mantra


A mantra is a two- or three-word explanation of why your innovation (product, service, company) should exist.


Kawasaki said mission statements don’t always resonate with everyone in the business, can be over the top and don’t always articulate the ‘meaning’ or how you want to change the world.


“I’m going to read to you a classic American mission statement: ‘The mission of Wendy’s is to deliver superior quality products and services for our customers and communities through leadership, innovation, and partnerships’.


“In all those times, eating cheese burgers, french fries and drinking cokes, it had never occurred to me that what I’m participating in as a customer of Wendy’s is leadership, innovation and partnerships. Forgive me, I thought I was just eating a cheese burger, french fries and coke. I don’t think most Wendy’s employees could repeat this mission statement,” he said.


Kawasaki said many times in the US he has seen a company hire out a high end hotel (which always seems to come with a golf course) for its business leaders to work together over a couple days on crafting a mission statement.


“We form cross functional teams with employees who cannot stand [each other] – you climb ropes together, you close your eyes and hold out your arms and fall back into your team mate’s hands … kumbaya.


"The next day, having now become best friends with people you couldn’t stand 24 hours earlier, you go to a small room where there’s a whiteboard and a magic marker pen and you craft your mission statement with the meeting facilitator, whose name is Moonbeam.”


Don’t do that, he said. What’s a more productive use of time is coming up with a mantra that is easy for everyone to remember and sets the tone of the meaning.


“The company is Wendy’s, and the mantra should be ‘healthy fast food’. And in America, when you absolutely, positively want something at some place, you use FedEx. ‘Peace of mind’.”


3. Jump to the next curve


“I learnt from Steve Jobs true innovation occurs when you jump to the next curve, not when you stand at the same curve,” said Kawasaki.


Back in '80s, when Kawasaki was working for Apple, people wanted it to progress to a “bigger, faster, cheaper Apple 2”. Instead of focusing all of its it’s time on Apple 2, the company created Macintosh, which in its time had “an ocean of RAM” at 128K.


Most companies define themselves in terms of what they already do, which is an inhibitor to innovation or jumping the next curve, he said. For example, ice harvesters didn’t invent the ice factories, and ice factory businesses didn’t invent the refrigerator, even though they are probably the best in the business to invent the fridge, he said.


“So if you define yourself as ‘we’re in the ice harvesting business’, you will not see the light of the ice factory business. And if you define yourself as the ice factory business, you will not see the light of the refrigerator occur.


“If you really want to get to the next curve, you have to jump to it. You can’t evolve the current curve, jump to the next curve,” he said.


4. Roll the dice


Any innovation needs to address a need and understand the pain points in people’s lives to make it compelling enough for people to value it.


One example Kawasaki used is MyKey. Having bought a Mustang to help him get through his mid-life crisis, he said, one of his biggest concerns when he travels is that his two in-experienced driver sons (ages 19 and 21) will get their hands on the car and have some tragic accident. MyKey allows him to program into the key the speed limit the car can drive when it is initiated in the car.


The completeness of a product or service also needs to be considered. People need to know you haven’t left anything out; that you have thought of everything, making it compelling.


“As a self-published author, let me tell you about the completeness of Amazon, for example. You write your book in word, you upload it and eight hours later it’s for sale. You have the cover. You get 70 per cent royalty, not 15 per cent.


“If you want to make an Audible version of your book - they [Amazon] own Audible - you write a description of your book, you put it out into the marketplace and the people who are professional voice actors respond. You set up auditions and listen to them, then you pick one of the voices.”


5. Don’t worry, be crappy


Don’t miss the boat by trying to perfect your product or service, just get it out to market and continuously improve on it.


The Macintosh in the '80s was an advanced computer for its time, but there were so many “crappy elements to it”, Kawasaki said.


“It was $2500, no software, small floppy, no hard disk to start. It came with a laser printer that was $10k, and it printed one sided. What a piece of crap, but it was a revolutionary piece of crap.


"When you have jumped curves, it is okay to ship with bugs and shortcomings. I’m not saying you should ship crap. I’m saying you should ship revolutionary products and services with elements of crap to it."


He added that people working in the biotech business should probably not follow this advice.


6. Let 100 flowers blossom


The application that you build your product or service for might not have the same application in the real world.


That’s okay, Kawasaki said, just roll with it. “Sometimes the ‘wrong’ people buy your product and service and they use it in the ‘wrong’ way.”


He gave an example of Avon cosmetics making products that are supposed to make skin “so soft”, but instead parents were using it as insect repellent for their children.


“What do you do? Do you start telling people ‘no, this is cosmetics…this is not about preventing mosquitos from biting your precious little jewels’. Avon are now making skin so soft product line extensions, all kinds of stuff, to prevent insect bites.


“You should be so lucky that your product or service is embraced and adopted in any way. Don’t be proud, let 100 flowers blossom.”


7. Polarise people


“When you create a great product or service, you will polarise people. Some people love what you do, some people will hate what you do. It’s okay,” Kawasaki said.


TiVo is an example that drives TV marketers crazy, he said. One day of the year in the US, Superbowl Sunday, is the only day he watches advertisements. For the 364 other days of the year, he skips right through them.


“That polarises agencies and large brands, because they are spending billions of dollars making ads. And guess what, people like me never see the ad.


“This should not be your marketing plan – piss people off. But the consequence of great innovation is polarisation. Don’t be afraid of polarising people, great things polarise people.”


Uber is another example of a company polarising people in the taxi industry and governments, as it is seen as a competitive threat.


8. Churn, baby, churn


Incremental changes are key, Kawasaki said, as once you release your product or service, you need to be prepared to go through many versions or changes based on customer feedback.


But before that, you need to ignore advice, he said. “Many people are going to tell you ‘you can’t do it, it shouldn’t be done, it won’t be necessary’. So you need to ignore those people, because if you listen to them, you won’t try it and you’ll never know.


“Customer feedback is great for helping you evolve something, but to revolutionise something people can only describe what they want in terms of what they already know.”


9. Valuable and unique


Don’t forget you can just be valuable, but then you have to fight in the market on price alone. And if you are just unique, it’ll be hard convincing any customers to spend any money on you.


Kawasaki pointed to Pets.com, first establishing potential to reach a mass market selling pet food online but not thinking carefully about how its business model offers more value than the traditional one.


“Here’s a taste of what it’s like to be an investor in Silicon Valley. There are 300 million Americans, one in four owns a dog, so 75 million dogs. Each dog eats two cans of dog food per day. That’s 150 million cans of dog food a day. Totally addressable market.


“And we are not talking about 240 days a year or business days only. This is B2C or more accurately B2D (dog). Every day of the year, dogs need to eat.


“We think it cannot be hard to get a mere 1 per cent of this total addressable market. This translates into 1.5 million cans of dog food per day. Let’s says we sell each can for $1 – that’s $1.5 million per day times 356.


“So now let’s look at inefficiencies in this supply chain. One inefficiency is obviously the retail. Why do people have to get into their cars and drive to the store to buy cans of dead cow? So let’s remove the retailer, and we can discount 20 per cent by doing this.”


However, one flaw to the pitch Kawasaki pointed out is the dog food is just being shifted to a warehouse, which means cost in delivering to people's homes. This means no discounts can passed on.


“And it’s less convenient because you have to be at home when [the delivery company] drops off the dead cow at your house. That’s why it was not unique and not valuable,” he added.


10. Perfect you pitch


One tip from Kawasaki that could make your pitch stand out is to get personal.


A little bit of innocuous cyber stalking on social media networks to gain information on your potential client’s interests and passions can go a long way, he said.


“I love to use pictures. This is a picture of a LG washer and dryer. I was speaking to the management of LG and thought ‘you know Guy, you’d be so clever if you’d taken a picture of your washer and dryer. That way you could start off the speech to say ‘LG, I’m one of yours’.


“When I was in Russia, speaking at a conference, I opened up with this picture [ of cannon balls]. My opening remark was ‘I had no idea you Russians, you really have big balls’," he joked.


When it comes to using PowerPoint, Kawasaki said a good rule of thumb is keep your presentation to 10 slides, 20 minutes of talking, and 30 point font size so an audience over the age of 20 can read the text.


Also, whatever you do, do not lose interest in your audience by reading any part of your slides word to word, he added.


11. Don’t let the bozos drag you down


Kawasaki has built up his immunity to ‘bozos’ over the years. He said there will be many times you’ll come across bozos or people who are clueless and ride off an idea without trying to investigate or understand it first.


The dangerous bozo is the one to particularly watch out for, he said. “The dangerous bozo is the winner bozo. A winner bozo dresses in all black, owns stuff that ends in ‘i’ like Lamborghini, etc. This winner bozo is rich, famous, powerful, visible, has lots of followers on social media. And you’re tempted to think all this equals smart. I think 50 per cent of the time it’s lucky, not smart.”


He said when a bozo tries to instantly ride off your idea, come back at him or her with examples of foolish, short-sightedness mistakes well-known technologists have made in the past.


For example, Ken Olsen, founder of Digital Equipment Corporation, in 1977 said: “There’s no reason why anyone would want a computer in their home.”


“This is dangerous bozosity. Ken Olsen was such a great entrepreneur, such a great innovator. But he was so successful on the [current] curve, he would not embrace and accept the next curve,” Kawasaki said.


Kawasaki also had his moments in being a bozo. About 15 years ago, he passed up an opportunity to go for the CEO position of Yahoo because he didn’t quite understand the business, it didn’t jump out at him right away. He also had a small child and a baby on the way, so the long commute to the office wasn’t appealing to him.


It was a hard lesson learned, but a valuable one. “I could have been the first CEO of Yahoo. It’s in some difficult times now, but [back then] it was at the start of Yahoo," he said.







Submitted November 20, 2014 at 01:15PM by mig29k http://ift.tt/1udxgix Entrepreneur