The Future of Online Business

Virtually every business these days has founded an online presence, either by starting a website or establishing an online store through which they can sell their products and services. Online business has a great potential to considerably increase your profitability by allowing you to reach a virtually unlimited customer basis of millions of people worldwide. Here are some of the advantages you can enjoy by taking your business online.

Starting up a website requires a minimum investment of money compared with setting up an offline brick-and-mortar store. And unlike offline stores, you don't have to spend a lot of cash advertising your online business, since you simply have to optimize your site to be search-engine friendly and your customers will find you when they perform searches on search engines like Google and your site has high rankings. There are many techniques that you can adopt on your own to make your website more search engine friendly.

You can automate your business processes such that the website runs itself with minimal supervision. You can avail of e-commerce solutions for your site that will automatically take customer orders, check out their purchases and accept their payments without requiring a person to actually perform these functions. These solutions represent great cost savings on your overhead expenses, which you can bank as profit or pass on to your customers in the form of cheaper prices.

You can promote your business in a cost-effective manner through social media sites. With literally millions of people at any one time using Facebook or Twitter, these networking sites offer a terrific opportunity for you to build a relationship with your customers so that you can not only promote your business but also build brand loyalty that will pay off in the long-term. You can enjoy a lot of great benefits by setting up a Facebook page for your enterprise, as well as opening a Twitter account.

You can easily build your niche. Previously it was very difficult to build specialized businesses that appealed to a limited clients, since it was hard to find and reach them. But with the Internet, you can easily link with your customer base by optimizing your website with the right keywords so that they can find you when they re doing an online search. You can download PDF books that will help you learn more about subjects such as doing keyword research and optimizing your site to reach your niche audience.
Timur Karipov is an expert when it comes to EbookUniverse. To find out everything about Books Online, visit his website at http://ebookuniverse.net/.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/7446177

Finding Your "niche"

So what is a niche?

An often used technique for affiliate marketers is Internet-based niche segments of larger markets, referred to as niches. A website can be developed and promoted quickly to uniquely serve a targeted and customer base, giving the affiliate a small but potentially durable source of revenue. This technique can then be repeated across several other niche websites. A bigger niche is harder to market to as the expense of online advertisements increases according to the popularity of the keywords used (on Adwords, for example).

Some niches may become saturated with marketers, increasing competition and thus reduce the slice of the pie available to each competitor. One solution is to find smaller, "undiscovered," but still profitable, niches, usually by searching out the best keywords to target. These lower cost keywords are called long-tailed keywords, as in the long tail of secondary keyword phrases that usually follow the main keyword in popularity of number of searches conducted by internet users. Because some are so obscure as to have few or no clicks per month, the trick is to find the right ones to target.

When you are considering starting an online business, you want to make sure you find the right product.  What do you want to sell.  What is your passion.  What subject or topic do you have a lot of knowledge about.  Let me start by telling you that selling an information product online is easier than selling a service.  But, selling a service online makes more money with monthly memberships. 

Before you spend all your time working on a website and writing up eBooks, you want to be sure that your customers are going to be interested in what you are selling.  Do your market research.  Start by seeing how many competitors you have -this is a good sign.  Read through newsgroups, discussion boards, and chat rooms and learn about your target market customer base.  If you already have an email list, send them a survey to see what they are most interested in.

Most internet marketers preach that there are three reasons why a customer will want to buy your product.  Your product has solved a problem for your customer.  Your product has made life easier or more comfortable for your customer.  You are very passionate about your product and it shows in everything you do.

When researching your niche, you may want to use www.Amazon.com and find the current top sellers.  Find out what people are reading about.  You will want to research keywords with keyword tools such as www.wordtracker.com.  You need to discover which keywords are being searched for frequently. 

Doing a little poking around your competitors sites isn't a bad idea.  This is one way to come up with ideas on what would make your company different or better.  Take a look at their traffic rankings and their related links.  By analyzing this information, you can see how many visitors they have each day and how profitable their company is.
Once you find your passion, ask yourself does this serve my customers.  You want to provide an excellent service to each and every person that spends their money with you.  This cuts down on complaints, bad reputations, and, worse of all, chargeback's.

Making Easy Money On Global Forex Trading


Big money is made not by working hard but by working "Smart". Check out this video - see how you can double real money accounts in months!   See undeniable proof of those bold claims by clicking here.

There are different forms of business. But the easiest way of making money is to trade forex. One of the leading providers of forex trading in real times basis is the global forex trading. It started out its operation since 1997. It gives chances to individuals to trade forex online on real times and it offers an opportunity to most forex brokers to earn millions each day.

Global forex trading is currently serving over one hundred countries. It uses the DealBrook FX2 software and provides twenty four hours access on the forex market. It is also equipped with the highest quality of consumer service which is widely available in the industry of forex trading. The forex brokers are given the opportunity to have an access on the prices of over sixty currency pairs and provide analytical services from renowned experts. The traders are also updated with the latest news bulletin on currency status and available forex charts. Global forex trading is the only provider of trading platforms on forex suitable for beginners as well as professionals.

There are various advantages when trading forex. It is very accessible since it is open twenty four hours besides having the most liquid market. The leverage strategy is always available wherein the traders have the option in using a 100:1 leverage. This reduces the need for larger capitals that is to be opened on the traders account. Forex trading has no commission and the trading is widely available over sixty currencies all over the world. Forex trading is globally available that is why the traders have wider trading opportunities regardless of any market conditions.

Don't assume that forex trading is only for big investors because of the given advantages. Global forex trading have open the way for smaller transactions. In this way, both small and big investors are given the opportunity to gain profits from trading forex.

In rare cases, some people assume that the market for global forex trading dwarfs the equities. However, this is not true because the volume of forex trading even exceeds two trillion dollars each day. So, global forex trading is considered the leader in the field of competitive market exchange. There are several reasons why global forex trading is very exciting.

- The forex market is widely available. The traders can trade currencies twenty four hours a day, seven days a week regardless of its fluctuations. This provides greater market opportunity for traders compared to equities which can only transact business on market hours or when stock exchanges are available.

- The global forex trading potential leverage is astounding. Compared to stock trading, the trader can either trade with the money that they have or open margin accounts and double the leverage when trading. Take for example, you funded your margin accounts with 25,000 then you can control an equity position of 50,000. But in global forex trading, your original capital can obtain leverages up to 20, 50, or even 100 times.

In this manner, the traders can open a forex brokerage online with only 5,000 dollars and can control positions up to 200,000 dollars or above. And if the trader can fund an account with 10,000 dollars then he can control positions up to 500,000 dollars. So, whether the trader can only gain 5% on the positions, then it would still be equivalent to a 25,000 dollars gain with only an initial capital of 10,000 dollars.

- There are lots of traders in the forex market. However, even if it is possible to earn fast profits, the risk of losing is also very high. That is why the technical and fundamental analysis of forex markets is very important. It is advisable for traders to get forex education to have a good start. It could increase their chance of becoming successful forex traders. The traders should guard their business from potential losses.

Global forex trading is indeed a high speculative endeavor. Keep in mind that the traders who are successful in trading forex are those who are methodical, have strong controls over their emotions and impulses, fault-analytical, and disciplined. The traders can really earn big profits in just a few days of trading, it will grow as the time goes by, however only avoid making any mistakes.

8 Biggest Mistakes People Make When Trying to Set Up An Online Internet Business

I know you've been there.  You thought it was easy to make money online through setting up a website or blog, purchasing a domain name or even picking up a free domain name through Blogger or Wordpress, linking affiliate products to it from Clickbank or Clicksure, added some Adsense ads to generate some free money, optimized the website by adding some really good keywords, added some content, then you've sat back and hoped that would attract a lot of free traffic and the money would roll in.  Sounds good, but sorry it doesn't quite happen like that.  What people don’t realise is it still takes a bit of consistent hard work and sweat equity before the money starts rolling in.

Here's a list of common mistakes people have made when trying to make money online:

1.    Thinking you need money to start your online business.   Well to start off with, you don't.  You can set up a free blog through Blogger.com or through Wordpress and just follow their tutorials.  You can even go search on Youtube and find out how to set up a free website or blog.   If you want to get started Blogger is one of the easiest ways to start.  It's quick, easy, and it's free, i.e. no monthly webhosting fee, no need to purchase a URL.  Once you've set that up just link some Adsense ads into it, write up some content or articles.  Go over to Ezine Articles and find some free content there and copy and paste that into your site.  But just remember, give credit to the original source.  Read the copyright rules in Ezine Articles to save being penalized.  But hey, you're just getting started here.  Of course the best information should come from you.  You can add your own content later when you get more confidence or have more time.  Just get it started and get your site online.  You don't have to be perfect because you can change it as you go.  Then sign up into Clickbank marketplace, which is also free, and find some products to add to your site.

2.    Thinking you have to hire a Webmaster or Web designer to design a website or have a lot of experience to a blog or website. Guess what?  You don't.  Just follow the tutorials in whichever site builder you want to use, e.g. Blogger or Wordpress or search Youtube or the web on how to.  There's a lot of free information out there.  Use it to get started.  Start generating money first, and then maybe later purchase other things to automate some of the work and free up some time.     

3.    Not having a goal.  It's so important to have a goal, and WRITE IT DOWN.  Just write it on a piece of paper, in a notebook.  What I've always done is purchased these really cheap school notebooks around the time they're on special, or just use your kid's old notebooks they haven't used.  They're easy to carry around or store away for easy access.  Read your goals every morning and every night if you can, a minimum of once a day.  You will be amazed at what that will do.  Believe me, it works!   When writing down your goals, use the S.M.A.R.T. principles:  Be SPECIFIC, MEASUREABLE, ACHIEVABLE or ATTAINABLE,TIME-BASED.  Set long term goals and then break them down into short term goals.  It's important to break down goals into tiny steps, e.g. daily goals.   Have you heard this, "How do you Eat An Elephant?  One bite at a time."  That's how a goal should be; one step at a time - one bite at a time. 

4.    Not having a plan.  You've got to have some sort of plan.  Would you build a house without a plan?  No, I didn't think so.  Not having a plan is like sailing a boat without a rudder.   First of all, work out how much time you are going to commit to this business.  If you work full time as well and want this as a part time business, work out how much time you can afford to build it.  You can't use the excuse that you don't have enough time.  Believe me, some of the most successful internet marketers in the world have started off working full time, and having other family commitment to cope with.  It's a myth when they say you have to have 8 hours of sleep a night.  You only need 4.  Most people sleep for about 7 to 8 hours a night, but only 3 to 4 will be quality sleep.  You just need to learn how to relax or wind down before going to sleep.  Read a book, read your goals, listen to some soft music.  I go to bed about 10.30pm most nights and my internal clock wakes me about 4.30am.  I'm up at 5.00am, check emails and my business until 6.00am and then do exercise for an hour (another article on it's own).   Break down each step.  Here's something to start you off:

·         Set some Goals
·         Find a niche market (Niche Plan)
·         Find a product or products to sell on Clickbank
·         Create a Blog or Website
·         Monetize your Blog, e.g. add some information, content or articles, add affiliate products, Adsense, Keywords, etc.
·         Drive traffic  (Traffic Plan)

     Of course these have to be broken down even further adding times to them as well (timeline).  For me, when I started I spent a minimum of an hour a day in my business, learning, adding content, creating traffic, checking email, adding comments to Facebook and Twitter, etc.   Remember if you had a laptop, Smart phone or Ipad, you can be anywhere in the world building this business.  Isn't technology great. 

5.   Lack of confidence in themselves.  The best way to conquer this is build up your knowledge base.  Search the internet for ways to build up your confidence.  Learn all about building a business online.  All this information here will take time for you to work through.  You will be working through Clickbank tutorials, website tutorials, Youtube lessons.   A half an hour a day building up the knowledge will pay off in the end.  Just don't EVER give up.  It took me 2 years to make money online because my brain got overloaded and I just went off into different tangents.  Of course the best way to succeed at first is to follow someone else who's been successful, but their programmes can cost.  Start off for free and then when you've got the money later, purchase programmes.  But please be careful what you purchase.  There are lots of scams out there, believe me, I learnt the hard way, but the good news sometimes you have to fail to win, that's how you learn.  I want to save you from making those same mistakes I did.  If you're unsure search Google and type in the programme they are selling then the words "scam".  But read it properly because sometimes these sites are just trying to take you away from a good product and intice you into buying something they are promoting.

6.   Being a perfectionist.  Yes this was my problem when I started.  I ended up wasting time tweaking this and tweaking that, and then ended up wasting a lot of time.  Don't worry about being perfect at first.   Just get your site on line.  Make your website simple, don't add all the bells and whistles to it.  Check other people's sites out - check out what's good and what's bad in their site.      

7.   Procrastination.  I'm sure we all do it - procrastinate!  This is where your goals and plan should kick in.  Write daily goals (a daily list) of what you want to achieve.  Try and stick to your plan and times you set for yourself. 

8.   Not being clear about a niche.  Focus on what you love.  There are lots of niches out there, e.g. weightloss, dog training, health, etc.  Check out Google Adwords which is free.  This will allow you to add a particular keyword, for example "dogs", and it will come up with what people are searching for to do with that subject or niche.   Again, focus on a niche that you love.  It helps to keep motivated. 

To learn more on how to make money or creating websites, just add your details in the Optin box above and I will email you three free ebooks on how to make money.  I will also forward you a copy of another great ebook on Blogging Simplified.  Feel free to share other comments or mistakes people can make while trying to make money.

Good luck!

 


Make Money on Trademe (or Ebay)


You want fast cash! In this day and age with the recession and that, people are starting to turn to Trademe or even E-bay to bring in that fast cash. Yes, it's hard times right now and maybe you too should be looking at what's in your garage or cupboards that you can sell off. But remember, when you start selling, make sure you make your Trademe ad count. There is an art to successfully selling on Trademe.

Here are a few hints:
  • Put in as much information into your Trademe ad.  It can create trust and especially when you start pinpointing the faults in it, e.g. small scratches. 
  • Take clear photos and put on as many as you can.  Nothing worse than someone putting one photo in.  I know myself I click out straight away if there's only one photo in there on an item (of course some things don't need it). 
  • Tell them why you're selling the item.  If you've purchased a new item, say so.
  • If you can put in the postage or courier fee, great.  That will also help.
Bookmark this site and I will keep you up-to-date with more Trademe Secrets.

But in the meantime check Michael Carney's information out on Making Money Online with Trademe below: 

"So you’ve decided to get serious about Trade Me and make some real money on the site. But what should you sell – and where can you find goodies at the right price to make a good profit anyway?

WHAT SHOULD YOU SELL ON TRADE ME?
For some, the answer to this question is easy: sell products that you know a lot about – and indeed, are passionate about. That could be anything, from coins of the nineteenth century to slightly used designer clothing. If you know your products well enough to be a little, um, obsessed about them, then you’ve probably already identified what’s a good deal and what’s a ripoff anyway – and often you’ll already know where to buy your specialist products for a really good price.

For others, the choice of what to sell is not so clear-cut. Many of us have passions that don’t easily lend themselves to profitable trading. Collecting the various ‘Thomas the Tank Engine’ models, for example, can be great fun and all-consuming—but the stock easily available to Kiwi collectors may not have a high resale value, at least not on Trade Me.

And that’s the point of this particular article. We’re exploring what it takes to make some reasonable dollars online, not just earn some spare change by selling off those odds and ends cluttering up your garage – or by parting with precious items that you’ve spent half your life collecting.

HOW MUCH DO YOU WANT TO EARN ONLINE?
Before you even choose what products to sell, you need to decide how much money you want to make on Trade Me – and how much time you’re prepared to devote to doing so. When we interviewed some of the top Trade Me sellers for the TRADE ME SUCCESS SECRETS book, they told us they were spending 60-70 hours a week on Trade Me related tasks, and listing 200-300 items a week. That total suggests that they were photographing and listing an average of 3-4 items per hour (not to mention wrapping and despatching perhaps one item per hour, based on selling one in every three or four items listed*).
*Across Trade Me, typically the sell-through rate averages around 25%. In other words, one in four auctions usually close successfully. That response rate is much higher for specific categories, as you’ll see later.
Of course, those top sellers were trading fulltime on the site – your goals may be somewhat more modest. Even so, you need to identify some key metrics before you decide on your product selection.
For example, if you want to earn $500 per week (before tax) from Trade Me, but are only willing to spend 20 hours a week working on auction tasks, then the following maths might apply:
  • 20 hours @ 4 items listed per hour = 80 items listed per week
  • Sell-through rate of one sold for every 4 items listed = 20 items sold per week
  • Profit required on each item to earn $500 per week = $25 each
If you’re selling one product for every four listed, then each product sold must also include a listing cost allocation for the three not sold. Those costs (within general auctions) can range from 25 cents to $5 or more per listing, depending on your selection of promotional items, subtitles and other options. So your calculations need to take those into account (x4). And then there’s the success fee of 6.9% per sale item (up to $150). All in all, you could be looking at fees totalling as much as $20 for every four items listed (and one sold).
In other words, in order to clear $25 per successful sale, you may need to earn at least $45 more than your purchase price per item. Clearly you need to choose (and then buy) your products very smartly indeed. You also need to be very careful when deciding which promotional options to choose, to minimise your costs but maximise the appeal of your auctions (for which advice, may we point you to Chapter Eleven of Trade Me Success Secrets).

CHOOSING A PRODUCT 1: THE PRICE RANGE
Continuing with our example, then, if you’re wanting to earn $45 per item, you could perhaps be looking at selling products with a perceived value of (say) $150, which you need to source for around $100 each in order to achieve your desired profit margins. That clearly rules out a wide range of products; but still leaves plenty of scope for the imaginative mind (refer to Chapter Nine of TRADE ME SUCCESS SECRETS for strategies to customise each product and thus improve its perceived value to potential purchasers).

CHOOSING A PRODUCT 2: STUFF THAT ALREADY SELLS ON TRADE ME
Every week, around 1.4 million items are listed on Trade Me. Every week, around 350,000 of those items sell. Trade Me collects and kindly reports on which items are more likely to sell than others, and you’ll find that information (updated monthly) here: http://www.trademe.co.nz/Community/SellThroughRates.aspx .

We’ve been tracking these statistics since Trade Me first started publishing them in late 2005 (just in time for the first edition of TRADE ME SUCCESS SECRETS), which was a great relief – we weren’t looking forward to crunching the numbers ourselves, which would have required looking at some fifty thousand pages (every week).

What we found in 2005 – and it’s a result that remains true today – is that Baby Gear and Mobile Phones are consistently the most sought-after categories on Trade Me. A higher proportion of products in those categories sell on a regular basis than almost anywhere else on the site.

Of course, not everybody can sell Baby Gear and Mobile Phones, certainly not all the time (and the categories would plunge in terms of success rates if everybody tried). So we recommend you look at the monthly sales results by category (through the prism of your price constraints, of course) and decide if any of those are for you.

CHOOSING A PRODUCT 3: FINDING NEW PRODUCTS AND TRENDS
Even though online auctions can consume your every waking hour, there is, in fact, life outside Trade Me, radical though that notion might be. If you want to identify hot products and categories before they begin to become popular on Trade Me, you need to start your searching elsewhere. Ten suggestions:

1. The Trade
Manufacturers are constantly bringing out new products, as they look for ways to increase their sales and meet the evolving needs of their customers. Don’t wait for these new products to hit the public arena before you hear about them. Talk to industry experts, read trade journals, go to trade fairs and exhibitions.

2. ReadHaunt your local library, bookstore or news-stand. Some of the hottest new global offerings are written up in international news magazines such as Time, Newsweek and Business Week, especially in regular Hot Products issues. For techno-business trends, sample Wired, Fast Company and (locally) Unlimited and Idealog. For more technical products, Popular Science and Popular Mechanics provide inspiration. In the world of fashion, you’ll find the many international editions of titles such as Vogue will spark ideas. Whatever your product category, there’ll undoubtedly be international magazines serving that interest.

3. Watch TV
In particular sample some of the magazine-type shows on CNN and BBC World. You’ll get advance warning of hot trends brewing offshore. If you’re interested in the latest entertainment-related products, check out shows such as E! News Live, Entertainment Tonight and The Late Show with David Letterman.

4. Web Trends
If you’re interested in broader trend analysis, a number of global websites specialise in new trends. Inevitably, many of the trends thus uncovered are still some time away from commercial reality in New Zealand. However, for a sneak peek at some of the opportunities you might be considering for next year, visit (and, where available, sign up for newsletters at):
  • http://www.trendwatching.com/
    This site and its thousands of trend-spotters scan the US, Canada, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, India, South Africa, Australia, Brazil and 50 other nations and regions for hot, emerging consumer trends and related new business ideas. A monthly email newsletter shares these global observations, insights and new business ideas.
  • www.springwise.com
    A sister site to Trendwatching, Springwise scans the globe looking for new business-to-consumer ideas, concepts, innovations and ventures that have already proven themselves in local or regional markets, and are ready for expansion, partnership, franchising or copying.
  • www.google.com/trends/hottrends
    Search patterns, trends, and surprises — what’s hot and what’s not, according to Google. Search statistics are automatically generated based on the millions of searches conducted on Google over a given period of time: weekly, monthly and annually.

5. Closer to home: Kiwi ‘what’s hot’ lists
‘What’s Hot and What’s Not’ lists make regular appearances in many local newspapers and magazines. While some of the selected hot items are fleeting at best, bizarre at worst, others will provide the seed of an idea for a profitable product to offer on Trade Me.

6. Any and all magazines
Even weekly magazines such as the New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, Woman’s Day and New Idea are great sources of inspiration for what’s current. Squeezed in between those tantalising tales of celebrities in trouble you’ll find:
  • Advertisements about products that you could also be selling
  • Stories on common problems facing readers, which may inspire you to find or create profitable solutions
  • ‘How to’ features, eg, beauty workshops — needs found, for you to fill
  • Fashion accessories, for which you might have access to a low-cost source
  • Letters to the editor, citing problems and opportunities
  • Home and garden pictures, which can inspire you to create your own versions and sell online!

7. Mailers and advertising ephemeraTear down that ‘No Junk Mail’ sign on your letterbox and enter the world of sell, sell, sell! Devour those advertising circulars. Pay particular attention to products that have pride of place on the cover or have a full page inside that’s all about them. Those are products that will sell strongly at retail and — if you can source them at the right price — are potential sales champions for you.

8. NetworkTalk to shopkeepers and shop assistants. Ask them what’s hot in their store. Those that have been paying attention can point you towards some best-sellers — and probably some surprises. A word of warning: take any overly passionate endorsements with a grain of salt. These people are in the business of selling and may have you in their sights!

9. Searching online
Once you have an inkling of the type of product you might sell, search online via your search engine of choice. What exactly are you looking for?
  • The latest news on the product (for example, you may find that it’s just been superseded, recalled or enhanced – which can mean there’s an opportunity to buy up last week’s models at heavily discounted prices, wsell them at a not so heavy discount and make good margins)
  • Possible wholesale sources, if you plan to sell new items
  • Insider tips from those who love (or hate) the product
  • Sales figures from other markets
  • Articles or reviews on key features, benefits and failings
  • A whole range of possible insights about the product
  • Customer reviews, which tell you lots of useful info about the product (which you can use to inform your listings)
  • Tweets alerting you to hot news about product releases
  • And a whole heap of stuff you’d never find out the old-fashioned way

10. Number crunching
Many leading New Zealand retailers are public companies, and required to publish regular reports on trading patterns. Read their quarterly, half-yearly and annual reports and review any historical sales data that’s available in those reports (sometimes it’s in the accompanying commentary, explaining anomalous results). Use this information where you can to identify product categories that have been historically popular at certain key periods, eg, Christmas, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Valentine’s Day, Easter, etc.

CHOOSING A PRODUCT 4: WHAT ELSE?
Once you’ve identified possible products, you need to identify where to buy them, at a price that enables you make a decent margin. It’s never easy, but it is possible, as some of Trade Me’s top sellers reluctantly revealed when interviewed:

WHERE DO TOP SELLERS GET THEIR PRODUCTS?
We asked contributors to TRADE ME SUCCESS SECRETS where they get their products. They were understandably reticent — in many cases that’s the secret of their success — but we were very persuasive and managed to encourage a number of them to unlock their Book of Secrets, at least a little.
  • One of our jewellery sellers attributes a large part of her success to an ‘Aladdin’s Cave’ of goodies which she discovered when she purchased a jeweller’s estate. The acquisition included items that had been in a storage cupboard for some 30-odd years. These were shop-new but very retro. These days she also sources products from offshore (from a variety of international suppliers based in England, Europe and the Americas).
  • Another jewellery seller sources all of her products through the Internet. A lot of her ‘spare time’ is spent searching for products that no one else has, finding people with credibility and establishing good relationships with particular companies. She usually starts off purchasing a sample quantity of an item, to test the quality and the customer service of the company. If both measure up, she’ll start to build from there.
  • Another top trader, who sells toys online, has a more direct source: a large extended family (12 kids!) so there are always unwanted toys, games, clothes, appliances, etc. The normal greeting is ‘Hi, is this any good to you?’ as they walk in the door waving whatever in the air!
  • Yet another specialises in imported clothes and sexy lingerie. She reports that she does buy a little on Trade Me, but buys many of her products on eBay. Her particular niche: fashionable clothing and lingerie in larger sizes.
  • A leading Australian Trade Me seller usually manufactures his own products (which include replica posters, pins and patches, replica and novelty currency — and Kiwi Million Dollar Notes), but sometimes gathers goodies from garage sales and markets.
  • A Kiwi trader sometimes buys from ‘op shops’, and even occasionally buys sale items from shops. Her story is not atypical: many of the sellers we interviewed purchase products from local sources. A surprising number started out as hoarders, until they began drawing on their own collections to sell online. Friends’ stuff, markets and garage sales — as well as many of the other sources we identified earlier — were all fair game, and our top sellers were obviously able to make enough of a margin to make their Trade Me activities worthwhile.
As you can see from these reports from our experienced sellers, you can find resaleable products just about anywhere. If you just want to make a bit of pocket money, you don’t have to worry too much about regular sources of supply. But if you really want to build a sustainable business on Trade Me then you’ll have to put some serious effort into tracking down reliable suppliers, building relationships with those suppliers and (frankly) investing not just time but money.
For those who don’t particularly want to specialise in a single category, some other thoughts:

SOURCES OF SECOND-HAND GOODS FROM THE GENERAL PUBLIC
  • School Fairs: If you have kids, start with the schools that they attend. If you volunteer yourself for the PTA organising committee, you’ll sometimes be able to wangle first look at the goodies to be sold, before the fair is open to the public. Of course, you will have to contribute your fair share of PTA work in return for this privilege.
  • Flea Markets and Car Boot Sales: These highly localised markets attract a broad range of sellers, from the ‘clearing out the garage’ types to small-scale importers of knick-knacks from exotic destinations, but choose your purchases with care; some of these sellers you may never see again.
  • Book Fairs: For those who believe they can earn good money from books, the country’s book fairs can be an inexpensive source of stock, but you’ll have to hustle; the best offerings are usually rapidly scavenged as soon as they’re put on display.
  • Thrift Shops and Op Shops: We found 24 Salvation Army Family Stores and 20 St Vincent de Paul Society shops listed in the Yellow Pages; just some of the welfare organisations that operate these shops as community resources and worthy fundraising endeavours.
  • Antique Fairs: Visit www.huntly.net.nz/antique.html for a list of antique and collectable fairs throughout New Zealand. If you know your antiques, these fairs can be valuable, but you’d be well advised to visit some of the more out-of-the-way regions if you want to unearth truly hidden treasures.
  • Garage Sales: These humble events are always a mix of the good, the bad and the ugly. To find the real bargains, you’ll have to become one of those obnoxious individuals who turn up on the doorstep an hour before the scheduled start time. You’ll also make new acquaintances — the other earlybirds catching the worms, trudging along the same garage-sale circuits in search of the pot of gold hidden beneath the rainbow duvet.
  • Inorganic Street Collections: The last bastion of conspicuous consumption, as neighbours demonstrate their affluence by discarding perfectly functional, um, kitsch for others to drive by, sample and adopt. Or, worse, leave untouched for (gasp!) the council to haul away. Alas, this acquisition process will not provide a steady flow of saleable inventory, but can provide a few choice items for the opportunist. Note, however, that in recent years councils have tended to pass regulations to deter activity by hawkers – check out the rules in your catchment area.
  • And we would be remiss if we failed to mention the more regular supply of items that can be acquired if one is inclined to frequent the local Refuse Centre (that’s a rubbish dump with delusions of grandeur). Product quality might be an issue, but quantity and variety (certainly at a desirable pricing level) are assured.

LOCAL RETAIL OPPORTUNITIES
Trade Me is accessible to anyone with a computer and an Internet connection. As such, it’s a great shopping venue for buyers in more geographically isolated parts of New Zealand. Residents of far-flung outposts can now get access to products normally sold only in the larger metropolitan areas, while still enjoying their more pleasant lifestyles. Astute city-clicker sellers have noted this fact, and have been known to frequent their local retailers, buying discounted and sale items and reselling them online. Inexpensive products can often be found (with a certain amount of rummaging around) at stores such as:
  • The Warehouse
  • $2 Shops and other similarly named dollar stores
  • Dick Smith stores (especially their repairs and returns tables)
  • So-called ‘Category Killers’ — retailers that focus on a single product category, eg, Super Cheap Auto, Rebel Sport, Number One Shoe Warehouse
In fact, any retailer who has regular clearance sales should be on your list of potential product sources. If you know of retailers who have sales at a particular time of year (eg, Smith & Caughey’s twice-yearly events) you should add them to your calendar. New store openings are also a good source of bargain buying, but you need to be quick.

FACTORY AND OUTLET STORES
Although some ‘Factory Shops’ sell their wares at prices little different from traditional retail outlets, there are enough genuine factory shops out there to serve as a good source of products. The ideal factory shop will also be one of a kind and physically close to the factory it supports, so that few Kiwis have easy access to its lower prices.
SECOND-HAND DEALERS AND PAWNBROKERS
These classic institutions, which had the resale of second-hand goods pretty much to themselves in the days before eBay and Trade Me, can still be fertile sources of products to resell, although the dealers’ margins can mean it’s not always profitable to list them online. Second-hand dealers range in size and scope from single stores to national chains such as Cash Converters. Pawn shops occupy a lower profile in the retail sector generally, and are more likely to be found in areas bordering poorer households.

OPPORTUNISTIC EVENTS
There are, we are told, only two sure things in life: death and taxes. Estate sales, liquidations and bankruptcies are essentially the side-effects of both certainties, and while we naturally wouldn’t welcome such eventualities, they do tend to create opportunities. Typically, the recipients of deceased estates have little interest in many of the items hoarded by the dear departed, and will tend to dispose of them in bulk without worrying too much about the value of specific items. Similarly, receivers and liquidators are more interested in quitting chattels quickly than in realising optimal resale prices. Watch out for such opportunities: good profits can be made reselling the items individually.

ENDS OF LINE
We live in a disposable world of conspicuous consumption. Products with heaps of life still left in them are consigned to oblivion when new (sometimes only slightly) improved versions are introduced by manufacturers. But what happens to the old products? Where do superseded cellphones go to let their batteries run down? When the latest PlayStation rolls out the door, what happens to all those unused (but redundant) previous-generation consoles?
If you can find the right sources, perhaps some of those retired products could find new homes through your Trade Me listings. We can’t always afford the latest and greatest new product, and you could be performing a valuable public service by providing a new life to these obsolete senior citizens — and making a decent profit at the same time.

TRADE SHOWS AND CONVENTIONS
There’s nothing quite like the last day at a good trade show. Exhausted exhibitors, weary of the whole thing, just want to pack up and go home. But they’d rather not have to lug home all the products they still have on display, so they’re often willing to quit stock at a substantial discount. So if you intend to go to any tradeshow, make sure you leave it till the last day — and preferably the last afternoon. Then get ready to haggle.

RENTAL AND LEASING COMPANIES
Companies that lease out equipment, whether on a short-term or long-term basis, inevitably end up with used but often still serviceable products when the leases expire. They are bound to have existing arrangements in place to dispose of those goods, but will probably listen to a compelling alternative.

UNCLAIMED ITEMS
We’re a forgetful lot. We leave our belongings on trains and buses. We drop stuff into drycleaners or repair shops and never get around to picking them up. We send packages to the wrong addresses. We leave goods in storage. That’s why the companies reserve the right to sell unclaimed goods. To you.

CONFISCATED GOODS AUCTIONS
There’s something vaguely voyeuristic about bidding for goods that have been confiscated by police or customs. We tend to imagine all sorts of sordid tales about the former owners of these innocent household goods. Unfortunately, that morbid fascination also tends to make such auctions very popular, so bidding can be brisk for many items. Our best advice: get a catalogue in advance, if you can, and check out potential resale returns in advance. Failing that, turn up early, identify and inspect the items you could resell. If possible, work with a partner by cellphone to identify the prices such items are currently fetching on Trade Me. Subtract your costs and your margin and that’s your top bid price. Don’t bid beyond that point (sometimes easier said than done, if you happen to fall in love with a particularly choice offering).

CHARITY AUCTIONS
Auctions have always been a popular method of supporting good causes. They have become even more effective with the advent of Trade Me. Products are donated freely, all the dollars raised go towards the designated charities and everyone’s happy. Of course, not all products at the auctions achieve their maximum value. The high-profile offerings capture attention and bids, but some of the products slip through at bargain prices. That’s your cue.

TRADITIONAL AUCTIONS
While Trade Me auctions continue to draw more and more members, they’re not the only game in town. Traditional auctioneers still handle large quantities of goods, and they’re still a great place to pick up unexpected bargains. We recommend looking out for special-interest auctions (eg, those which involve the sale of complete stock and chattels of restaurants, industrial goods suppliers, contractors, etc). Typically, these auctions attract industry insiders looking for the specialist equipment available only at such auctions. The insiders generally have little interest in the everyday chattels common to all businesses — computers, fax machines, copiers, printers, desks, tables, chairs, etc — and such products can be purchased at much lower prices than if they were being sold at general office or computer-equipment auctions.

LOCAL WHOLESALERS
Where can you find genuine local wholesalers who might be willing to deal with you? You have to ask the right people. And that would be who? The local manufacturers who made the products or the local branches of multinational manufacturers for products made offshore. Specifically, you should call them up and ask for the sales department. Simply tell the person in that department that you own a retail business, and you want to sell some of their products. Ask them for a list of their wholesale distributors. They’ll have that information readily available, and should be willing to give it to you.
Next step: call the wholesalers they give you and ask about their terms — discount structure, minimum stock requirements, payment terms, etc. They’ll probably need you to set up an account, and you still have to deal with the issue of whether they will sell to a small home-based Internet business. Many of them won’t, so this research can take a great deal of time, but it is very important to your business that you do it right.

INTERNATIONAL WHOLESALERS
If you thought local wholesalers were tough to track down, just wait until you try to find genuine international wholesalers. The Internet is flooded with millions of people and organisations claiming to be wholesalers — a quick Google gave us 4,560,000 results — so you really will have to put in the hard yards. If you’ve identified a specific product you want to sell, the first steps can be the same as those we’ve suggested for dealing with local wholesalers: call the sales department at the manufacturer and find out their wholesale distributors. The next step, however, would be a lot harder: finding someone who’s willing to (a) deal with small orders; (b) ship stuff all the way over to New Zealand; and (c) overlook the fact that there’s probably someone in New Zealand who already has the distribution rights for this market.
LOCAL ONLINE AUCTION SITES
There are a small number of online auction and classified sites operating in New Zealand in competition to Trade Me. It’s fair to say these sites have been attracting relatively limited numbers of visitors and as a result the bidding on specific items is less frenzied. There may well be products listed on these sites that could be purchased cheaply and then resold on Trade Me.

INTERNATIONAL ONLINE AUCTION SITES
If you can cope with such issues as currency exchange, shipping costs and the higher risk of fraudulent activity, the world’s online auctions are a fertile source of products for you to resell locally. You should inevitably begin with eBay.com of course, and that may well occupy you enough. But eBay has many international offshoots. If you can handle languages other than English (or use the automatic translation options on Google’s browser bar plugin), you might well pick up some useful bargains on non-Anglo sites.

PRODUCT SOURCES ARE EVERYWHERE, BUT…
With a combination of knowledge, experience and imagination you can find potential product sources anywhere. But if it was easy, everyone would do it. It takes as much diligence and determination to turn an idea into a business on Trade Me as it does in any business venture.
PS That’s definitely all we have space and time for in this way-over-length article. If you want more, may we respectfully direct you to TRADE ME SUCCESS SECRETS, which covers the topic in even more detail. The second edition of this best-selling book is of course available for sale at our Trade Me store."


How Can I Make Money Fast?

What is SaleHoo?

SaleHoo is one of the fastest growing product sourcing portals on the internet with over 75,000 members. It contains a database of verified drop ship, wholesale, closeout and manufacturing suppliers offering thousands of products at wholesale prices to retailers all over the world. SaleHoo also provides a tool kit of selling and sourcing guides, market research software and a private members' forum. The supplier database is regularly updated, ensuring the latest retail products are always available for you to purchase. Best of all, SaleHoo carries the BBB Reliability Seal so you know you will be getting the best quality service and trusted information every time. SaleHoo is the perfect place to discover all the suppliers and business strategies you need to make money!

Here are 7 Reliably Profitable eBay Markets

1. Clothing, shoes and accessories

Clothing seems like one of the most exciting categories for ladies to get involved in as it includes so many niches such as novelty underwear, comfort shoes, plus size gym wear and clothing, etc. Clothing is also one of the easiest things to sell and ship, and best of all, there's always a demand for clothing.
Here is a selling Tip: Always give the buyer as much information as you can in your eBay listings, especially about the garment's size. This will help buyers to work out whether it fits them or not - one factor which can easily cause uncertainty in potential buyers.

2. Collectables

eBay is one of the most popular places in the world to buy and sell collectable items without a doubt. Collectables can include antiques, posters, baseball cards, medals and war artefacts, coins, comics and other branded items like Coca Cola etc.

Sourcing Tip:  Rummage through your garage, cupboards for old collectables you great grandmother may have given you, or visit yard and estate sales for second hand items which you can buy very cheaply and sell on eBay and make a good profit. 


3. Health and Beauty

There are so many items within the Health and Beauty market: there's hair care,  vitamins and anti-aging creams, weight loss supplements, dental care, makeup (nail polish, lip gloss, lipstick, lip balm, concealers, powder, foundations, eyeliners, mascara, eyeshadow, illuminators, bronzers and blushers - and many many more), even perfumes and cologne, moisturizers, eye creams, microdermabrasion kits, hair and makeup brushes as well as applicators, hair removal kits or razors and shaving creams, manicure kits, eyelash curlers, tweezers, you name it.  The list goes on. 

As with all categories, it really helps to sell something which you are really interested in or have experience with.  If it's something you enjoy yourself, sell it.  It will keep you interested.  What about if you suffer from dandruff, selling dandruff treatments would be a great thing to sell as you can relate to your audience and give them a few tips along the way (would be great in your eBay About Me page).

Hot Tip: While brand-name items are top sellers in the health and beauty industry, be very weary of Chinese suppliers offering these items very cheap as they are likely to be fake and eBay cracks down very hard on anyone selling these sorts of things.

4. Electronics

Electronics is possibly one of the most competitive and exciting markets on eBay, particular for the big boys, and potentially a profitable market on eBay - particularly when it comes to items such as mobile phones, Androids, iPods, iPads or even Kindles.  One of the best ways to approach this market is in a big way, i.e. make a real profit by doing a big bulk buy and sell in big volumes. Consider supplementing your product range with accessories such as iPod skins, spare cords, or hands free kits for mobile phones.

5. DVDs and CDs

I bet you didn't know that eBay sells over 1 million DVDs and CDs and each month?  However, for every one million sold DVDs and CDs sold, there are around 2 million listed. Yip, you guessed it, another highly competitive market for you to get into. The trick to making it in the CD and DVD business is to niche it up - go outside of mainstream movies and TV series', or music albums and find a new niche market like exercise DVD's, classic films or learning languages.


6. Gaming systems

There are many gaming enthusiasts that use eBay to buy and sell their gaming systems and games. A typical gamer will buy the latest system, play it for 8 hours a day for about a month then want to sell it on and find something new to entertain them, which means there's always many buyers on the hunt for a new system to entertain them.

7. Baby Gear

From toys to feeding equipment and strollers, baby gear can be a very highly profitable eBay market to get into. Like clothing and health care, there will always be a market for baby equipment and with the huge costs associated with bringing up a baby, it's no wonder parents turn to buying online to find bargains and save themselves some money.

Hot Tip: Don't be put off sourcing second-hand or sample grade baby clothing because babies can be messy little things and parents need them to have an abundance of cheap clothing to change baby into after they splash around in the puddles, play with mud or start feeding their sweaters.
But remember, keep in mind that these markets are reliably profitable only when they are well executed! The above categories are highly competitive so when selling them, you must work hard to stand out from your competitors with great key words and item descriptions, and flawless customer service!


Ideas for Creating an Article and Ebook

Link optimisation - Make your site popular


Optimising your website is a good idea.  It's a great way to attract organic traffic to your website (free traffic). 
  • Add links to your website (some will link for free, some will charge) e.g. DMOZ - http://www.dmoz.org/.  This site is like a dictionary of websites (a free site). 

  • Write articles and submit to many articles sites (make sure you change the article/spin article, etc. www.ezinearticles.com.  Many are free. Note: Optimisation may not become apparent or noticeable at first, but it will in the future.

  • Keywords - use keyword rich URLs, Titles, and add keyword many times in the article or website.

  • Do research first using something like microniche finder and other tools.

  • Give Away - give away information, e.g. Free ebooks, Free information - in emails, through Social Media sites like Google Plus, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Blog sites, Member sites and forums, My Space, Squidoo, Social bookmarking managers like - DIGG, Del.icio.us.  Allow people to rank pages according to popularity, judged by votes.   The higher you are ranked the more you're seen on Google.

  • Promote your business at same time.

  • Blog on other people's blogs, giving helpful advice, on hobby sites, forums, etc. e.g. Ukulele blog, member sites or forums.