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Thursday, November 28, 2013

How to Start an Import/Export Business

What can you expect to make as an international trader? The amount's entirely up to you, depending only on how serious you are and how willing you are to expand. Annual gross revenues for the industry range from $30,000 to $200,000 and beyond, with an average of about $75,000. Some traders work from home, supplementing 9-to-5 incomes with their trading expertise. Others have launched thriving full-time businesses that demand constant care and feeding. Wahib W.'s export company has a staff of five that oversees multimillion-dollar contracts.
"There are tons and tons of opportunities for [export] trade," says Wahib W. "U.S. manufacturers are at least 10 years behind the clock in exporting." So the potential for growth is entirely up to you--as long as you're willing to put in the time.

Pricing Yourself

As an international trader, you're an intermediary in the buying and selling, or importing and exporting, transaction. Therefore, you have to determine not just the price of the product, but the price of your services as well. These two figures are separate yet interactive. Because you're a swimmer in the trade channel, the price of your services has to be added on to the product price, and that can affect its competitiveness in the marketplace.
Since the fee for your services will impact the success of the product, you may ultimately decide to change your pricing structure. You don't want to undercharge your client so that you can't cover your expenses and make a profit, but you don't want to overcharge and reduce the competitiveness of your company and the merchandise you represent.
Import/export management companies use two basic methods to price their services: commission and retainer. Normally, you choose one method or the other based on how salable you feel the product is. If you think it's an easy sell, you'll want to work on the commission method. If you feel it's going to be an upstream swim, difficult to sell and require a lot of market research, you'll ask for a retainer.
A third method is to purchase the product outright and sell it abroad. This is a common scenario when you're dealing with manufacturers who would rather use you as a distributor than as a representative. You'll still market the product under the manufacturer's name, but your income will come from the profit generated by sales rather than by commission.

The Commish

Import/export management companies usually operate on a commission basis of about 10 percent. These fees are based on the product cost from the manufacturer.
Let's say you're working with English lawn chairs, which cost you $110 each. Here's what you do: First, take the price the manufacturer is charging for the product: $110. Now multiply $110 by 10 percent, which gives you a commission of $11 per chair.
So your product price at this point is $121 per chair ($110 + $11). To come up with the final price, you'll need to add other costs to this figure: any special marking or packaging, shipping, insurance and any representative or distributor commissions that you'll pay to others in the trade channel, which we'll go over a little later. Once you've arrived at a final price, you'll check it against your competitors' prices (you did do your market research, right?). If your product's price is comparatively low, you can bump up your commission percentage.
For now, however, you can see that for every chair you or your trade channelers sell, you'll get $11. If you sell a thousand chairs, that's $11,000 for you!

Biting the Retainer

If the manufacturer can't discount her price sufficiently or if you feel that the product will be a tough sell, you'll want to ask for a flat retainer (the monetary kind, not the dental appliance kind). You'll pass all the costs of market research along to the manufacturer. By taking a retainer, you guarantee yourself a set income rather than one tied by commission to a "problem" product.
To determine what your retainer should be, you'll need to consider three variables associated with the performance of your services:
  • Labor and materials or supplies: This usually includes your salary or estimated salary on an hourly basis plus the wages and benefits you pay any employees involved in the performance of the job. To determine labor costs, estimate the amount of time it will take to finish a job and multiply it by the hourly rate of your salary and that of any employees you might use. You can compute materials as a percentage of labor, but until you have past records to use as a guide, you should use 2 to 6 percent.
  • Overhead: This variable comprises all the nonlabor, indirect expenses required to operate your business. To determine your overhead rate, add up all your expenses for one year, except for labor and materials. Divide this figure by your total cost of labor and materials to determine your overhead rate. Or use a rate of 35 percent to 42 percent of your labor and materials.
  • Profit: And the end result is: After all labor, materials and overhead expenses are deducted, profit can be determined by applying a percentage profit factor to the combined costs of labor and materials and overhead.


Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/41846#ixzz2lxXCKVi0

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

15 Underrated Apps Every Entrepreneur Should Use


Entreprenuer_apps
Whether you have a tech question or a fashion concern, there's probably an existing app that can help you out.
But frankly, with all the apps out there, it's easy to get stuck with the same icons on your home screen — and never so much as click on the newer ones that would benefit your business most.
That's why we asked 15 successful young entrepreneurs to share their go-to yet underrated app of choice. Here's what they had to say.

1. Lift

Jonathan MeadWe all know our habits ultimately determine our lives and destinies. The same is true in business. Our businesses are what we repeatedly do. My business partner and I use Lift any time we want to make a new habit stick. This could be anything from writing a thank-you note every day to something as simple as checking in to Basecamp. Since we both follow each other on Lift, it's easy to hold each other accountable and make critical habits stick.

2. WinStreak

Charles GaudetIf productivity and growth are important to you, Strategic Coach's free iPhone app WinStreak is helpful. You identify three "wins" you accomplish each day and set three wins to achieve tomorrow. This app helps you focus on what's important and the steps you need to accomplish to move toward your goals.

3. CloudMagic

Patrick VlaskovitsUntil Apple decides to make the search function useful for iPhone users, CloudMagic is an indispensable search engine for all your data. CloudMagic lets you search across Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, Dropbox, Evernote, etc., through one simple search box.

4. Venmo

Rameet ChawlaThe most under-utilized app right now is Venmo. The peer-to-peer payment system has yet to be solved, and Venmo provides frictionless transactions. We use it at the company. It’s free, it’s easy, and I’m surprised it hasn’t completely caught on.

5. Brook

Brant BukowskyMy favorite app is Brook (currently in beta). I love Twitter but don't have time to sift through all of the superfluous posts. Brook helps me focus on the most important updates.

6. Fleksy

Brent BeshoreFleksy is a fantastic app that allows you to type without looking at your smartphone screen. It saves me so much time, and every entrepreneur should be using it.

7. Full

kelsey MeyerFull just came out, and I'm already obsessed! It helps me set goals and track my progress. I've been using it for both my business and personal life.

8. TripIt

Ioannis VerdelisTripIt gives you the ability to organize your travels just by forwarding your booking confirmations to an email address. I don't know how I ever knew where I was supposed to be before I discovered this app.

9. Flowdock

doreen-blochFlowdock is a chat-meets-inbox tool that runs on most browsers and mobile platforms. The greatest aspect of Flowdock is its ability to allow my team to collaborate instantly on projects and emails. Flowdock also has team inbox features such as drag and drop, file uploads, activity streams that allow team members react to changes on projects immediately, message tagging, instant notifications and more. I'd recommend this app to any entrepreneur wanting to stay organized, especially as your team scales.

10. Gliph

Andrew SchrageGliph allows you to safely send private messages across a variety of platforms. It's perfect for confidential negotiations that must be handled electronically. It comes with document storage and encryption features as well.

11. Refresh

Adam RootRefresh crawls social networks to provide users with a dossier on anyone before you meet with him. In 30 seconds, I know the person's spouse's name, where he or she went to college and when we last met.

12. Audible

ryan shankAs an entrepreneur, you should always be learning and reading books. It's really hard to find the time to actually focus on a physical book. I've found Audible extremely helpful to listen to books while on the go.

13. Box

Derek CapoThe ability to edit files and securely them send to customers or staff anywhere in the world is truly priceless. With our Box subscription, we are able to see the progress of projects and give feedback to our staff from anywhere in the world using a tablet, phone, laptop or desktop.

14. Wunderlist

Jeff FernandezI use it to capture ideas and tasks for myself. It's gorgeous and performs well on both the iPhone/iPad and Web version. The Chrome plugin is very helpful as well. Whenever I have an idea, I save it to Wunderlist. I use it for personal tasks and ideas.

15. focus@will

sean ogleI started using focus@will a few months ago to help me really zero in during times when I need to be productive. The app uses specially formulated music to boost productivity by way of increased focus. I don't know if it actually works or if it's simply the placebo effect, but since I've been using it for the last two months, my productivity has gone through the roof.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

CHARTGAME The time-lapse stock trading game

 Play Chartgame


Do you ever wonder if a stock is going to go up or down? Don't we all!
There is a whole field of study, known as "technical analysis" that focuses on trying to find clues as to whether a stock is likely to go up or down based on its past stock chart behaviour. In fact, there are companies, such as Recognia based solely on doing stock chart analysis. Nobody claims to be able to predict accurately or reliably. But if you can predict right more often than wrong, you are already winning. It's comparable to being able to calculate your odds optimally in an online casino. So long as your calculations are better than others, over the long run, you win.
The field of technical analysis has many players in it. Personally, I'm trying to figure out, for my own purposes, how much merit there is to technical analysis. So I decided to build a something where people who profess to be skilled at technical analysis can test their skills.

How the game works

When playing Chartgame, the computer will present you with a random historical stock chart of an actual large cap (S&P 500) security, without telling you which company and time period the chart represents.You are then given the opportunity to reveal the stock chart one day at a time, selecting to "buy" or "sell" the stock at various times. After a maximum of one year is played for the security, the actual name of the company, and what time period the graph was for is revealed, and you move on to another stock chart for an unknown company and time period.
You are rated on how much profit you made over the days you were invested.
The computer compares you to a strategy of "buy and hold" on the stocks played. Your goal is to beat that.
More about how to play Chartgame can be found on the Help page

Do you have questions or feedback?
Email me at:  matthias@chartgame.com
Also check out my Home Page and my Woodworking website

How I Turned My Mediocre Website Into A Million-Dollar Business

I have a confession to make: During the entire 6 years I ran my hosting company, I pretty much stunk at marketing.
I’m embarrassed to admit that my hosting company’s website actually won a contest where the goal was to find a profitable hosting company with a terrible website. (The prize? A website redesign, of course.) Our Adwords strategy was never profitable. I even failed at promoting profitable affiliate programs to our clients, and I never built a list. Frankly, I was awful at anything related to marketing.
But we lined up client after client.
Many of you have asked me how we did this, and my two-word answer is “We listened.” While this is absolutely true, and you should take it to heart, it is time to explore that more in-depth. How exactlydid we get customers?

A Different Approach

I approached web hosting from a completely different perspective than most web hosting company owners. Most web hosting companies are interested in volume — that is, selling cookie-cutter solutions to as many clients as possible. This is the most technically efficient strategy. It fits in well with the logical minds of many hosting company owners.
Of course, the customers get marginalized in this situation. Tired of getting stuck in the morass of cheap hosting companies with terrible support, they would appear on forums like Web Hosting Talk, only to get caught up in the next frenzy of “Your first year for $7!” hosting craziness that erupted.
I quickly realized that cheap hosting wasn’t the market for me. Our profits were slim to none, and I was going to have to outsource our support to make any money. Cheap hosting only works with economies of scale. Unfortunately, it’s also what most people think of as “web hosting”, so many new company owners end up going out of business because they can’t make a profit selling hosting for a few dollars a month.

Finding More Profitable Customers

After doing a cost analysis, I realized our most profitable customers were in the $200-$300/month range. They were much harder to come by than the cheap hosting customers, but they also demanded less of our time.
In talking to these more profitable customers, I learned that they had chosen my business because we were pretty much the opposite of most of the “big box” hosting companies. Instead of offering generic “boxes”, we took the time to help them build out custom servers and solutions that suited their needs exactly.
Better yet, as the CEO, I took personal time to ensure they were satisfied — often following up with them a week or so after everything was installed, training my staff to address each customer by name, and even taking customers out to lunch and listening to them.
In other words, my business succeeded because we did the exact opposite of what most thought a company had to do in order to become successful in the web hosting world — offer generic solutions and cut costs.
In talking to other successful web hosting company owners, I learned that the ones with the consistently highest profit margins, the happiest customers, and the happiest staff did the same thing we did: added the personal touch to an industry so sorely needing it.

Taking This Lesson To Your Business

Instead of focusing on flashy websites and cookie-cutter solutions, what can you do to make your business stand out and be more profitable?
  1. Communicate with your customers frequently. The more often the communication, the better. Even if we were just working on a problem and hadn’t solved it yet, I trained my staff to respond and say we were working on it. This applies to any small business. Don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know, but I’m figuring it out” or “I will have the answer for you soon.” Clients appreciate communication, even when you haven’t solved their problem yet.
  2. Cherry-pick your customers. I relied on my instincts to help me pick customers. If at all possible, I tried to meet them in person before they ordered. If I couldn’t meet them in person, I’d get on the phone with them. During our first meeting, I felt them out. What were their goals in picking a hosting company? If they couldn’t see past our higher prices, I would tell them frankly, “If low price is your only objective, we’re not the best fit for you. We’re worth more, and here’s why.”
    I explained to every potential client that we would make a special effort to make sure they would be 100% satisfied. I had a great track record of closing the sale at those first meetings, because the customers knew they would be well taken care of. Do this at your first meeting with clients, too — if they’re focused on price, remind them of why you are more valuable than a low-cost competitor. If they don’t bite, you should be the one showing them the door. There are plenty more clients out there who are willing to pay more for someone of higher quality.
  3. Whenever possible, go for the more lucrative contracts. It’s easier to manage 2 customers at $500/month each than 100 customers at $10/month each, and both net you the same amount of revenue. What do you have to offer to drive your customer revenue up?
    My company had just 170 customers when we were acquired, but our average revenue per customer was around $425/month. 170 customers seems small, until you add up the numbers and realize just a few more customers would have pushed us over $1,000,000 a year in revenue. Best of all, we were able to service those 170 customers with as few as 4-5 employees. Imagine how many employees we would have needed to service the same amount of revenue with shared hosting: 5,700 $10/month customers!
As a small business owner or entrepreneur, your focus should be on consistently driving more and more value to your customers. Start with a target in mind. For instance, maybe you want $50,000/month in revenue. That’s 1000 customers paying you $50/month, or 100 customers paying you $500/month. What services or products can you offer to your customers so that each one will want to pay you $500/month?
If you don’t know, start taking your target audience out to lunch and asking them those sorts of questions. I guarantee you that every single small business that is in revenue and profitable has some problem or pain point that they would pay $500/month to get rid of. What are those pain points, and how can you make a replicable product or service that you can sell to 100 of them? If you take 10 lawyers or 10 accountants or 10 startup company CEOs out to lunch, they’ll tell you. Then build your company around that.
Stop killing yourself by creating a business that requires thousands of customers to be profitable, and start figuring out where your potential customers’ real pain points are. Then build your company as a solution to their problem. You’ll be making thousands of dollars a month sooner than you expect, and you will be far more sane. The best part? You’ll no longer feel compelled to spend all that money on a flashy website to make your business a success. :)

Monday, November 25, 2013

Learning To Code On The Street


It’s 7:33 AM. Leo is leaning over his laptop writing some practice lines of code while I sit nearby on leftover sandbags from Hurricane Sandy. It’s cold, but it is a great morning.
A little less than three months ago, Leo became an Internet icon when he declined my offer of $100 in cash in favor of learning to code. You can catch up on his story with this video interview. Every morning for an hour before work I meet with Leo to help him learn a software engineering language called JavaScript. As part of his agreement to code, he has a refurbished Samsung Chromebook to work on and three JavaScript books to study.
While there was significant criticism about the offer at the beginning, thousands have rallied around his story on Facebook in what has become the most loving and supportive communities I have ever seen online. What started one morning as a jogger ran by shouting, “Saw your story, go Leo go!” has now turned into daily encouragements, cheers, and even strangers walking up to share their excitement for what Leo is doing.
To “learn to code” is not the point. Learning to code is not a destination, it’s not an end result; learning to code is a direction. For Leo the direction is very simple. “We need to care about our planet,” he said as his goal in lesson four. Leo’s idea is to build a carpooling mobile app which counts how much CO2 emission you are saving, calling it, “Trees for Cars.”
He will be announcing the rest of the details as soon as it’s right (and he figures them out). I use this as the end goal of our lessons covering everything from database architecture to location services.
Leo’s direction is not just building programming an app. Leo has the drive to make a difference. Here I thought I was the one helping, but Leo’s goal is to help everyone many times over by spreading awareness to make the planet a better place. From coral reefs to declining forests, Leo has told me his one goal is to bring back public attention back to our planet. While I hope his app is very successful, his focus on the big picture is truly inspiring.
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Put yourself in Leo’s shoes. He walks four blocks to reach a place to charge his laptop and six blocks to use the restroom (in the opposite direction). He sleeps sitting up and sometimes, if it was a rough night, he is still asleep when I get there to find him draped over his laptop case to keep it safe. He must get food, stay warm, guard his things, and somehow manages to study a very difficult subject for hours with a cheery spirit.
Many times during this project, especially in the second week, I would have packed up and left if I were him. In the first week, we had to cover things like copy-and-paste, installing programs, and even basic email. Despite the huge mountain to climb he has stuck to it day-by-day. Each morning when I show up, he is there with a smile, “Top of the morning to ya’ patty my boy!” he often says, knowing I am Irish. Beyond being my friend, these sessions have become the best part of my day.
Seth Godin, startup guru, says there is always a “gap” or “dip” before you do something very big. The dip is the lowest point, the point when many give up.
“Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and watch him change the world.”
Two days before his interview with the Today Show, we hit the first major dip. When I arrived Monday morning for our daily lesson I found his hat on a bench and his cup knocked over with coffee spilled on the pavement. Immediately, I thought something was wrong. After talking to his friend, a traffic guard, and two policemen I discovered Leo had been arrestedfor trespassing on a public bench and was on his way to central booking. Despite presenting receipts to the arresting officers at the precinct, Leo’s electronics (cellphone, laptop) were also confiscated. Through incredible support, the Facebook community and many press outlets took his story to the public urging the NYPD to expedite his release with “#FreeLeo” started going up on Twitter.
Early Tuesday morning, 24-hrs before his interview with the Today Show, Leo was released on what I was told was an incredibly fast processing time — the Judge also taking a special case. In spite of being requited, due to a “clerical” error Leo’s laptop and cellphone were filed as investigatory, which means that it can take up to six months to be returned.
We were frustrated, but somehow the arrest was motivating, Leo had no laptop, no phone to test the app on. He also got sick, but remained un-phased. We continued studying off of the JavaScript books and he used my computer to continue when we had to have a machine.  I was told by the officer in charge of the arrest that a letter to the District Attorney would speed up the return of his laptop and cellphone. And in the meantime, a kind member of the Facebook community provided her Chromebook.
In Leo’s words to the Facebook community,  he wrote, “’Leo the Lion’ loves you all and it’s all going to be ok.” Of the two of us, he is definitely the more peaceful one.
The lessons are exactly what you might assume with two key parts: The first part is to focus on the mind. Due to our time constraint, Leo must retain the enormous amount of new vocabulary and memorizes using a trick from ancient Greek orators called “Memory Palaces.” This method was used by the Greeks to memorize entire speeches, hours in length, by visualizing a different room or object in the room for each part of the speech. For Leo, accessing rooms of JavaScript allows him to learn faster and to retain more.
The second is not a process or tool at all. It is the humanization of the process of learning to code. Imagine if you had a personal mentor to walk you through each line of code, someone who believes in you and holds you accountable, I believe this is something critically missing from online education and subsequently the free software engineering courses online.
In my mind, I see a social network for mentors and mentees. This is where you can only have one friend (your mentor), where you can layout your ideas together, do video sessions, and set up times to meet. I see it as a safe place, where coders are vetted for commitment, and students are truly eager to learn. This place is just a dream for me but dreams are made alone; it’s reality we have to build together.
I am asking for 10 software engineers who would be willing to choose from among the thousands who have emailed about Leo, asking to learn to code themselves. These software engineers would commit two months, one hour a day, to teaching one student how to build an app or a website in the language the engineer is comfortable with. Lessons would be conducted over Google Helpouts, Hangouts, or Skype, with every lesson recorded. Ultimately at the end of the two months, we combine and organize all 10 engineers sessions (400hrs of material) into a massive video database that anyone can explore and learn from for free. Upon reading this, if you feel called to help hundreds by truly helping one, pleasesign up.
Look at your clock. Leo is out there now in NYC typing on a small Chromebook. Winter is arriving and with it we are now racing time and the cold. A member of the community put it best, “Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and watch him change the world.”
PS: Remember this exact time, day, hour, and second when you got to this point. If you are an engineer and want to teach, we are using that as your “Guardian ID” (Monday Oct. 21, 2013 11:53:21 AM = 10212013115321). It’s a very important time, it’s the moment when you decided to help. Thank you.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

10 Positive Signs That You Are Going to Be An Entrepreneur

1. You see opportunities everywhere

You can’t help yourself: you see the potential in every thing and every person. When you wake up in the morning, you’re raring to go because there are ideas to think up, tasks to set into motion, and businesses to be built.

2. You like to scratch your own itch and solve problems

When you see something that could be done better or a massive problem, you’re not afraid to step up to the plate to solve it. That usually means creating something that solves other people’s problems, too. In turn, these solutions can take on a life of their own and become businesses that make an dent in the industry.

3. You think of something and immediately look for how it could turn into a business

Maybe you like to think up new stories. Or you’re great at coming up with delicious recipes. Coding new software is fun for you. All of your imagination is engaged when you’re having fun! These ideas that keep coming to you are all fodder for your entrepreneurial side. You look for ways to turn them into viable businesses, or people who can do it for you.

4. You used to sell stuff as a child

You know you’re an entrepreneur when you sought experiences to hone your sales skills as a child. Maybe you sold baseball cards like Gary Vaynerchuck or you had a lemonade stand on the corner. Or maybe, like me, you built websites for your parents’ friends and started freelancing before you even knew what the term meant. You likely got hooked on earning money for yourself and decided it was a good trait to take on.

5. You think in terms of investments: time and money

With any task you undertake, whether it’s watching TV the evenings or mowing the lawn on weekends, you consider the time and money investment and return. If you watch one hour of television, that’s one hour less for your business’ development. On the other hand, hiring someone to mow your lawn gives you back time to further your business dreams. You’re constantly crunching numbers and optimizing how you use the resources you have, so you can get more down the line.

6. You assess other people for leadership qualities

You get that your businesses can become bottlenecked if you’re always the one in the middle, so you look for leaders who can help your businesses grow. When you meet someone at a cocktail party, you’re looking to see what role they could fulfill at your current or future companies. You’re also adamant about training and mentoring people who will one day be able to take your spot, so you can go on to build your next business.

7. You love talking about other people’s business success

There’s no such thing as bad-mouthing success in your house. You know that you need to look positively upon successful entrepreneurs to become one, and you love to soak up all the “how-to” advice you can glean from people’s success stories.

8. You read biographies of your favorite business moguls

You love to get a glimpse at how things went down and how you can apply these lessons to your own life and business. Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Warren Buffett — they’re all familiar business mentors through their biographies, and you know which traits you want to take on from each of your business heroes.

9. You’re persistent to a fault

Giving up is not in your vocabulary. You know that if this idea doesn’t pan out, there will be opportunities to kick butt with your next business move. You’ve tried and failed before, and you know you’ll make mistakes, but you take each one in stride because you’re in it for the marathon and not the sprint.

10. You care about making the world a better place

You know that business is the vehicle for change on a massive scale, and you’re committed to making the world a better place. Starting a business is something you’re motivated to do because you believe in what you can offer the world, and you know you’re the person to make it happen.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Top 50 Places To Advertise Your Website For Under $25

Posted by  in Traffic

Today I wanted to share my Top 50 places to advertise your  website or sales pages.
People are always asking me where I advertise, and where they can advertise that doesn’t cost an arm and a leg and a few fingers..lol, so I decided to put together this list for you.
I have personally advertised on most of these, the rest were used by close friends/biz partners that I trust.
They are all great for generating traffic to your website. Don’t let the cheap prices of some of the sites fool you, THEY ALL WORK!
I used these sites when I didn’t have a lot of money to put towards adverting, and I still use about 20 of them today just because they work.
Tip: Some of these sites I used to help me to break into the Top 20 Internet Marketers
I suggest you start by choosing 5 sites to try and use them for 2 weeks and see how they work, then choose another 5 and see how they work, until you either find the sites you really like or until you are advertising on all of them, which bring you a ridiculous amount of traffic.
Nice problem to have..right? =)
None of the website links below are affiliate links, I didn’t want to take away from any one site or have you lose an opportunity with a great site.
Best thing to do is bookmark the page so you can refer back to it as needed.

Top 50 Sites…

http://www.coop-hits.com -  $10.50 – 2,500 Visitors
http://www.toptiertraffic.com -  $10 – Monthly Premium Member (Subscription)
http://www.viralcoop.com – $49 – (12 months)..yes PER YEAR and it works
http://www.earneasycash.info – $10 (awesome)
http://www.gladiatorhits.com – $10 – 10,000 credits awesome manual traffic exchange
http://www.headerads.com – $10 – 10,000 credits
http://www.incentria.com – $15.50 for 5000 guaranteed visitors
http://www.adtroopers.com – $12.95 membership creates a ton of traffic
http://hits-a-million.com – $5.00 to $25.00
http://www.pyrabang.com – $5.95 – Gold Member (this is a gold mine)
http://traxads.com/megasolos – $10.00 – 1 Mega Solo to 5 Text Ad Exchanges
http://yourezads.com – $20 for 1,000 views
http://cashtextads.com – $8.00 for 2,606 members that must view your website
http://www.leadsleap.com – Free or you can get great traffic for $27/month
http://lords-of-traffic.com – $8  1 Day Start page (means your website will show first)
http://www.myfreeadboard.com – FREE – Upgrade to PRO for only $14.95
http://target-safelist.com – $8.95 – Contact Solo Ad to all members
http://www.trafficpython.com – $25 – 100,000 link credits per month
http://www.newage-mkt.com – $5.97 Awesome..this baby rocks
http://the-traffic-secret.com – This baby here is FREE and it works
http://www.deepseahits.com – FREE Awesome manual traffic exchange
http://www.national-leads.com – prices vary but  the traffic is insane
http://www.subscribeme.net – prices vary..good place to get great hits
http://www.trafficspan.com – $27.60 – 10,000 Visitors
http://www.1stopclassifieds.net – $14 – Advanced Membership
http://www.e-mailpaysu.com – prices vary awesome traffic
http://www.extremetargettraffic.com – $19.95 – 7,000 Visitors
http://www.myguaranteedvisitors.com – $70 – 4000 Guaranteed Visitors
http://www.gotsafelist.com – $27.97  – 5 Day Desktop Text Ad
http://www.moneymakingmommy.com – $29.00 – Top Sponsor Ad
http://www.mlmleadgenie.com – prices vary but they are awesome
http://www.soloadcoop.com – prices vary and they are great
http://www.activesafelist.com – Contact solo ad sent to over 2,185 members
http://www.advertcrusader.com – $34.95 for 30,000 clicks on 60 different “PayTo” sites.
http://www.trafficswarm.com – great marketing company
http://www.flyingsolos.com – excellent place for solo ads
http://www.worldwide-cash.net – $12.50 – 25,000 USA visitors
http://cashtextads.com – $21.00 great!
http://www.teblaster.com – awesome..5 stars from me!
http://www.planet-traffic.com – Now this place brings in traffic
http://www.rapidclassified.com – very cheap and they work
http://www.trueviewtraffic.com – one of my favorites
http://www.mywizardads.com – simply great!!
http://www.businessworldlist.com – give this baby a try
Next 5 sites are a little more then $25 but I wanted to share, since I have had good results with all 5.
http://www.bigcityadvertising.com – $50.70 – 84 full page classified ads for one year
http://www.fasteasytraffic.com – $30 – 6,000 Visitors
http://www.solo-ads.com – $35 – to 5,000 Ezine Subscribers
http://www.targetedvisitors.info – $39.95 – 10,000 Visitors
http://team4success.net – $49  this place is great for a bunch of hits
This list will continue to be updated as I try new ad sites.
Hope you enjoyed the list, if you use any of these sites, leave a comment and let me know your results.

Monday, November 18, 2013

10 things that investors like and loathe in entrepreneurs’ pitches

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Investors gave thumbs up to the ability to improvise and thumbs down to an infomercial tone at a recent critique of entrepreneurial pitches in Philadelphia. A panel of investors evaluated presentations from four entrepreneurs and discussed what they look for in elevator and longer format pitches. The session was part of a seminar instructing entrepreneurs on how to succeed at the upcoming Angel Venture Fair 2012.
Four companies who will be participating in the fair won the opportunity to participate in the critique. Two gave eight-minute pitches and the other two had less than 2 minutes to sell their idea.
The panelists included Karen Griffith Gryga of Mid-Atlantic Angel Investor Group Fund, Bob Thomson of Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeastern Pennsylvania and Ellen Weber of Robin Hood Ventures. Beth Cohen acts as director of emerging growth services at Philadelphia law firm Blank Rome and moderated the panel. Here is some of their advice to entrepreneurs on how to make the cut on selection day.
Assume investors know nothing about your business or sector. One of the toughest parts of developing a pitch is getting the balance right between too much information and not enough. Use your limited time to give a complete but succinct overview so they understand what your product does, why it’s relevant and what gap it fills in the market. At the same time, try to be as brief as possible.
Offer some competitive analysis. You may be the first company to come out with a product that fulfills a particular need, but painting an accurate landscape of the market for your investors and how your product will change that could do wonders for how your investors perceive and value what your company offers. Be respectful of your competitors, though. As one investor noted, “show where you have credibility and where your rivals have credibility.”
Explain the sales and marketing side of business. Who are your current distributors? How are they distributing your product? This is something they will look for and will appreciate it if you can demonstrate this is an important consideration for your business.
Does your product solve a problem? Make sure this is clear to investors. You may even consider opening your pitch with “Wouldn’t it be great if there were a way to do xyz.” Hopefully, it’s a problem that enough people want solved. On the other hand, beware that you …
Don’t sound like an infomercial. Investors get that you are trying to sell them on your product. They also know you might be nervous. But you won’t do yourself any favors by adopting an overconfident, smarmy persona who sounds more like someone selling ShamWow towels than an innovative medical device or digital health program.
Give a sense of time to market. If you are a small company, do you have a big strategic partner that can help you grow? It’s easy to overlook that in your pitch, but this is one of the key items that investors like to hear about and may notice if it’s absent.
What’s your monetization strategy? You have to make it clear at some point how your company is going to make money. Nobody is expecting you to be profitable in the first year, but if you can give investors a road map on how you will make money, it will provide some logical reasons for companies to put money with you. While we’re on the subject of investors profiting from your business, you should also give them a sense of what your exit strategy is.
Got props? If you have a prototype of your device or product, bring it along. It helps convey what your company is doing and helps investors improve their understanding of your business in a tangible way.
In some cases, less is more.  When it comes to visuals in a presentation, the less copy the better.  Cohen said to one presenter, “I tell entrepreneurs I want investors to listen to you, not read your presentation.”
If your computer presentation fails, be prepared to wing it. Everyone likes a story of battling adversity and coming out ahead; it’s no different with investors. If you can deliver your pitch seamlessly when the walls are crumbling around you, you do a great service to your business and are likely to impress your audience. If your computer crashes during your presentation, be prepared to pitch without it. Don’t lose time trying to make the technology work.


Read more: http://medcitynews.com/2012/02/10-things-that-investors-like-and-loathe-in-entrepreneurs-pitches/#ixzz2l1aDdVNP

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