Monday, July 23, 2007

5 Online Millionaires You’ve Never Heard About

How To Tell Your Prospects What They Need To Know
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Maki Kaji - http://www.nikoli.co.jp/en/

Maki Kaji makes 4 million dollars a year … creating sudoku and kakuru puzzles. His private company, with just 20 employees, had annual sales of about $4 million in 2006. The core of his business is 50000 website members who test different versions of sudoku puzzles before the hit the market to determine winners. How many sudoku millionaires do you know?

Books Lambert - http://www.thebeerbelly.com

Books Lambert, who runs TheBeerbelly.com as president of Under Development Inc., is also someone who might have been viewed by some as having a less-than-perfect business model for his venture. But — after the press picked up on his contraption and he got 1 million hits to his fledgling site, as well as about 80 calls from offline media, including CNN and the like — he sold his electronics company, turned toward inventing full-time and his beer belly is jiggling as he laughs all the way to the bank. He just cleared a million. Lambert also uses a potent mix of marketing savvy and passion, spiced with some serendipity, to run his site. The Beerbelly, by the way, is a neoprene bag that fits under a shirt and can be used to avoid paying $9 for drafts at sporting events. This guy is my hero!

Patrick Misterovich - http://www.pezmp3.com

In July 2004, Patrick Misterovich was a stay-at-home dad when he read an article featuring an entrepreneur who had turned Altoid tins into iPod speakers. The idea inspired the 40-year-old ex-IT administrator to make a list of other possible candies and electronics that could be combined: laser pointers, Life Savers, USB drives. But nothing seemed to fit until he noticed “MP3 players” and “Pez dispensers” sitting idly on his list like two lost souls waiting for someone to play Cupid. The response has been positive, and current sales are at $1200000. In 2006, Misterovich sold out of his original production run and received approval from Pez to go forward with the second edition of Pez MP3 players, which have passed UL testing and will go into production early this year.

Jay Villemarette - http://www.skullsunlimited.com

OK, this is technically an offline business with online presence, but hear me out. Jay Villemarette cleans skeletons--mostly animal and human skulls--for a living. He owns Skulls Unlimited International and insists there's never a dull moment at the office. We'll take his word for it. After all, his company might be cleaning a gorilla skull one day and that of a chipmunk, a giraffe or a human the next. You probably wonder “Why would anyone want a skull, no matter how clean it is?" But museums, veterinary and medical schools, and other educational groups might take umbrage with that assessment. There are enough of these establishments, in fact, that Villemarette needs 13 full-time staffers and two part-timers and expects his company to break $2 million in sales this year.

Pascal Riffaud - http://www.primetimetables.com

New York restaurant booking service PrimeTime Tables - "specializing in impossible reservations" - has created a bit of a storm in the NYC/food blogging teacup. The service, touted as a very exclusive dining club, can procure members short-notice reservations at the hottest restaurants in New York, Miami, Colorado and The Hamptons, many of which are booked weeks in advance.


The company was founded by Pascal Riffaud, former concierge at hotels like the St. Regis in New York and the Ritz in Paris. Mr Riffaud also runs Personal Concierge International, a concierge service that can enhance its members' lives in many ways, including access to 'fully committed' restaurants. Premium membership costs USD 450 per year, plus reservation fees (free for reservations acquired the same day before noon), while non-members pay between USD 35-45 per booking, depending on how far in advance they book (48 hours - same day). Pascal just made his first million and has no intention of going back to his concierge job. I wonder why.


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Start-Ups Key to States' Economic Success

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New small businesses are the most important factor in driving personal income, employment, and other factors, research shows.

Start-ups are the single most important factor driving a state's economic success, according to a new study by the Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy.

The study, which was released Monday and examined U.S. Census data on small-business start-ups by state between 1988 and 2002, found their success or failure rates had a profound impact on gross state product, state personal income levels, and total state employment.

For instance, raising the number of small-business start-ups in a given state by just 5 percent tended to boost gross state product -- the sum total of a state's economic output -- by 0.465 percent, the study found. By contrast, a higher number of small-business closures tended to impede state economic growth.

Similarly, a 5 percent hike in small-business start-ups increased a state's employment growth rate by 0.435 percent, while raising personal income by 0.405 percent, the study found.

The study defined small businesses as those with fewer than 100 employees. Based on the median number of small-business start-ups across all 50 states per year, a 5 percent increase was equal to roughly 445 new small businesses.

"Every one of our models indicates that states with more new small firm establishments grow at a higher rate over time, even after we control for the level of economic activity and a variety of other factors," researchers said.

"Now more than ever, state policymakers should be aware of how their decisions affect small business," Chad Moutray, the agency's chief economist, said in a statement.

"Creating an environment that values entrepreneurship and risk-taking is sure to increase economic growth, personal income, and employment," Moutray said.
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Lousy Business

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http:// www.louseynitpickers.com/

For M. Evan Parker and Frank Campos, business is pretty lousy these days — and that's just fine.

The Pasadena pair started their in-home lice removal service, Lousey Nitpickers, in July, budgeting $8,000 to launch a website and buy a supply of hair care products, towels and nit combs.

Six months later, the company's revenue is still very small. And like most fledgling entrepreneurs, Parker and Campos face several tough challenges if they are to establish a sustainable and profitable venture, business consultants said.

But with sales steadily expanding, Parker and Campos are optimistic that their business will continue to grow, given the demand from frantic parents who discover their children have head lice.

The firm fields an average of 10 calls a day, some days as many as 25. Most are direct referrals from past customers.

"People don't tend to book us in advance," Parker said. "By the time they call, their child's been sent home from school and they want treatment that day."

Accommodating as many as 90 itchy customers a month can keep Campos, the firm's chief nit-picker, another full-timer and three part-time employees busy from 7 a.m. until 10 p.m., shuttling to homes across the Los Angeles area. The two men, who have known each other for a couple of years, found their nit niche after years in the hair care business. A licensed cosmetologist, Parker, 43, had earlier developed and marketed a line of hair products. Campos, 21, had worked at a children's hair salon in Los Angeles. Neither is a stranger to lice.

The bugs are as old as civilization itself, with references in the Old Testament to "the plague of lice." The insects pick no favorites or seasons and plague people of any age, said Vermont pediatrician Barbara Frankowski, who is chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics' council on school health. But infestations spread most easily among preschool- and school-age children who touch one another a lot, she said.

"Little kids hug each other and snuggle up close on the beanbag chair in the classroom to read together," she said.

The result: 6 million to 12 million Americans are infested with head lice each year, according to the National Science Foundation.

Given a permanent bull market for nit-pickers, Parker thought an in-home service would be a more cost-effective business than a salon with fixed overhead. His idea is not new. The LiceSquad is a similar service headquartered in Ontario, Canada, and Parker says wealthy families have long been able to afford hairdressers who will make discreet house calls.

He figured there would also be a market among middle-income families.

The strong demand for nit-pickers is also because of the development of so-called super lice, which have grown resistant to commercial and prescription products in recent years.

Lice have built a tolerance to insecticide-based shampoos because the products have not always been left in hair long enough or been repeatedly used as directed, Frankowski said.

That's why Campos and his colleagues rely more on painstaking nit-picking to end the infestation.

Parker initially expected that the company's printed materials and website, louseynitpickers.com, would be its best marketing tool. But by the third month, he said, referrals from customers and schools began multiplying almost as fast as lice themselves and now generate at least 40% of new customers. In hindsight, he said, he wishes he hadn't ordered so many pamphlets.

Jim Lee found Lousey Nitpickers — and his family's deliverance from weeks of lice — by going online.

Lee's 4-year-old, Karissa, started scratching first, in mid-October, then 2-year-old Micah and finally Monica, his wife, 40.

The family had tried a prescription shampoo and two commercial products to kill the pinhead-size critters. For good measure, Monica Lee cut several inches from Karissa's long hair. She also slathered her own long hair with mayonnaise and covered her scalp with a plastic bag, one of several home remedies some believe can suffocate the bugs.

When all that failed, Jim Lee searched on the Internet for lice removal services.

"I figured there's got to be someone who does this," said Jim Lee, 42, head chaplain at Oaks Christian School in Westlake Village. "And if not, I said I'll start the business myself."

Campos answered the Lee family's call, in an unmarked Honda sedan. (Parker said he frequently had to reassure embarrassed customers who ask, "You're not going to show up with a big louse on the roof of your car, are you?")

Typically, Campos inspects the head first to assess the degree of infestation, then he shampoos and conditions the hair before settling down to work with his nit comb.

The firm will make a return visit within 14 days in case a nit missed in the initial treatment has hatched. The nit gestation period is a week to 10 days, and getting every last one is key, pediatrician Frankowski said.

The service costs $150 to $200, depending on the number of infested people in the household and the length and thickness of their hair.

Desperate families such as the Lees who say they're only too happy to pay have pushed the firm's revenue to a projected $21,000 in the fourth quarter of 2006 from $12,000 in its first three months of operation.

Although Parker, Campos and Campos' sister are co-owners, Campos is the only one of the three who currently draws a salary from the venture. Parker still works for a hair care products company that manufactures a line of nontoxic, botanically based shampoos his nit-pickers use and sell to customers.

Parker hopes the business will support him full time after a couple of years but acknowledges that "the reality is you have to keep your day job for a while."

Their venture is a good example of how practitioners can apply their expertise to fill another, more narrow niche, said Peter Cowen, a Westwood-based consultant to emerging companies. But having a good idea is not always enough to expand their profits, he said.

Reaching their goal will depend on the firm maintaining solid gross margins, Cowen said. Without guaranteed repeat customers, he said, Parker and Campos need to keep a close eye on their ratio of costs to fees and explore opportunities to franchise or otherwise expand the geographic reach of their venture.

Profitable margins are just one requirement for success, said Ben Martin, an attorney who advises small businesses for the Loyola Marymount University Small Business Development Center.

"Cash supply is another big one," he said. "A lot of people think it's the amount of money a business has on hand," he said, "but it's also the timing — when cash comes in, when it goes out."

The firm's growth so far is, in large measure, because of Campos. With his ready smile and playful manner, the Los Angeles native has charmed many fidgety youngsters into sitting still for the hour or two a typical treatment takes and turned several of his young customers into fans.

One boy recently presented him with a wallet he made from duct tape. Another composed a poem.

Finding employees such as Campos is one of the business' biggest challenges. Parker relies on a number of online job sites, including Monster.com, to advertise for "service technicians."

"If we say 'nit-picker,' it scares them away," he said.

Securing liability insurance was the other major obstacle. Parker said he just wanted a general liability policy because the venture's risks were limited — "We're not using chemicals or sharp instruments." But until State Farm Insurance agreed to underwrite the firm, "nobody knew how to classify us."

A number of area schools have recently hired the company to screen students for lice. That service has quickly become a major source of new customers, Parker said.

Despite that demand, Martin warns that 70% to 85% of small-business entrepreneurs fail after two years. Many who shut their doors were making money, but not enough to earn a decent living. He advises Parker and Campos to be proactive: to use a bookkeeping system that shows them how well they're performing and to get outside advice.

"Business owners are often too close to the process," he said.

For the moment, however, Parker and Campos' venture often generates some awkward cocktail party talk.

"Initially people are really quiet when I mention what I do," Parker said.

"Then all of a sudden everyone has a lice story."

That's when they ask for his business card.

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How To Make Every Ad Dollar Accountable

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I am a strong, enthusiastic advocate of direct marketing. For most businesses, small or large, direct marketing consistently delivers the best results for dollars spent. We need to begin with an understanding of direct marketing versus other types of advertising, promotion and marketing. Let's talk first a little bit about the others.

There is institutional advertising. This type of advertising is often intentionally used by big corporations and blindly copied by smaller ones. It essentially says to consumers and/or to stock holders here we are, here's who we are, here's what we do and we're nice guys but it never asks anybody to buy anything or to take any action. It's image building.

Some examples you're probably familiar with include the Goodyear Blimp flying over football games, the IBM TV commercial seen during the Sunday morning news programs and during some sports telecasts, most bank advertising, Time Magazine's signs in airports, this is all pure institutional advertising.

Advertising agencies, consultants and the media love to sell you this type of advertising because there is no possible way to measure its effectiveness. Is it working? Is it paying for itself? Who knows?

The next slightly more sensible approach is what I call 'Non-Measurable Response Advertising.' This type of advertising is trying to sell something but is still basically unaccountable for its results. TV commercials for a particular brand of car fall into this category. The intent of those commercials is to get you interested enough in that car to go to the show room but there's really no way to tell how many people who came to the show rooms this week we're influenced by those commercials.

Would they have come anyway as a result of the dealers own newspaper ads? Who knows? Many smaller businesses get trapped using this type of advertising. Appliance, record, clothing, department stores all run sales ads - here's what's on sale come on in. But they have no means of determining how many people became because of the ads versus how many might of come anyway or how many came from an ad in one media versus the same ad in another.

They can guess. They can take this weekend's higher traffic less last weekend's traffic and attribute the difference to the ads but it gets worse. They advertise the sale via the newspaper, two radio stations and flyers. How do you tell what works and what doesn't? Again ad agencies and the media like to sell this type of advertising because it's difficult for the advertiser to measure the results.

Another type of marketing is public relations and publicity. There are firms who you can retain to prepare press releases and articles about your products or services and your company and work at getting them placed at various media. These firms may also arrange interviews and talk show appearances. Although you can measure them by how much actual exposure they get for you it's generally difficult to then measure how much business came from the exposure. Also in this category is the sponsorship of everything from a little league team to an Indy 500 race car or a golf tournament.

All three of these types of marketing probably have some place in a businesses total marketing plan. It is my firm belief, however that these methods are grossly and deliberately oversold to clients by media and professionals because of there resistance to results measurement. It is also my opinion that most businesses, the owners of small businesses and the executives of large companies stupidly waste outrageous sums of money on these non-measurable marketing options.

I would much rather see money spent where the results can be definitively and accurately measured so the changes can be made to develop successful response levels for every dollar spent.

Dan Kennedy, http://www.dankennedy.com/


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Is 'Anyone Can Do It' Just A Marketing Schtick?

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Any time someone says to you, "Absolutely anybody can do this" you need to hang on to your pocketbook.

I do not believe that "anybody can do..." any specific thing. At least not to a level that the world is going to richly reward.

Let's take some of the stuff I teach. Can anyone build a Google campaign, write ads that get clicks and make their CTR's get better and better with testing?

Sure they can.

Can anyone and everyone expertly build and manage $20,000 of clicks each month?

No. At least I don't think so.

The extraordinarily successful people in the Adwords game are the ones who somehow 'crawl inside' of the campaign and feel what all those numbers and columns mean... who are able to sense what those visitors are clicking on and why. They can look at somebody's ad campaign and in 10 seconds know whether it's put together right, or not. Those are the ones who manage $10,000 or $100,000 of clicks every month and make it profitable.

There's the doing of the thing, and then there's the Art Factor. The Art Factor comes into play when your heart and soul get connected to it, when you are able to crawl inside the thing and live in it and breathe it. If you can do that, you can pick up the art factor. Then you can master it.

One of my favorite scientists is Barbara McClintock. McClintock was a biologist who made startling discoveries that scientists are still ignoring today, 50 years later.

McClintock discovered that DNA, the helix that contains the instructions for assembling your body, is intelligent. It has the ability to re-engineer itself on the fly - in fact it's literally pre-programmed to re-program itself. This discovery was so radical that they thought she was crazy at the time and her insights are mostly dismissed even now. But McClintock was perhaps the first to understand that living things are organized by information.

The title of her biography "A Feeling for the Organism" refers to her ability to seemingly crawl down through her microscope and get inside the cell - not just observing what was visible, but what was implied.

Forty years later she claimed the Nobel Prize for science.

What world are YOU able to crawl inside of? Can you crawl inside your customers' minds that way? Can you imagine you're a web page, readers listening as you talk to them and you know how they're answering back? Can you become so absorbed with your customers that you become one with them?

Whatever microscope is so fascinating to you that you can crawl down inside it and imagine yourself living down there - if it's an audience that has money to give - that's the way you're gonna make a million dollars.

Will "absolutely anybody" be able to do what you do? Not on your life. You can't buy marketing for your business on a showroom floor the way you buy a car. USP's don't just roll off assembly lines every 45 seconds. There will be few who can rival you. And nobody will be able to sell somebody a road map to your pot of gold for $49.95 either.

If I could encourage you in any way possible, it would be this: To be patient with yourself as you explore and unfold the unique giftings that you alone possess, and to wrap those gifts and talents into your products, the services you offer, and your
marketing, so that NO ONE can knock you off.

The world will richly reward you for fulfilling that vision.

There are plenty of cubicle drones and paint-by-numbers people in the world... I hope you'll aspire to put out some of your own original pizzazz, put your own fingerprints on what you do. Do the thing that you alone can do.

To your success.

[Via Perry Marshall]


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E-Coupons 101: Offering Digital Discounts

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It's no secret that shoppers love bargains, and if done the right way, offering discounts can increase conversions and nurture customer loyalty. In fact, Forrester Research analyst Lisa Bradner's report "E-Coupons Engage Customers Beyond Discounts" shows that Web shop owners would be wise to ramp up their efforts in this area. "Half of coupon users who go online use Web coupons as well. They make more money, shop online more, and talk about new products with peers more than offline coupon users do," according to the report. One-quarter of e-coupon users said they like to try new products and services before others, compared with 13 percent of offline-only users, which shows they also influence others with their opinions. Thirty-five percent say, "People ask me for information about products, places to shop, sales," compared to just 20 percent of their offline counterparts. But how exactly do you get started? Scott Kluth, founder and CEO of CouponCabin.com, wondered the same thing. He likes a bargain as much as anyone else, which is how he got started in the online coupon business. "I noticed when I was checking out online there were these boxes for discount codes and I never had any," said Kluth. "If I've learned one thing in my career in retailing and the Internet, it is that people love the opportunity to save money. And they hate it when somebody else is getting a bargain when they aren't." To that end, he decided to help e-tailers make it easier to offer promotions through coupons by creating CouponCabin.com, an aggregator of consumer discount codes. In his three years of doing so, he's become keenly aware of what works — and what doesn't — when administering coupons online. We spoke to him to find out, and here are his top 10 tips:

  1. Mass Appeal: When creating coupons for the first time, merchants tend to forget that they must create coupons that appeal to a wide audience and are simple to apply. One of the most common mistakes is creating a coupon that is valid only for a specific product or product category. Alternatively, merchants will create coupons that appear general but actually include as many as 30 or more brand and product exclusions. In limiting the product range, merchants are also limiting potential customers.
  2. Keep It Simple: A complicated coupon code is another common problem among merchants using coupons for the first time. Many shoppers tend to write down coupon codes on paper before entering them, and long and complex codes leave room for error. "I've seen some merchants use codes that are 15 or 20 digits long and case-sensitive," said Kluth. "That's not good." Coupon codes should be short, simple and avoid using characters that can be misinterpreted.
  3. Parameters Beyond Price: It is a safe assumption that a greater discount will result in a higher conversion rate; but here are some additional best practices for creating effective coupons:

    • Offer a solid discount of at least 5 percent.
    • Keep the coupon generic to all orders or a category.
    • Establish a coupon expiration date to create a sense of urgency.
    • Use simple characters to avoid confusion when entering a coupon code, for instance, confusing characters may include "i" and "l" and "1" or "0" and "o."
    • Create a clear landing page recognizing the discount.
  4. Flat Rate vs. Percentage: Coupons offering a flat-rate discount in dollars, such as a $10 or $50 coupon, are very popular. These coupons tend to attract more clicks and have a better conversion rate for sites with average order totals less than $100. Alternatively, sites with an average transaction size more than $100 find that coupons offering a percentage discount, such as 10 percent off $100, often perform better. Finally, coupons that provide a discount with a low minimum purchase threshold, such as $5 off a $15 purchase, or even no minimum at all, such as $10 off any order, consistently result in high conversion and click- through rates.
  5. Don't Be Too Greedy: Merchants commonly try to create coupons with a minimum-spending requirement that is higher than their average order. By imposing such a minimum spending requirement, the merchant is subtly suggesting that the consumer add an extra item or two to their product order. An example might be a book merchant whose average order is two items totaling $40. Recognizing this average, the merchant would typically offer a 10 percent off coupon for orders of $60 or more, thus enticing the consumer to add another item to their order to meet the minimum. "A lot of times it's better to at least start out just using the average order amount," said Kluth.
  6. Free Shipping Rules: Free shipping coupons are also quite popular with merchants as they consistently perform well. With shipping costs constantly on the rise, consumers take advantage of free shipping coupons, particularly for sites that would normally charge in excess of $6 in shipping fees.
  7. Target First-Timers: Since new customers typically have larger orders than repeat customers, many online merchants now attempt to attract first-time buyers by offering them greater discounts. Whereas repeat customers may expect coupons offering 10 percent off their order, new patrons might enjoy a 15-percent discount for their first purchase.
  8. Click to Activate: Another rule of thumb is that user-friendly coupons lead to higher conversion rates. Overall, coupons perform better when they can be activated from the shopper's click, thereby skipping the step in which the consumer must enter the coupon code during the check-out process.
  9. Decoding Code: At check out, e-tailers that do choose to use coupon codes should keep their entry boxes clearly marked so that visitors can find them easily. Entering the coupon code or clicking on the link should activate the code and allow consumers to see their discount. It is best that the discount be seen as a line item in the shopping cart before they complete the transaction so that the savings are visible and the customer knows that the discount has been applied.
  10. Smooth Landing: Finally, coupons should be linked to a specific page. Merchants new to the world of Internet coupons will sometimes link a category-specific coupon to a generic landing page, leaving the customer to search for the discount or appropriate page. Instead, e-tailers should make every effort to link a coupon directly to a landing page that represents the discount. By customizing this landing page, sellers save consumers time and provides them with the assurance that their coupon has been activated. This simple task typically results in considerably higher conversion rates.

Michelle Megna is managing editor of ECommerce-Guide.com.


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