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Q&A: The Answers
Posted by Scott on 3rd November, 2007 | 7 commentsQ: After you sold your businesses in the 90s, did you get bored? Did you wake up every day and wonder “What do I do now?” I’m launching my new internet startup at the blog world convention in Vegas, and I think there is a really good chance this one could get bought out one day. Its fun to entertain the idea hypothetically, but sometimes I think if I sold, what would I do with my time?
A: This is a great question. Short answer, absolutely! After I sold my sites in 1999 and was hired as an employee to work for the buyer, I lost nearly all of my drive. I had no perspective on how much or how little money I had, but I thought it was a lot (turned out later it wasn’t), and I was also no longer working for myself. This was a huge motivation killer. Before, I knew that all my efforts were going into building a business that benefited me directly. But working for an employer, with a fixed salary, made me depressed and lazy. I started playing a lot of online multiplayer games like Quake and Unreal Tournament and became a slacker for several months. It wasn’t really until I started seeing my money evaporate (due to the stock
But nowadays, I actually do have quite a bit of free time or “optional work time” because my business is setup to run by itself with the help of a great (small) team of people. If I don’t work, the business doesn’t grow, but it doesn’t fail either. I spend my free time relaxing, traveling, getting out on the road on my bike several hours a week. After you sell a business I think you have to get your head back into something rather than just not doing anything. Even if that means starting a local bakery or coffee shop business or something, anything to keep you occupied, or take risks and start that cool business that you always wanted to try but never had time for. I’m no longer in a survival mode where I absolutely have to work to live, mainly because my sites do run themselves so well, but I enjoy working to increase the company’s profits and overcome challenges. That continues to be fun and fulfilling for me.
Q: I was wondering, let’s say you do find a niche, need, or whatever as a business. Where do you find the developers, business partners, resources necessary to get it off of the ground?
A: It doesn’t cost a lot of money to launch most websites. There is a plethora of prepackaged software out there, for instance. Even highly customized sites with complex applications and custom backends are not all that costly to setup. That said, the more you know how to do yourself, the less it will cost you to launch. That’s why I recommend that all Internet entrepreneurs learn how to code – if you don’t have cash to hire coders, you can create the site yourself, it will just take a bit more time than hiring several developers to do it.
If you have a killer idea and absolutely need funding to get it off the ground, hire someone to help you write a business plan and go pitch it to VC’s in
And I really can’t overemphasize learning to code yourself, learning to do everything yourself, really. In my business, I know Perl and MySQL inside and out, I know server administration, HTML, web design/PhotoShop, I understand SEO, etc. I really don’t need to hire anyone to launch complex custom websites because I know how to do everything myself, though there are more talented coders/designers/SEO specialists out there than myself – those folks are “great” at their niches, while I am just “good” at everything. An SEO expert or a developer may be excellent at what they do but they probably don’t know how to launch a website from scratch, monetize it, and make a living from it. If you don’t have money to hire people, you just have to know enough about each of these areas to be successful, even though you may not be the greatest at each area.
Q: I have a PR2 blog which i am operating for little over a year now. I am looking for ways to monetization other than Adsense. The problem is, my blog has a narrow range of audience and it has a niche “Software Testing” for which it is very hard to find direct advertisers or relevant ” affiliates” program. Could you suggest something?
Q: Do you ever invest in other people’s start ups?
A: Not usually but I am open to anything. I would be more likely to buy someone’s site, especially one that runs itself like a forum or other user generated site.
Q: I’ve got a niche, a presence, a book, and a web site - and am trying to figure out if I need to move into fulfillment. My question - should I stay away from the fulfillment activities (receiving an order and shipping), allowing me to put my efforts into the sales, web and
A: If I understand the question correctly, you’re asking if you should process orders and ship them out yourself, or farm those tasks out to a third party. That really depends on how efficiently you can do the fulfillment yourself, how much time and money it will cost you, vs. a third party. If you’re a one man shop and have no plans to hire minions to do your order processing and shipping, then those tasks are going to seriously cut into the time you have to run the more important/higher level aspects of your business. I am a big believer in outsourcing those kinds of things – the key is to shop around and find an outfit that will do it cheaply and reliably. You might want to even consider outsourcing to a foreign country like
If you dropped Amazon and brought your book/e-book fulfillment and
If you can, I’d suggest keeping your book available at lulu+Amazon and adding a third cheaper fulfillment for PPC campaigns and other
Q: I’m not actually selling a product, or technically, even a service at Jetwhine.com. I’m really after raising awareness about portions of the aviation industry to people who need to know. How direct is the correlation between some of the traditional
A: I create sites that meet a need, I monetize them, and they almost always promote themselves. I do a small amount of niche advertising and I don’t do PPC campaigns. I’m also not trying to promote awareness. That said :), I think viral
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Thanks for the Q&A! I hope to see this kind of post again.
Great post. learn something new everyday.
I have the same problem as your PR2 blogger; however, I have two PR6 sites and one PR5 site.
I’ve been looking for different ways of monetizing them but everything I try seems to be a waste of time and effort. I’ve had several people ask me,
“how much money are you making with those PR6 sites?” Frankly speaking, it’s embarrassing to address the question.
The thing about having a PR6 site is that Google will obviously rank your content much higher than a PR2 site, but you have to have a quality, and a quantity, of SEO-optimized content. Then, your organic traffic should be high, and you’ll be able to monetize your site much easier than with low traffic.
So.. If you only have one page (your homepage) or a dozen pages, you’re not getting maximum organic search benefit from your site. For instance at Dealighted.com (PR6), we have thousands of unique content pages indexed, all of it generated automatically, and several thousand visits a day from Google.
I appreciate your reply Scott.
One of the PR6 sites have a couple pages ranked PR6 (actually a little higher than the homepage) and I have numerous internal pages ranked as PR5 and PR4 pages. The site gets several thousand visitors from Google per week. Btw, this particular PR6 site is a blog.
internet home business
This is a great opportunity. It really works and has longevity.
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