PROFITABLE CAREERS IN
INFORMATION SALES
If you have a passion for
a particular hobby, pass-time or field or interest, you may have
already developed the core of a highly profitable business.
What single activity do
you enjoy more than any other? Is it sewing, cooking, playing
with the children or grandchildren? Or, are you more adventurous?
Do you dream of long cross-country trips in a well-equipped camper,
visiting the capitols of Europe and Asia or skiing the Swiss Alps?
Maybe fishing in a crisp mountain stream at dawn or creating an
heirloom in your own wood shop is your idea of "life at its best".
On the other hand, you may relish the challenges of political
or social activism, raising funds to help disadvantaged people
or protecting our architectural heritage. All these, and thousands
of other avocations can be developed as an info-marketing
business.
BECOME A PART ....
We're in the midst of
a quiet revolution that most people won't recognize until it's
over. It's the info revolution, and unlike many of the
great changes in history, virtually every man and woman alive
today can benefit from the it. The only requirements are an understanding
of the process and the Will to Seize the opportunities.
During the great period
of discovery and colonial expansion from 1450 to 1800, most people
worked on farms or in farm support trades. Their home and their
land was their business. Even craftsmen, not directly engaged
in farming, usually worked in a building directly adjacent to
their home. During the industrial revolution of the 1800s people
left home and migrated to urban centers where they found employment
in factories.
Because manufacturing
required large numbers of people to to do coordinated work in
a single location, cities became congested. People were alienated
from their land and homes and the cities of the 19th and early
20th centuries developed pockets of pollution and crime.
After the Second World
War the upwardly mobile middle class fled to the suburbs in search
of a better life. But this provided only a marginal improvement.
Most people were still forced to leave their homes every day and
travel to a central location where their work could be coordinated
with that of others.
The commute became part
of the American lifestyle and thousands of hours were removed
from the workers' lives. The family unit was weakened by the absence
of one or both parents who were now required to spend additional
hours "on the road". Commuting also exacted a toll on the environment
as more cars, petroleum and highways were needed to facilitate
commuting.
The information revolution
promises to alleviate both the social and environmental problems
of the industrial revolution by making it practical for many people
to tele - commute. With a relatively inexpensive computer and
modem in their homes, millions of Americans will be able to interact
with coworkers around the world.
They can earn a handsome
living without leaving home, clogging the freeways, polluting
the air or burning foreign oil. What's more, they will have more
flexible schedules and be available to their families more frequently.
By occupying their local communities more hours of the day, they
will reduce crime and take a greater responsibility for their
surroundings.
A second, less obvious,
benefit will also occur. As large corporations decentralize their
work force they frequently find they can operate with fewer full
time employees. This has led to much of the corporate down-sizing
we have all heard about (or in many cases, experienced) in recent
years.
Some believe this down-sizing
helps the corporation and hurts the worker, but a growing population
of ingenious info entrepreneurs, or infopreneurs (to coin
a phrase), have realized that they were much better off outside
the bounds of corporate loyalty.
These infopreneurs, or
as they are more commonly called, consultants, are suddenly free
to sell their wares to the highest bidder. In some cases that
will be the company that once employed them, in other cases it
may be that company's direct competitor. In still other instances
the most lucrative market may be the public at large.
The corporate employee
is now free to take the information gathering and processing skills
they learned at the expense of their employer and sell information
products far and wide.
The only limits on the
potential of the infopreneur-consultant will be their own imagination
and marketing skill. Some will choose to develop their expertise
and sell it on an hourly basis as freelance problem-solvers or
trainers.
These are the people we
have come to consider traditional consultants. However, they will
always be at the mercy of the 24 hour day. Most of us need to
sleep six to eight of those hours, then family, household chores
and normal social functions take up another four to five hours.
When all is considered,
it's very difficult for the most successful consultant to sell
more than 40 hours a week. Many consultants make a good living,
but there is a better way.
In stead of allowing your
market to be limited by the number of hours in a work week, leverage
your hours by creating information products that can be sold to
the general public.
In stead of collecting
a lot of money from a few clients, collect a little from many.
In this way you can sell the same information over and over with
very little incremental effort or expense.
It's a practice we used
to call PUBLISHING. Actually we still do. But, the opportunities
have expanded so rapidly that a new term almost seems necessary.
Once publishing was the
province of millionaires and vast corporations. The capital investment
required to publish even a modest brochure was far beyond the
means of the average individual.
Today, the personal computer
and the electronic data highway have made it possible for ordinary
people to create complex information products, not only in their
homes, but from virtually anywhere in the world they can find
electricity and a phone connection.
What's more, publishing
is no longer confined to the printed page. Today publishers have
the ability to incorporate audio, video, computer animation and
the fascinating interactive world of computer CD in their information
products.
PROFITS FROM THE INFORMATION
REVOLUTION
Not everyone who profits
from this explosive new industry will be a product creator. As
the farmer needed the blacksmith and the factory worker needed
the machinist, so the infopreneur needs marketers, researchers
and data entry help.
Right now, you may think
that creating a salable information product is beyond your abilities
(We will show you it is not.) Even if it was, you could profit
from the sale of other's work.
Many people ask, "Don't
I need to be a trained writer or artist to create an information
product?" The answer is; absolutely no! Although the information
industry offers writers and artists exciting new ways to sell
their services, many information products consist of simple data
bases or directories anyone can learn to produce. As we said earlier,
you probably have the core of a great infomarketing business in
your possession right now!
BUILDING ON DREAMS
Let's test this theory.
Make a list of the 10 things you would enjoy most in your life.
They can be things you have done in the past or things you have
merely dreamed of doing. You now have the core element in an exciting
new business, a business that could generate $50,000 to $250,000
and more in the next 12 months.
Your first assignment
is to go to your local library. It contains two books that will
tell you which of the activities on your list will pay off and
which won't. They are THE OXBRIDGE DIRECTORY OF LISTS and STANDARD
RATE AND DATA (Periodical Directory) and you will usually find
them in the reference section.
Actually, STANDARD RATE
AND DATA is a whole set of books. You are interested in the volume
that pertains to periodicals (magazines and newspapers).
You're going to use these
two books to determine the size of the market that is interested
in each of the activities you have listed. If you were a large
national corporation, like Proctor & Gamble, you might pay
your ad agency thousands of dollars for this kind of information.
But, you'll get it virtually free (and your information will probably
be more accurate.)
Check the number of publications
in STANDARD RATE AND DATA that relate to each activity on your
list. For instance, if you listed skiing as one of your favorite
activities, turn to the topic index and look for publications
that deal with skiing. Also look for related topics like "winter
sports", "cross-country skiing", and "mountain sports". Be sure
to identify the entire market for each of your activities.
List each magazine or
periodical, then turn to the listing for those publications and
list their circulation (the number of people they reach with each
issue). Create a numerical score for each of your activities consisting
of the total number of readers of all publication that relate
to each activity on your list.
This research process
is a little time consuming. But remember, when it is complete
you will have information worth thousands of dollars. That's one
of the marvelous things about compiling information. You can create
products worth thousands of dollars virtually from thin-air. It's
like prospecting for gold with none of the physical risk or discomfort.
Now compare your list
of activities to THE OXBRIDGE DIRECTORY OF LISTS. This massive
book contains all the major mailing lists available and the number
of people on each list. Look first at the classified index to
identify lists of direct mail marketers who would appeal to others
interested in your activities. If you have listed cooking as one
of your activities, you will naturally want to look for "housewares".
But also look for headings
like "herbs and spices". Note all the relevant lists and the number
of records (people) they contain. Create a numerical score for
each of your activities consisting of the total number of records
on all mailing lists that pertain to each activity.
Now create a combined
score for each of your activities by adding the number of issues
circulated from STANDARD RATE AND DATA and the number of records
from THE OXBRIDGE DIRECTORY OF LISTS. Naturally, there will be
some overlap between the two figures.
Many of the people subscribing
to the publications will also be on the mailing lists but in this
type of gross analysis that factor is unimportant. Your objective
is to discover a numerical score that indicates high interest
in one of your favorite activities.
Some activities are so
highly specialized that they fail to achieve high scores from
these two sources. If this happens to you, don't despair, you
don't need scores in the millions to succeed in the information
marketing business. In fact, the beauty of this system is that
you can service small markets more effectively than many large
corporations, thus avoiding competition.
You may simply need to
dig a little deeper to identify your markets. Our master-course,
THE $1,000,000 DESKTOP PUBLISHING IDEA BOOK, lists other resources
for defining the potential size of your potential market. Like
our book, they are all readily available from most public libraries.
BRAINSTORMING A PRODUCT
BASED ON YOUR RESEARCH
Let's begin by looking
at some of the ways other people are using infomarketing to generate
wealth. A variation on an existing successful enterprise could
be your key to that big annual income.
Many of the following
examples of infomarketing require a substantial commitment of
capitol, others could be "boot-strapped", built gradually from
a modest beginning by reinvesting profits along the way. This
technique, often called pyramiding, is explained in our master-course,
THE $1,000,000 DESKTOP PUBLISHING IDEA BOOK.
More details on the work
of these and many other entrepreneurs is included in a special
bonus report, available exclusively with THE $1,000,000 DESKTOP
PUBLISHING IDEA BOOK. We'll tell you how to get a copy a little
later.
* Every day, companies
large and small generate thousands of press releases with information
they feel is vital to the public. The main-stream press will pick
up and run a small fraction of these releases. One entrepreneur
has capitalized on this by charging companies to run their stories
in his publication. Another newsletter composed of press releases
is a bimonthly tabloid produced by one man and has a circulation
of 80,000.
* UNDER 25, a marketing
newsletter with it's finger on the pulse of the nation's youth.
has subscribers in major corporate marketing departments and ad
agencies. Editorials are gleaned from a network of student reporters
on campuses around the country.
Why not provide the same
report on Hispanics, Blacks, Seniors, etc.
* Another infopreneur
publishes 30,000 copies of a biweekly youth oriented journal of
music, films, theater and celebrity interviews. It is distributed
free to New York City colleges and bookstore and has a large following
among advertisers wishing to address this lucrative market.
What other age, ethnic
or social groups would advertisers in your area
like to access through
this type of direct "free" media? How about graduate students,
farmers, senior citizens, high income families?
* ADDICTION AND DRUG ABUSE
REPORTS is a monthly publication that covers the latest information
on prevention and treatment and has special appeal to public health
officials, educators and law enforcement agencies.
* A husband and wife team
publish REFUNDLE BUNDLE, a letter that details major coupon and
refund offers by grocery manufacturers. They have 30,000 subscribers.
* New Yorker publishes
CHOCOLATE NEWS, a letter to more than 18,000 subscribers on the
virtues of chocolate. It includes recipes and shopping tips.
How about a healthy version
of this publication? You could compile recipes for low-fat (sugar,
salt, cost, etc.) versions of favorite family meals?
* WHITE-COLLAR CRIME REPORTER
is a newsletter that focuses on insider trading in the stock markets
and other illegal business practices. It reports both court rulings
and defense strategies to a subscriber base of attorneys and corporate
security officers. THE DEFENSE LITIGATION REPORTER is similar.
Every two weeks it details legal developments in Pentagon fraud
cases to military contractors and consultants. An annual subscription
is $654.
Highly specialized information
commands high prices. You can acquire the type of information
for which others will pay a premium.
* A Lafayette Indiana
man publishes a unique monthly letter on parenting. Each month
the subscriber receives an issue that exactly corresponds to their
child's age. Thus the content is more relevant to busy readers
than broad-based parenting magazines. The letter has attracted
275,000 subscribers and generated $4.6 million in annual revenues.
* A New Yorker publishes
a monthly letter on restoring and maintaining urban brownstone
homes.
You could do the same
for country homes in your area, giving resources for materials
and services. Invite service suppliers to contribute editorials
on the specialized needs of your region, then offer them advertising
space near their article.
* Newsletter Specialists,
a Pasadena, California firm, will write, design, typeset and print
letters for both promotion and in-house distribution. The owners
developed their client base through ads in the LOS ANGELES TIMES
and local business publications.
* PHOTOLETTER, a biweekly
publication from Star Prairie Wisconsin, details the needs of
hundreds of commercial and editorial photo buyers to their 1500
subscribers, most of whom are photographers, reps and agents.
* One woman in Arlington
Massachusetts begins by finding the hot-topic of the day. Although
these topics are frequently unfamiliar to her, she manages to
prepare a prototype issue of a newsletter and test it's viability
through a free distribution. When she finds a winner she hires
an experienced editor and goes to press. So far, her OIL SPILL
INTELLIGENCE REPORT, INDOORS AIR QUALITY UPDATE and EXPERT SYSTEMS
STRATEGIES have garnered subscription rates from $200 to $400
per year.
* Another lady in Mountain
View California watches or records 14 daily soap opera, then summarizes
the plots and publishes them in her DAYTIME SERIAL NEWSLETTER.
She has 8000 subscribers.
* A Charlottesville, VA
man publishes a newsletter from his home. The subject: Travel
in France. His annual gross income (at last report): a whopping
$399,500. What's more, he can write off $50,000 a year in travel
expenses.
* Another publisher produces
a newsletter covering resorts that cater to families with children.
* A Chicago based publisher
reports on unusual cultural events and attractions world-wide.
They are the sort of things large travel magazines usually miss.
* Santa Barbara man publishes
a newsletter that promotes escape from the urban rat race and
the virtues of rural living.
Try the same approach,
but rather than selling subscriptions, sell it as a give-away
to a gas company, railroad or resort area chamber of commerce.
* An Arizona native living
in Japan, has developed a unique twist on the travel letter. He
compiles a synopsis of the major news stories from the Japanese
media and publishes the JAPAN FREE PRESS.
It is sold to major corporations
for distribution to their employees overseas (especially in the
U.S.A.). This is extremely useful in areas where it is difficult
to get foreign papers. Another American expatriate in Japan publishes
Tokyo Weekender, a popular social tabloid distributed to 25,000
foreign residents in Tokyo bars and restaurants.
* Although PRIVATE GUIDE
to RESTAURANTS is of special interest to San Francisco's many
visitors, it's 13,000 subscribers are primarily locals. The publisher
began by writing to 100 friends and asking them to subscribe.
He promoted his publication through frequent appearances on local
radio and through persistent publicity efforts.
* Not all financial newsletter
publishers are economists or economic gurus. One man, who publishes
GROWTH STOCK OUTLOOK, was a NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC staff photographer
before he began his newsletter in his basement office. He now
has 10,000 subscribers at $175 a year.
Another gentlemen, now
publisher of THE PROFESSIONAL INVESTOR, was a paratrooper, car
salesman and chemist before starting his letter which now reaches
8,000 subscribers who pay $75 a year.
* A couple in Newport RI
publish three investment newsletters from their home. We don't
know their exact gross income but the letters range in subscription
price from $425 to $99 a year and they have 30,000 subscribers.
* A resident of Boston
is convinced that odd-lot stock trades represent the whim of the
public and the "public" is always wrong. He's convinced 4,500
other people that his theory is accurate because they all subscribe
to his newsletter which studies odd lot trading.
* A Larchmont, New York
man compiles all the mentions of a stock in the leading news media
and develops his "consensus rating report."
* The Doctor's Press of
Lancaster Pennsylvania publishes a monthly newsletter that
physicians can personalize with their own message. It's a great
way to keep in touch with patients without blatantly advertising.
The cost for 2,000 copies is between $450 and $550 a month. The
publisher, a home entrepreneur, has provided the same service
for dentists, according to FAMILY COMPUTING MAGAZINE.
* A cartoonist who's work
centers on the subject of business life sells his wares to company
newsletter publishers. He currently has over 1.6 million readers.
Similarly, the entrepreneur behind WORDSERVICE INTERNATIONAL hopes
to become the "small press UPI" she engages a network of 200 freelance
writers in 40 countries to develop highly focused editorial content
for specific newsletters and small magazines. Clients pay an annual
subscription plus royalties for each article used.
* People like to spend
their money where they feel welcomed and comfortable. So, the
success of ethnic and special interest "yellow pages" should surprise
no one.
* A New Yorker publishes
a BLACK PAGES listing black owned businesses in his area. He charges
between $200 and $1500 for each listing, depending on size.
* Following that same
principal, another publisher produces a CHRISTIAN YELLOW PAGES
from his home. Advertisers must sign a statement that they are
born-again Christians. More than 2 million copies have been distributed
through churches and bookstores in 19 states. A smaller version,
called the CHRISTIAN BUSINESS DIRECTORY is published in San Diego.
* Small shops and service
businesses that depend on trade from an isolated neighborhood
are excellent candidates for advertisers in a neighborhood phone
directory. Most phone company directories cover geographic areas
too large to be cost effective for this type of advertiser. One
man compiles several such directories for neighborhoods in Manhattan.
Each contain between 50,000
and 100,000 residential listings. They are distributed free to
residents and paid for by advertising in the front of the book.
Assembling such a directory is easy, simply borrow a "reverse
directory" (by street address) from your local library and use
a good quality scanner and OCR program.
* Another variation on
the old-standard yellow-page directory is produced by a Dallas
area couple. Its SELECT - THE GUIDE TO REFERENCED BUSINESSES.
Companies pay $385 to $5225 to be listed, but they must also pass
a stringent reference check. The first edition of 50,000 books
netted $18,000 on revenues of 150,000, but the couple expect to
hit a gross of $750,000 when they are able to cover five upper-income
Dallas-Fortworth neighborhoods.
* Tourist Guides are another
popular form of directory. Although major tourist destinations
usually have more than their share of slick, full-color guides,
many secondary markets have none. That's what two Orlando Florida
women discovered in the course of their research. So they spent
six weeks investigating restaurants accommodations and tourist
attractions and developed a book that included a calender of outings
for every day of the week and special citrus and seafood recipes.
They wholesale the book through a variety of outlets including
newsstands.
* Who can resist the quintessential
tourist guide, the map of Beverly Hills with star's homes emblazoned?
An aspiring actor, developed a macabre variation on the theme,
a map of dead star's grave sites. It sold 140,000 copies at $3.00
each in it's first six months.
* A more serious approach
to locating celebrities was taken by the creator of THE ADDRESS
BOOK, a 279 page volume that lists 3500 addresses (and in some
cases phone numbers) of media, corporate, and government individuals
and organizations world-wide. Now in it's sixth edition, it has
sold more than 200,000 copies.
* Many urban centers are
now served by companies who deliver restaurant food to your home.
They usually publish a comprehensive listing of menus from their
subscribing restaurants. But, home delivery is no less popular
in secondary suburban markets that lack the population density
to support such services. There, each restaurant uses part time
kitchen help to make the delivery. But, promotion of the service
is difficult. One publisher filled the need with his directory
of 160 restaurants that deliver. It is available free in neighborhood
shops, newsstands and the restaurants themselves.
* While still a junior
at Princeton University, another enterprising young man recognized
the need to connect engineering students with potential employers.
Concentrating only on the state of New Jersey, he published a
directory of companies that hire engineers. It was so successful
that he expanded the enterprise to 22 directories covering 49
states. His annual gross is reportedly in the neighborhood of
$850,000, with a net of $250,000.
A variation on the theme
was reported by the Boston Globe. It's an employment classified
report, culled from 65 newspapers across the country and customized
to each subscriber's specifications. One customer will get pages
of "Accountants Wanted" while another will received the "Secretaries
Wanted".
* A publisher from upstate
New York, tried to make hotel reservations in a distant city and
wasted all his pocket change in a phone booth. Later he discover
that the hotel had a toll-free number and this lead him to the
concept of a TRAVELER'S TOLL-FREE DIGEST. His concise 35 page
document has sold over 100,000 copies.
* Again, the best ideas
grow out of a discovered need, like that of a magazine executive
who developed the concept of a "national phone directory of important
numbers" in response to a his on-going need to communicate with
major government offices, union and corporate headquarters, news
organizations and financial institutions. He sold his idea for
the 50,000 entry directory to Bantam Books, who paid him $90,000
for his trouble and funded three researchers to compile the work.
THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING
People all over the world
are discovering they can generate an annual income of $50,000
to $250,000 with an information enterprise with Your own information
products.
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