Showing posts with label Entrepreneur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entrepreneur. Show all posts

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Internet Entrepreneur

How to be an internet entrepreneur? Simple: start a business selling stuff on the internet! What can you sell? Either goods or services.

If you are starting a website hoping to make money off it, you need to know your revenue stream. If you build a website without any idea of monetization, you can rest assure that you will burn lots of money before realizing the error of your ways. This is exactly what happened to a lot of internet companies during the dot com bust.

It is not as simple as
1) Build website
2) ???????
3) Profit!

First you need to know what you are selling. Are you selling a product or are you selling some services? Products could include cds, e-books, shirts, pets, swags, etc. Services are a little tricky; you can host a service where people can meet and have meetings online, or a service that keeps track of customers, or an online inventory system that helps you buy stuff when you're running low on them.

Directly selling your products or services is just one way to make money. Another way of making money online is through advertising and affiliate programs. GoogleAds have reportedly paid out as much as a few hundred thousand to a lucky chap.

Thats the easy part though. The hard part is building traffic to your website. The more people know about your site, the bigger your chances of having some of these potential customer buy what you have to offer. You definitely need to work on you SEO aka Search Engine Optimization to make sure your site shows up when people look for stuff.

Even if you followed all the steps, success is not guaranteed. That doesn't mean you have to give up though. You need to keep working on your SEO, products, etc.

But what if you keep working on it for several years, tweaking your SEO, updated your products/services and are still losing money instead? Know your limits; some business are just not ready yet. Try going into other venture and come back to the ones you failed another time.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Starting A Business : Providing Goods vs Providing Services

When I started my IT business in November 2007, I used the bootstrap method to fund my way into providing IT Consulting services to my customers. It was a very effective method; I kept cost down and don't have to worry about production in the normal sense. On April 2008, I partnered with another person to start an aquaculture business with him providing the technology and I providing funding and management. We decided to go with bootstrap method to fund our way because if it worked for my IT business, it will definitely work for a low tech business of rearing fish. We even got a couple of other partners; one a silent partner who provides small bootstrap funding while the other partner joined so we can utilize his sales and marketing skill. It was a huge mistake.

The operation was so small that production could not supply enough fishes to meet the demand. The other problem is that the rate of return was so low that most partners became disgruntled with the business. What happens next is clear; one of the partner quits and became a real estate agent while another partner slowly reduces his involvement and started his own door to door clothing sales business.

So what exactly went wrong?

Well, some business you simply just can't start bootstrap. Some business should be started big to take advantage of the economies of scales. If we had sought funding in the beginning, we would have been able to build bigger ponds, rear enough fish to meet the demand, and get returns that is high enough to keep everyone happy.

The other factor is the fact that these are two completely different type of business. The IT business is created to provide services while the aquaculture business is created to provide goods. Increasing the means of productions for a service based business does not necessarily mean an increase in revenue although it affects goods based business a lot. For example if I have been given a project work $50,000, buying 10 laptops and desktops will neither increase my revenue nor decrease my time spent working on it. However, the difference between having 10 ponds versus 100 ponds of fishes at harvesting is clear.

So there you have it, economies of scale and types of business - providing services vs providing goods. Next post I will talk about another reason business self-implode : Bad Partners.