Imagine if 25 years ago I had made the
following claims:
Anyone, anywhere in the world will be able to read the works of Ludwig von Mises on demand.
Instead of the hassle of going to travel agents, we'll be able to book our own flights in seconds.
It will soon be possible to speak live to a thousand -- heck, even a million -- people without leaving
your house.
(Plus 100 other claims far more astonishing than these.)
We all would have said: uh-huh. Sure.
Thanks to the Internet, these wonders are now commonplace.
But -- and here's what most people miss -- the same is true about making a
living: a lot of the toughest, most labor-intensive, and indeed most expensive parts of running a business are much more manageable online.
Regular people can achieve results that would have been impossible without a major up-front investment.
Now of course there's of course work on the front end.
But I'll tell
you this: I would never have gone to the trouble of starting a brick-and-mortar business. Online, on the other hand? I can work from anywhere, I don't need to take out a $1 million loan, and I'm a lot happier.
You're almost always dealing in products that are infinitely reproducible, additional copies of which have a marginal cost of zero.
The delivery system of these
products is completely automated and requires no human effort once set up. People can be ordering and receiving their products at 3:00 in the morning.
You can leverage other people's email lists, contacts, and social media followings even if you yourself have none of these things. Affiliates will sell your stuff to their lists in exchange for a cut.
Your overhead is
minimal to nonexistent.
The only thing standing between you and this is a learning curve.
I just solved that problem for you: