Kategoriak: All - automation - differentiation - advertisement - credibility

arabera Anthony Johnson 13 years ago

1920

The 4-Hour Workweek - Step 3: Automation

Developing a successful product involves several stages, starting with brainstorming potential ideas and assessing their viability without immediate investment. This can include reselling existing products or creating new ones tailored to specific markets.

The 4-Hour Workweek - Step 3: Automation

The 4-Hour Workweek - Step 3: Automation

Testing the Muse

Step 3: Microtest your products
Invest or divest

Rollout and automation

Test the advertisement

Drive traffic with Google PPC and track results

Use real websie to offer free downloadable material

Dry test with one-page site advertisement

Test eBay auction

Best the competition

Create a one-page advertisement emphasizing differentiators and product benefits

Use search term suggestion tools to find related/derivative terms for respective products

Figure out how to differentiate

Free or faster shipping?

Offer better selection?

Create a better guarantee?

Use more credibility indicators?

MBA - Management By Absense

Look like a bigger company
Do not provide home addresses
Set up interactive voice response (IVR) remote receptionist
Put multiple email and phone contacts on website for different departments
Give yourself mid-level title instead of Founder/CEO
Not all customers are created equal
Do not accept orders from common fraud countries
Offer a lose-win guarantee instead of free trials
Offer low-priced products instead of free products
Refer all potential resellers to an online order form that must be printed and faxed in
Raise wholesale minimums and require tax ID number to qualify resellers
Do not accept money orders or checks
Fewer options=more revenue
Do not offer international shipments
Eliminate phone orders completely and direct all prospects to online ordering
Do not offer overnight or expedited shipping
Do not offer multiple shipping options
Offer one or two purchase options
Replace yourself with scalable infrastructure
Phase III: Use bigger, more sophisicated outsourcers such as end-to-end fulfillment houses
Phase II: Add extensive FAQ and use local fulfillment company
Phase I: Do it all yourself
Remove the human element
Place yourself out of the information flow

Ensure that all outsourcers are willing to communicate among themselves to solve problems

Contract outsourcing companies that specialize in one function instead of freelancers

Outsourcing Life

Avoid common complaints
Send one task at a time, no more than two, and always prioritize
Tasks should be completed in no more than 72 hours (Parkinson's Law)
Request regualr status updates on tasks
Give precise directions
Make special request for type of VA you want at the outset
Aviod misuse of your information
Create unique login for VA for your websites
Never give them debit cards
Which VA to hire
Use a VA firm instead of solo operator
Get a trial first
Determined by cost per completed task, not cost per hour
Eliminate before you delegate
Refine the rules and processes before adding people
Unless something is well-defined and important, no on should do it.
Build a system to replace yourself
Get a remote personal assistant

Don't limit yourself, just ask if something is possible

Goal is to free your time to focus on bigger and better things

Finding the Muse

Step 2: Branstorm (do not invest in) products
Option three: create a product

Information products

You don't have to be an expert

Join ProfNet to be a quotable expert for articles

Offer to write 1-2 articles for trade magazines

Give one free 1-3 hour seminar at a nearby university, then at 2 large companies

Join two or three related trade organizations

Read 3 top selling books on your topic and summarize on one page

Do you have a failure-to-success story that could be turned into a how-to product for others?

What experts could you interview and record to create a sellable audio CD?

What skills are you interested in that you--and others in your markets--would pay to learn?

How can you tailor a general skill for your market ("niching down")?

License content or compensate an expert to help create content

Repurpose content that is in the public domain

Paraphrase and combine points from several books

Time consuming to replicate

20-50x markup

Sell only through one outlet (to avoid price wars)

Find a generic product that can be repurposed for a special market

Create new product prototype

Option two: license a product

Dealmaking intensive but high profit margin

Option one: resell a product

Easiest but least profitable

Pick two markets you are most familiar with that have their own magazines

It should be fully explainable in a good online FAQ

It should take no more than 3-4 weeks to manufacture

It should cost customer $50-200

The main benefit should be encapsulated in one sentence

Step 1: Pick an affordably reachable niche market
Be a member of your target market

Which of the groups have their own magazines?

Which social, industry or professional groups do you belong to?

Find a market, then develop a product for them
Goal: to create an automated vehicle for generating cash without consuming time