The DNA of My Online Home Based Business

growth-analysis

I was looking back at my company’s past performance a few weeks back, and I learned a lot of things. Mind if I share them with you?

The graph you see above is a simplified version, so you don’t see the detailed information but trust me you can learn a lot from my successes and mistakes. Notice that this graph starts in November 2005, my first month as a full-time writer and entrepreneur. The first few months were tough for me, and in February 2006 I even lost some money after my paid autosurf disaster. It took me one month to recover and from April 2006 till now my income has only been increasing.

But the real lesson is in the overall pattern I discovered by looking at my financial stats. It took me some time to learn exactly why in some moths my income grew and it other months it fell back temporarily. I also learned why in some periods my business grew by over 200% and in other months it grew very little.

The Real Measure of Online Income

If you notice the graph above I have 2 types of overall income:

  1. Active Income – The income I get when I launch a new product, or actively market my products or other people’s products as an affiliate.
  2. Passive Income – The income I get when I just let things run by itself and make no attempt at running a new marketing campaign

A lot of people in Internet marketing (and even MLM for that matter) hype up the idea of making money passively, when your previous efforts will continue to pay you for months or even years to come. But passive income is not all it’s cracked up to be. In fact if you stopped working on your Internet business today, you cannot expect the income level to be the same as when you’re actively working your business.

There’s a gap between these two types of income, and passive income is always lower.

In May 2006 I launched Chapter-M which was my first successful product online. That raised my active income for the particular month (period 1), but soon after the active income level dropped as most people will tend to buy your product on the launch day itself, or within the first 30 days. However, if you do things right your product will continue to sell at a lower rate for a long time afterwards, which means that you’ve now raised your passive income level.

Same thing in August 2006 when I launched WordPress Adsense System and had my first thousand dollar day. The income rose again in August but the next month it fell to the residual income level. But this is a good product, so it continued to sell and added to my passive income as I didn’t really actively market the product beyond the first month.

Slowly, both my active income and passive income started to rise, as my WordPress tutorials blog and blogging forum started getting more traffic and my mailing list started to grow. With a bigger mailing list, I could promote affiliate products and make more money. Throughout September 2006 till March 2007 (period 2) however, I created no new product of my own, barring a few simple stuff here and there, which was more of a list-building exercise than money-making quests.

But now the machine was running smoothly, so without big campaigns my income grew and I believer will continue to grow a the residual level for months to come.

In April and May 2007 (period 3) I launched Easy Blog Traffic and Internet Millionaires Club, which pushed my active income level up again to the USD10,000 mark.

How To Grow Exponentially

There’s a few lessons I learned from this:

  1. Focus on creating new products – If you want to increase your income fast, you must continue to introduce new products and create new sites. If you don’t your residual income will grow slowly, but if you do you can raise the bar quickly and be earning at a different level altogether!
  2. Residual income isn’t 100% hands-free – Residual income still takes some of your time. Sometimes you’ll need to update a website or product, fix bugs in your software or boost your SEO to keep up with the times. If you completely abandon them your residual stream will eventually dry up
  3. Take your time to plan and create – You can decided to just write an ebook one day and hope that people will buy it, but if you want to make money from that ebook for a long time, you need to make sure you do it right. Alexis Dawes has an excellent guide at DesperateBuyersGuide.com that teaches you exactly how to create products with high value. If you take the time to plan, you always end up with a winning formula.
  4. Don’t get distracted – During period 3 I got distracted with trying a lot of different things, and I started a couple of new blogs that sucked up a lot of my energy. Instead, I should have focused on creating more information products on related topics / niche markets so I can capitalize on the resources that I already have
  5. Focus on constant traffic – Tie up your email list with your blog, your forum, and any other site or service you have. Make sure you get constant traffic from search engines (both free and paid) so that you’ll always have new people looking at your product or offer.
    • Doing JV promotions is great but when they hype dies out its really up to you to make a product successful by getting your own traffic..
    • If you only depend on other people to help you market your stuff, your income level will be extremely volatile, with a bigger difference between active income and passive income.
    • You don’t want to spend every month coming up with a product du jour and hoping others will promote them for you…
    • The reason I managed to increase my income during Period 3 when I had no active marketing is because I have managed to get about 30,000 visitors per month to my blog and products using many different traffic generation methods by myself..

Well, that’s about it for now although I can share a lot more from just the one graph above.

If you cannot draw a graph like that for your own business, I suggest you set aside a few days to get your financial information on track. It’s no use investing more time and money into your business if you don’t really understand the DNA and driving force behind it.

Using Squidoo to Make Money Online

Oh yes, as if MySpace, blogging, Craigslist, coregistration, MyBlogLog and Technorati were not enough, now there’s a new player on the block in the Web 2.0 world.

squidoo It’s an orange-colored one-eyed alien squid affectionately know as Squidoo. I’m sure you may have heard some hype about it, but what is Squidoo, really?

Squidoo launched in December 2005, and the man behind the idea is Seth Godin, a well-know author of several marketing and business books, and the authoritative figure in marketing concepts and ideas for small businesses.

Since this IS a blog about making money online, I’m going to focus on how to use Squidoo as an effective marketing tool, being quite aware of the backlash I may receive from certain “pure” readers. In this case however, I don’t feel so bad as the owners of Squidoo themselves acknowledge that Squidoo will be used by marketers to make money online, and they clearly encourage that act.

The idea is simple really – allow individuals to create a lens which is basically a one / two page collection of relevant content, RSS feeds, articles and products related to a certain keyword / market. The lens master is the owner of these lenses, and he can create as many as he wants, on as many different topics as he wants.

The lens master is then viewed as the authoritative figure on that topic, or at the very least an enthusiast that has taken the tie to research the topic and present a “list” of information sites relevant to that particular market.

On each lens, the lens master can monetize his page by:

  1. Adding Google Adsense (insert your ID) and monetizing from clicks
  2. Linking to his other blogs / sites and monetizing on the off-site traffic received
  3. Linking directly to his own books or products
  4. Linking to an individual affiliate program and monetizing from affiliate commissions
  5. Adding additional Ebay and Amazon modules to his lens, and monetizing from the affiliate commissions

So what’s the big deal, really?

Why would you want to use Squidoo instead of building your own web page?

The answer is simple, as I discovered in my Myspace marketing interview and a couple of other interviews I’ve done about using popular sites to form a symbiotic (or parasitic) relationship with an existing business.

The answer: SEO or Search Engine Optimization

squidoo Sites like Squidoo.com already have massive amount of traffic and is viewed as an authority site. A friend of mine, Sean Wu, has an entire course devoted to this concept of leeching off authority sites in his Tag and Ping course.

But while that course deals with sites like Del.icio.us and social bookmarking, Squidoo is quite different in a sense that you don’t need your own website or blog to start using it.

The idea behind it is that since these sites already rank high on search engines, it will be easier to create a specific page on a specific keyword, and rank high in Google for that particular keyword with little or no effort. Every page you create will somehow get linked to from the main pages of Squidoo.com, and through those links the search engine spiders will eventually find your Squidoo lens (page), index it, and rank it.

A lot of people claim that they can get first page rankings in Google for the keywords they use, and make money from the onslaught of traffic they get. As easy as it seem, experience has thought us (me at least) that it’s never really that simple. Can I really hope to create a lens with the keywords of “make money online” and instantly topple all these people?

Probably not, but as I’m writing this, I did find one Squidoo lens listed on the first page, at the 9th spot.

make money online squidoo

I don’t know about you, but I’d consider myself very blessed to have this kind of result, especially considering that my 2-page collection of related articles can compete with the big dogs like JohnChow.com or ProBlogger.net, each running established blogs with thousands of pages worth of content.

So, clearly, there’s something to this Squidoo phenomenon. Although some critics say that Squidoo is a sad Web-2.0 wannabe founded by a guy that is better at marketing himself than at creating solid business models, I say if there’s an opportunity I’ll take it.

So watch out a series of articles on how you can use Squidoo to get high search engine rankings, create traffic, and make money online. I’ll be throwing in some videos as well, if possible.

If you want to get a crash course on making money online with Squidoo, I strongly recommend you get Squidoo Profits by JP Schoeffel

Fake It Till You Make It?

A friend forwarded this article to me, which is worth a read:

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By Paul Sloan, Business 2.0 Magazine editor-at-large

October 16 2006: 10:37 AM EDT(Business 2.0 Magazine) — One of the many remarkable aspects of the Internet is how easily people can use it to pretend to be something they aren’t. There are, of course, terrifying results, such as when crooks pose as your bank.

But David Carter has taken that capacity for misdirection and made it into a legitimate way to make money.

For instance, Carter didn’t know a thing about asbestos when he launched AsbestosSurveys.com – yet it sure looked as if he did. He wrote about regulatory changes in his native England by culling data from a government website. He explained what property owners needed to do to comply. He even posted local phone numbers for his “business” in London, Manchester, and Birmingham, each of which was forwarded to an answering service.

When inquiries flooded in, Carter steered them to an acquaintance who really was an asbestos surveyor. The requests were far more than one surveyor could handle, but Carter continued to book new customers.

“I told them there was a big backlog,” recalls Carter, who is 47 and lives in Birmingham. “Then I said, ‘Oh, God. What do I do now?’”

To Carter, there was really only one answer: Become a surveyor himself. [Read more...]