I tell people they should build
something for themselves online, and they think I'm asking them to build a new Walmart.
When all I'm really asking is for them to open a lemonade stand, to start.
For instance: I know people who have developed apps, or Chrome extensions, or written eBooks, or created blogs to generate affiliate income, or built email lists, or built eCommerce stores or sold print-on-demand products.
Those are all great approaches.
But much easier is giving things away. That's as simple as a lemonade stand. It literally (and I'm using that word correctly) cannot get any easier.
I told you I gave away access to an excellent video series on money and investing that my folks raved about. Not a single negative comment.
I didn't have to sell a thing.
But once people watched, the creators followed up with them with various offers. I didn't have to do this. I was the hero who gave away the free stuff. The creators did the selling. I just sat back and collected 50% of the dough.
Why more people don't do this is beyond me: giving something away to people who will benefit from it, and then sitting there while the checks pour in.
How does something like this work?
Brendan Mace's Goodwill program shows you.
It costs approximately nothing, and it comes with 30 days' email access to me to ask whatever questions you want.
And it shuts down tonight:
Tom Woods