starting business online

...now browsing by tag

 
 

Considering An Internet Business? Why?

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Simple online searches reveal a plethora of opportunities hyping that they are businesses, but most are not businesses at all. They are variously disguised sales schemes offering commissions. However, the lure of independence and income, wrapped with the promise that an individual will become a “business owner” confuses many would-be entrepreneurs.

Most of these opportunities lack appeal for experienced owners of traditional brick-and-mortar and service businesses. I am one of those entrepreneurs, having owned several regular-old-businesses (furniture stores) before opting to go “Internet” and leave the rents, inventory and employees behind.

It didn’t take long to see that actual business opportunities online are pretty slim. The most obvious Internet opportunities left me cold. The idea of working in sales as an affiliate had some interest, until I discovered the tiny profit margins involved after deducting advertising expenses.

Sometimes the expense was simply the involvement of hours, days and weeks of work to make a tiny amount of money by referring members to a site. Other times, when a few hundred dollars of startup money was involved, I discovered an old-fashioned network marketing company lurking behind it. Those “Businesses” might appeal to a neophyte afraid of commitment and having low expectations. However, they are not fulfilling to someone who expects their business to support houses, cars and family.

So, the question is, are you really looking for a business, or simply a scheme to make some spare cash?

If you wish to have a business, then you most likely know that businesses require startup capital, risk, operating capital, marketing, advertising and a location to interact with customers.

On the Internet, your business location is most likely your web site. If you’re thinking that’s all you need, though, consider that without customers, you will have no sales. It is a misunderstood fact that on the Internet there is no good “Location” for a business. There’s no busy street corner, no affluent town. Each business owner must use marketing and advertising to draw customers.

The downfall of most Internet businesses is not lack of a good product, or having a sub-standard web site. If the business is well capitalized, and has not blown their entire budget on web design (that’s another story completely) their ruin is simply a lack of traffic due to ineffective marketing and advertising.

Very few Internet business opportunities stress marketing more than they stress their products, but I believe that they should. One way is to have a turnkey marketing system, where the owner can pay for all services. Some franchises offer that. (Consider national fast-food restaurants who all benefit from the same huge media campaigns.) Another way is to provide training so that each owner/operator can control their own ads and marketing, either by doing it themselves or by outsourcing.

Now, given the expense of advertising and outsourcing, anyone considering starting an online business should keep an eye on their bottom line. It seems obvious, but if your profit on a sale is $50, you shouldn’t spend more than $49.99 to get that sale. So, entrepreneurs must weigh their return on investment very carefully before diving into any new venture.

The other consideration is recouping your startup costs. In traditional businesses, it typically can take years before expecting to see a profit. Internet business startup costs usually involve heavy web site design fees, and then heavy marketing and advertising budgets. If you are a “bootstrap” entrepreneur, those costs can be minimized by learning and implementing many skills, and keeping outsourcing expenses to a minimum, but there is still expense involved.

So consider what you really want when looking to start an Internet business. You will need a web site, a marketing system and high-profit products. But most of all, you will need training on how to operate your business online. There are very few packages available which provide all of that for you, but they do exist.

See the solution that worked for me here.

Share

Which Way To Make Money Online Is Best For You? Really?

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

When you first started looking online for ways to make money, what did you find? Was it eBay or some other direct marketing site where you could sell things and hopefully get a profit? Or did you find affiliate sales programs where you could sell someone else’s product and get a commission? Or were you drawn to network marketing programs where you could build a sales team and get a piece of everyone’s sales? My experience here may surprise you.

Before I even turned on my computer, I had made up my mind that the only thing out there was eBay-type sales. Mass-marketing. That style of direct sales was totally easy to understand. After all, I had been shopping all my life! I understood that the merchant’s job was to find and stock products, and my job as a consumer was to buy them, and pay a higher price than the merchant did. The profit on the sale was a simple concept. So I spent hours and days and weeks trying to figure out what I could buy wholesale and sell online at a profit. That’s when my search took a twist.

I felt stuck. Everything I found either had too much competition online already, or else I just couldn’t see how I’d generate thousands of sales to make money on a product with only a tiny profit on each sale. So what was going to be the solution?

A friend of mine had started working with a network marketing company, and showed me how that industry worked. She was selling stuff that had high quality, some brand recognition, and didn’t have a lot of competition. “So why aren’t you rich?” I asked.

You should have seen the look on her face. I got an earful of how the markup on each sale she made was only a few dollars, but she’d soon be making money not only from her personal sales, but she’d get an override on the sales of every new salesperson she got working for the company. It made sense, until…

As you can guess, I signed up and tried it. Sales were a lot harder than I thought. Even though the company gave me a web site, it was really difficult to get new prospects to go to it. I soon found that the only sales I was making were to people I knew personally – not a single one from the internet! My hopes of an internet-based business were dashed. But there was a bright side.

All my efforts to sell online actually exposed me to a world of sales I never envisioned. I think it’s comparable to being a “door-to-door” salesman (except the doors are all online.) To start in that industry I had to buy my “sales kit” but the investment was small. And when I made a sale, the profits were about a thousand times bigger than a sale in my network marketing company. Why?

This was the hook. Profits. And an endless supply of product to sell without me having to stock them and pay for them in advance. And no sales- teams to build. (I really liked that aspect). And because the profits weren’t all being shared among a team, there was a whole lot more going to the one who made the sale. So who are they and how do they do it?

People who work in this industry were called “Affiliates” instead of “salespeople” and what they do is (duh) sell stuff for a company, and get commissions for doing it. They accomplished this amazing feat by a variety of straight-forward means, which mostly come under the heading of advertising. Advertising, as you know, is nowhere near as mysterious as marketing (which often seems like complex magic.) Affiliate sales were attractive for another reason, too.

Affiliate commissions can be HUGE. And the idea of not having to make thousands of sales, like in network marketing or mass-marketing (small profits) made immediate sense. At least it made sense to me…

When I told my network marketing sponsor (remember her?) about what I discovered, I thought she was going to blow up. Well, as I said, this made sense to me – but it didn’t make any sense to her.

She reminded me about all the money we were going to make sometime in the future, and how network marketing would keep paying us on our team’s efforts long after we stopped selling things ourselves. It would be sweet. Hmmm.

Well, so far I hadn’t seen the “team” residual money she kept harping about. But what became obvious — when she finally stopped quietly reading me the riot act — was that we’d be parting ways. The lesson from all this is simply that no one form of online sales will meet everyone’s needs and expectations. So here’s what I found.

Mass marketing and eBay-style sales may be great if you can figure out how to get and sell tons of stuff. Network marketing might be for you if you can figure out how to get lots of people to sell along with you. And affiliate sales may be your ticket if, like me, you’d rather get bigger (up-front) profits for your marketing efforts, and not have to build a team.

You can see the solution I’ve been happy with at http://www.youraffiliatelifestyle.com

Share

Starting Business Online When My Stores Went O.O.B. (Out Of Business)

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

You need to install or upgrade Flash Player to view this content, install or upgrade by clicking here.

Have you ever had a business fail, gone out of business and been faced with starting over in a new industry? I have been faced with that situation many times, and have always found a great solution. Here’s my story:

I am an artist and an entrepreneur. When I graduated from art school (MFA, School of The Art Institute of Chicago) over twenty-five years ago, I had no marketable skills, so I went to work at a job. That lasted about two years, and I realized that I had I really had to be an entrepreneur and make my own way by having businesses of my own. I have not had a real job since then.

What I have done is start many brick-and-mortar stores and other traditional types of ventures. Some thrived, some tanked. Some went through the entire cycle from startup to success to expiration. The last ones were a small chain of art galleries and upscale decorative accessory stores which I operated in Southwest Michigan and Chicago for seventeen years.

Of course, the economy slowed down and with that my businesses slowed down. I slid deeper and deeper downhill into debt just trying to meet payroll and finance the inventory, and finally I was forced to close them.

I tried MLM (multi-level-marketing) and was extremely disappointed with the results. After years of dealing with upscale merchandise and professional clients, selling low-cost items to masses of people held no appeal.

I went online looking for another business to start, but ended up disappointed. What I found were new versions of old-style MLM.

Then I changed focus. I began to realize that there were successful online businesses which did not follow that model. They also were not new versions of inventory-based enterprises like online stores.

I discovered a new internet business model.

As soon as I found out about it, everything started to change. Of course it took re-adjusting my ideas about how to do business, because I was used to brick-and-mortar. I didn’t know how to operate on the internet. But what I found was a solution to all that. I found training which allowed me to learn how to market successfully on the internet, and how to thrive.

I found a business model which was capable of restoring, and even going beyond, the income I was getting from all of my stores when they were going at full-speed profitability.

This new business model allowed me to start again in business without prohibitive startup costs like a franchise, without the limitations of territorial restrictions, without the problems of overhead, employees, inventory and debt and expenses which had dragged my stores into the ground. The new internet business model got me started in business again.

Information on the new internet business model can be found by signing in here.


First Name:
Email:

Share

23 Questions About Starting Business Online.

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Is starting an online business the answer to your future security?

Every day, owners of traditional businesses ranging from franchises to retail stores to real estate and financial offices are going online seeking a new business model.  They look to the internet as a way to escape the heavy overhead, geographic/demographic restrictions, and prohibitive start up requirements of their current businesses.

Another group has joined them in this search for a new business model, but for different reasons.  They are network marketers who are disappointed with the old-fashioned approach to marketing which is the norm in their industry.

Are you considering a such a change? Looking for a new way to run a business and work from home?

As a former owner of traditional brick-and-mortar businesses (Stores and an investment service) and a member of  both online and traditional network marketing companies, perhaps I can help you out.

You know, I get asked the same questions over and over and over again about doing business on the Internet, and have spent hours, days and weeks answering them.

From now on, I’ll simply refer every question to this blog.  You see, I made a series 23 videos and a download-able pdf report answering the twelve questions I get asked most often about starting business online, and eleven questions I think everyone should be asking.

Before I get going on this report, let me tell you that I am not here to try to sell you on any particular company. I have been associated with several online companies, and have taught marketing to people in more online businesses than I have cared to write down. These questions apply to all of them.

I just want to let you know the answers to some very basic questions that everyone seems to have about every business, and you can get the entire presentation by signing in here.

Here’s the twelve most asked questions:

· 1. Do I Need Computer Skills?
· 2. How Much Will It Cost?
· 3. How Soon Will I Make Money?
· 4. How Many Hours A Week?
· 5. What is Social Media & Do I Need It?
· 6. Can I Hire Someone To Do It For Me?
· 7. Who Will Help Me?
· 8. How Do I Get Paid?
· 9. Is It Legitimate?
· 10. Do I Have To Make Phone Calls?
· 11. Do I Have To Make A Website?
· 12. What Is Marketing?

And the questions which SHOULD be asked:

· 1. Am I Ready?
· 2. Can I Work Alone?
· 3. What Personal Traits Do I Need?
· 4. Do I Have Support?
· 5. Do I Have The Drive?
· 6. What If?
· 7. Am I Willing To Learn?
· 8. Is This About Love?
· 9. Will This Business Satisfy Me?
· 10. Who Will I Be Associating With?
· 11. Am I An Investor?

If you already know the answers, great.  You’re way ahead of where I was when I started looking online.  But if there is even one question you’re fuzzy on, go through the entire presentation.

Hopefully these videos and this report will help you out in your quest!

Share