Objective: source blog
I will write a bit more about this in some later posts, as at present I don't want to reveal the product name, but the first thing you need to do when launching a product that will mainly sell through the internet is to find a hungry market.
Actually, that's what you want in any ideal business, but on the internet you have to get high Google rankings, and that a scientific process of:
- Look at Googles tools to find out what is being searched for
- Look at the magazine racks/Clickbank products to see what is being talked about/sold with regards those areas
- Assess the competition
- Choose a product and URL combination, and then just go for it
We are in Go For It mode, and for various reasons we'll come back to the science bit later: it will be come clear when I reveal the chose URL and product name.
So accepting we are at that stage, what's next? Well the books written, but I am sure needs more work. But as Litman would say, its good enough for launch!
The next thing that needs doing is the website, which we'll achieve in two stages:
1. Launch the blog, and get Google rankings started. It should take about 30days to get onto page1
2. Have a the proper website designed in background during this period, ready for a day30+ launch
I once got quoted £2000 for the design of a fairly simple new website once. I ask the designer what they did for £2000, and much as though their portfolio was great, the main answer was to pay them half of that sum as a deposit! Needless to say that I didn't take them up on their option, but went and sourced a cheaper option that took 3months to index in Google.
So today's task was to source a blog platform. Now I know there are cheap and simple ways to do this on free platforms - I'm writing this blog on such a platform - but I want to outsource. So I made contact (eventually...) with the provider of such Wordpress based blog platforms, and she (eventually...) came back to me to confirm that yes, I could not only have one eMail address, I could have as many as I wanted!
Go result for the day, but should have taken less time
Costs so far: £6.95
Time: 63hrs
Thursday, 31 March 2011
So why outsource?
So why outsourcing? We here so much about outsourcing to far off exotic lands in the UK media, that surely outsourcing is easy?
As an engineer its easy to jump in and DIY: but that's wholly unproductive. You see, what you learn in business is that something you are great at, something's you are good at, and something's you are adequate at - and the rest is just ego! When someone else can do it quicker/faster/cheaper/better, then - why DIY?
So this project is about outsourcing, and doing what I have found I do best: finding markets, conceptualising the product/service, and then launching. Once its in day-to-day business mode, frankly: I lose my mojo! I am then better to develop or move on, than I am to do the 9-5.
So I am outsourcing for three core reasons:
*Do what I do best/others do best
*Get there quicker/cheaper
*Change and improve my business
As an engineer its easy to jump in and DIY: but that's wholly unproductive. You see, what you learn in business is that something you are great at, something's you are good at, and something's you are adequate at - and the rest is just ego! When someone else can do it quicker/faster/cheaper/better, then - why DIY?
So this project is about outsourcing, and doing what I have found I do best: finding markets, conceptualising the product/service, and then launching. Once its in day-to-day business mode, frankly: I lose my mojo! I am then better to develop or move on, than I am to do the 9-5.
So I am outsourcing for three core reasons:
*Do what I do best/others do best
*Get there quicker/cheaper
*Change and improve my business
Business is NOT rocket science...
This is the diary of a simple UK business person, who is trying something new: outsourcing the launch of his new business.
It will on launch involve a website and a book, and possibly later a workshop or training event. But let's start with a website and a book, and then see where we go.
And that's lesson1, a concept I learnt from a mad New Yorker called Mike Litman: You don't have to get it right, you just HAVE to get it going! As an MBA trained engineer, I thought everything had to be planned to the Nth degree, where as actually - you don't, you just have to find a market and listen to it.
It will on launch involve a website and a book, and possibly later a workshop or training event. But let's start with a website and a book, and then see where we go.
And that's lesson1, a concept I learnt from a mad New Yorker called Mike Litman: You don't have to get it right, you just HAVE to get it going! As an MBA trained engineer, I thought everything had to be planned to the Nth degree, where as actually - you don't, you just have to find a market and listen to it.
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