Posted by BJM | Under business, business opportunity, customer service, home business, work at home, work from home
Friday Nov 27, 2009
Temporary Help Agency
The high cost of maintaining a full-time employee contributes to the growth of the temp-help business.
Minimum Start-Up: $10,000
Average Start-Up: $100,000
Revenue; $100,000 - $2.5Mil
Profits; $25,000 - $250,000
One Person Business: Yes
Advancement in computer hardware and software enables companies to staff mean and lean, preferring to hire temps during peak seasons rather than lay off workers during slower times.
On any given day, over 1 million people work on temporary assignments. By 1995, trade statistics estimate that 1.25 million jobs will go by way of “temps”, creating an aggregate annual payroll of about $10 billion.
These figures suggest that the temporary help business is here to stay.
Unlike the temp boom of the late 70s, today’s temp-help has gone beyond clerical help, with 37% of placements involving professionals.
JOB MATCHMAKER
A temporary-help service acts as a matchmaker between businesses seeking temporary help and individuals who want a job.
The temporary agency pays the employee on a weekly basis a set rate, and in turn bills the business/client a predetermined rate, usually 10% to 15% more than was paid the employee.
START-UP HURDLE
If there is a single hurdle that makes starting a temporary-help agency “difficult”, it has to do with your ability to cover the payroll up front.
As a temp agency, the demand for cash flow presents a two-sided problem.
While you are expected to pay your workers on a weekly basis, you are also expected to extend your clients 30 to 60 days credit.
So while you’re waiting to get paid, you need to have enough cash to cover your payroll.
For example, if you place 10 workers at 40 hours each for the week, at a rate of $8 an hour, it would require $3,200 cash for the week. That’s $12,800 in 4 weeks!
To avoid this problem, it is advisable to hire your workers as independent contractors.
You can act as their agent, and collect your commission when they are paid.
Posted by BJM | Under advertising, business opportunity, home business, information, work at home, work from home
Wednesday Nov 25, 2009
All-Cruise Travel Club
Most Travel Clubs are organized on the premise of building a sizable membership capable of negotiating discounts with various ravel providers.
Minimum Start-Up: $500
Average Start-UP: 10,000
Revenue: $25,000 - $250K
Profits: $10,000/Month
One Person Business: Yes
The Travel Club makes money earning a commission every time a member purchases airline tickets, books a hotel room, or goes on a cruise.
Today, things have changed quite a bit.
SELLING MEMBERSHIPS
With a swelling membership basis it is difficult for travel clubs to ignore the profits of charging for membership, no matter how insignificant the amount.
With 10,000members, a travel club charging only $20 a year will earn $200,000 in membership dues. This revenue is over any commission the Club earns when a member travels.
SPLIT DISCOUNTS
A Travel Club normally acts as a travel agent for the exclusive use of its members. As an “agency”, it gets standard agent commissions from airlines, hotels and cruise lines.
This can range anywhere between 10% and 18% of the purchase price. What travel clubs usually do is offer its members a rebate equivalent to 50% of its commission (meaning 5% to 9% of their purchase price.
If the member spends $1,000, they will get back anywhere between $50 and $90. This is enough reason for people to join a travel club, especially if the membership dues are just $20 a year.
ALL-CRUISE
As todays market shifts from the “all-in-one” and “do-it-all” service companies to that of “specialized” services, so do travel clubs.
Based on industry statistics, the best area to specialize in is the Cruise business, the fastest-growing segment in Travel.
YOUR BUSINESS
Sell memberships to your All-Cruise Travel Club and offer rebates on all cruises and peripheral services the member books through the club.
Find products or services that you can give as bonus for signing up for a year’s membership.
You may even want to seek distributors who will purchase membership cards in advance, at 15% of the retail price.
This means that if the membership retails for $20, a distributor buys it from you for $3. If you sell 10,000 memberships this way, you’ve just earned $30,000. Then, add to this revenue from commissions when members take a cruise.
Posted by BJM | Under advertising, business opportunity, home business, information, mail order, marketing, reports, sales, technology, telemarketing, work at home, work from home
Monday Nov 23, 2009
Making Money With Voice Mail
Although this money-making is continuously being marketed as “a way to make money with your answering machine”, new technology has actually rendered this idea obsolete.
With the proliferation of voice mail, fax-back service, and very inexpensive computerized voice processing systems, the answering machine, with its limited one-call-at-a-time capacity, is no longer ideal for making money.
With the advent of this new technology, the concept has also expanded to a variety of processes which you can use to make money.
PEOPLE MUST CALL
With answering machines, the only way you can make money is when people call you up. Since an answering machine is hooked up to a specific phone number, and since it does not advertise on its own, you will have to establish ways to attract people to call your phone number so that people can listen to the message recorded on your answering machine.
THE MESSAGE IS THE KEY
The message recorded on your answering machine is the key to your ability to make money.
The message can instruct people to send money for information about any subject matter, or instruct callers to leave their name and address so you can send them a sales brochure. The information you have recorded on your machine should be encouraging and convincing enough to motivate the caller to do what you have instructed.
THE 1-MINUTE SPIEL
Think of your recording as a radio commercial. Since callers have short attention span, used to hearing radio and TV spots that are not more than 1 minute long it is advisable that you limit the length of your message to about 1 minute, 2 minutes tops!
GETTING THE CALL & COLLECTING PAYMENT
Whatever it is you are selling, and by which you are using your answering machine or service, your primary challenge will be in two areas:
- How you can advertise and make your telephone number known to as many people as possible.
- How you are going to collect payment for whatever it is you are selling.
SELLING THE INFORMATION
One of the most popular topics sold on “answering machine schemes” is information about how people can make money with their answering machine.
This is worn out and very unimaginative. More than likely, your caller will feel insulted and not order whatever literature, report or booklet you want them to order.
Remember, if you want to have a recorded sales message over the telephone, use a voice mail service, which may cost you around $8 a month.
Posted by BJM | Under advertising, business opportunity, desktop publishing, home business, information, mail order, marketing, reports, technology, work at home, work from home
Friday Nov 20, 2009
Producing Newsletters On CD
Brandel Communications is currently developing a newsletter that will be released on Compact Discs, mailed to you once every two months.
The subscription rate is $195 a year. (Our production cost: around $3 per CD. With 6 CDs a year, our total cost is $18 per subscriber.)
Instead of print or video, we have decided to tap the CD market, the fastest growing communications media.
Minimum Start-Up: $2,500
Average Start-Up: 10,000
Profit Margins: 50% to 75%
One Person Business: Yes
OPPORTUNITY SEEKERS
To offer a subscription to this (still unnamed) newsletter, we are running full page ads in opportunities magazines, as well as implement a direct mail campaign.
Our initial marketing thrust will be directed at individuals seeking to start their own business, or a second source of revenue.
The Biz Opp market is at a strategic crossroads where new economic opportunities intersect with our growing disenchantment with conventional employment.
This market thinks! And it is quick at recognizing new opportunities. This is why we decided that the growth of How-To CDs depend on the variety of titles available.
WE CAN REPRESENT & SELL YOUR CD TITLES
While we are selling subscription to our newsletter, we offer customers the opportunity to purchase other CD titles.
We also have a regular New Titles ad which lists new Power Guides and How-To CDs available.
Every time we send out a newsletter and a catalogue, we include your CD on our title list and orders are sent directly to you. We do not take a commission or a percentage of your sales.
Your customer’s orders and payments come directly to you. You fulfill the orders and keep the money. We will design and print your ad for you.
CREATE YOUR OWN NEWSLETTER
We will accept advertising from those of you who plan to produce your own CD newsletter.
Producing a newsletter on CD allows you to collect subscriptions in advance, which is extremely helpful in generating cash flow during your start-up stages.
Producing a newsletter gives you a continuing link with a market that shares your common interests. Consider also the interest factor for a newsletter in CD form is quite high.
Posted by BJM | Under business opportunity, home business, information, mail order, marketing, reports, sales, technology, work at home, work from home
Wednesday Nov 18, 2009
There’s Gold Inside Your PC
A friend once asked, “How was your life before Personal Computers came alone?”
Honestly, I can’t really recall. It’s been more than 15 years since I bought my first computer.
It’s very convenient piece of equipment which makes my work a lot easier. Everything I’ve done with it is work related. However, by itself, I’ve never really learned how to make money with my PC until I met this poker player from Las Vegas who earns an average of $15,000a month with his PC.
But best of all, with his idea, you don’t have to know a single thing about operating a computer to get into this business.
SHAREWARE & PDs
A shareware is a “sample” version of software. Individuals who write software usually “give away” copies of shareware so potential customers can “test drive” the product before they purchase the full version.
This “try before you buy” has made the shareware concept extremely acceptable, both by the people who design software as well as tens of millions of computer owners.
Public Domain (PD) software are programs developed without any copyright or patent assignment. Since it is Public Domain, any one can use it without having to pay rights to its designer.
FREE COPIES
The Las Vegas man researched some of the best sharewares and Public Domain software he could locate.
He bundled together 7 to 10 of them into a single floppy disk and started selling them for $20 & up.
He made several disks containing different varieties of sharewares and PD software. He sold the disks individually and as a group. He was making so much money you’d think he was doing something illegal.
One day, competition caught on and he needed a twist. A friend of his introduced him to me and I developed a new plan built around the same product he already has. Since other people started selling similar disks at the same price eh was charging, the competition started eating up his market. He needed something new.
What I did was design a gift certificate offering free software. We gave certificates to stores, libraries, and mail order houses to give away to their customers.
The certificates offered a collection of shareware and PD software - FREE OF CHARGE. Just pay minimal shipping and handling fee of $8.69. Since it cost him 69Cents to reproduce each disk, he makes an $8 profit per certificate.
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