1001 Newbie - Friendly Tips by Bob McElwain - HTML preview

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Give Away Gross For Increased Profits

Suppose  you  produce  a  super  widget  that  sells  for  $50.00.  If  Charlie  comes along and says, "Hey, I can sell the heck out of these. How's $20 bucks a sale sound? Wanna deal?"

If  you  have  a  successful  business,  chances  are  you  will  say,  "Sure  thing." Smaller  businesses  or  those  lacking  marketing  experience  may  answer  with, "Why should I give away 40%?"

Such  people  will  run  from  this  offer.  But  it  is  an  awesome  mistake.  For readers who have not thought about this approach, here's why you should say yes.

Consider  a  computer  program  or  an  information  product,  something  which once  produced,  costs  virtually  nothing  to  reproduce.  (The  same  idea  holds  for manufactured products, but greater production costs need to be factored in.)

If you sell 100 copies a month at $50 each, you have a gross of $5000. Your net is  close  to  this,  for  you  have  minimal  fulfillment  costs.  Suppose  costs  are $5/copy. Then your net is $4500.

If Charlie hits the bricks and sells another 100 copies, you pay him $20 per copy or $2000. So your gross is down to $3000 and your net is down to $2500. You have indeed "given away" 40% of gross.

The key is not in what you gave away, but in your increased net. You are $2500 ahead and it cost you nothing to generate. In fact you made more than Charlie  did  without  lifting  a  finger.  So  why  do  some  people  say  no  to  such  an offer?

A common reason stems from believing they could have made the additional 100 sales themselves, at least over time. In the brick-and-mortar world in which territories are assigned to sales representatives, there may be merit in this belief. But  the  Web  is  a  whole  different  kind  of  place.  Assumptions  such  as  this  are incorrect. There is simply no way a small business can even hope to make their product available to all the people who would like to buy it at the time they decide to buy.

Regardless  of  the  position  of  your  product  in  a  given  market,  a  person searching for it may find a competing product first. If so, your product may not even  be  presented  for  consideration.  In  which  case,  your  competition  gets  the sale. Extending the presence of your product on the Web increases the chance of it being found.

Charlie can help in this by adding your product to his website and product list. His marketing efforts bring visitors who are added to the set of those aware of your product. If he sells 100 copies through his site,  it is quite possible that  every  sale  is  one  you  would  not  have  made.  While  one  might  expect  some overlap  with  brand  name  products  from  large  firms,  it  just  does  not  apply  to lesser known products produced by small businesses.

The Web is so vast that no one person sees a significant part of it. Thus most netizens  will  never  even  encounter your product unless  you  can  get  it  out  and about the Web. You can profit greatly by "giving" gross to Charlie. And for even greater profits, show Joe, Bill, and Pete how to do what Charlie did.

I market a computer program at $39. I will pay you 50% for each copy you sell.  I'm  ahead  by  $19.50  and  it  takes  only  a  minute  to  send  the  purchaser  a license code. Any takers? I will be delighted to work all day long for $19.50 per minute.