Starting an online business is incredibly simple. All you need is a laptop and these key ingredients to make your first sale:
All you need to start an online business
But before you get there, you’ve got to decide what type of online business you even want. There are 6 major online business models the average person can use. Some give you huge profit margins, take minimal time, and scale easily. Others require a lot of time, overhead costs, and are difficult to grow.
I’ve tested them all, so let’s walk through them real quick. Then you can decide which model is right for you.
Business Model #1 – Advertising
The most common business model is ads. Almost all of us have seen
these. They’re little advertisements — usually Google AdSense — on
the sidebars of a website.
Here’s how they work: as you get traffic, some people will click those
ads. When they do, you get a few cents, or even a few dollars per
click.
I tried this for IWillTeachYouToBeRich.com. But I quickly realized ads
don’t make that much money. In fact, what I learned was that you
need a huge amount of visitors, like 50 million visitors — or more —
per month, to make a good income from ads. That’s a lot of traffic.
Back when I started in 2004, I decided “If I can’t cover my rent with
ads, why bother?” They’re ugly and distracting. Plus, I’ll end up
spend-ing more time optimizing the click-through-rate on the ads
than actually writing great content. So after trying that experiment
for a little while, I checked the box and said I’m not interested in that
business model.
Business Model #2 – Software
If you have the skills to create new software, then this can be a
tempting option. The media loves to tell us stories about hot new
Silicon Valley startups and the founders of tech companies who
cashed out for millions after their company went public. So we think
starting an online business means doing something similar.
And yes, you could quit your job, seek venture funding, and spend the
next few years trying to build the next Instagram.
But let’s face it, for most of us, this isn’t a viable option. We’re not
programmers. We can’t code. And we’d rather stab ourselves with an
ice pick than try to learn any of that technical stuff (at least I would).
And even if you can code, do you really want to deal with the never
ending challenge of patching and upgrading your app?
Luckily, there are other options out there. You don’t need to create
the next Candy Crush to have a successful online business. You don’t
even need any technical or computer skills for the other online
business models I’m about to show you.
Business Model #3 – Sell Physical Products
I’m wary of this business model because the profit margins are
terrifyingly low.
Just to give you an example, we have a notepad that our designers
created internally for I Will Teach staff. We would have had to price it
at around $50 — for a teeny little notepad — just to break even if we
wanted to sell it. And after we shipped it to people, our profit margin
would have disappeared.
I know there’s some money to be made in this space. But I prefer the
profit margins offered by online products.
With online products, the profit margin is higher, and it’s much easier
to scale. Physical products just introduce so many variables and costs that I’m not interested in them.
Business Model #4 – Affiliates
Here’s an example of how affiliates work: A blogger will write a review
of “My favorite credit cards.” and at the bottom they’ll say, “you can
sign up for the card here — NOTE: this is an affiliate link.”
If you click that link and sign up, the credit card company is going to
pay that blogger an affiliate commission. Sometimes it’ll be $50 or
$75.
Over time, that can actually add up to a lot of money.
And there are
affiliate programs for everything — from audio books to weight loss
products.
For a long time, I avoided affiliates because I didn’t want people to
think I was recommending stuff just to make money. I only wanted to
recommend the best products.
But eventually I realized that my readers trusted me, they were already going to sign up for the accounts I was recommending anyways. So I decided to try putting an affiliate link in with one of my
recommendations.
When I did — virtually overnight — I became ING Direct’s number one
affiliate in the world. I was making more than $10,000 a month — just
by putting a link on my site.
But I soon learned this wasn’t a great long-term plan. My clickthrough rates tailed off and I ended up having to spend all this time
dealing with advertisers.
In the end, I realized it wasn’t worth the time, so I stopped.
Business Model #5 – Online information products
Now, my favorite business model: selling something you create.
Typically, these are information products, like a video course.
You can create a video or written course that sells for $49 fairly
quickly. But more expensive, high-end ones take a lot longer. For
example, when we built Dream Job, we spent months on research,
outlines, testing, creation, and design.
Online courses are low-risk, high-reward, and scale very well. You can
use them to reach thousands of people all over the world. It’s
become the crux of our business and now we generate over 95% of
our revenue through our own products. I can’t recommend it enough.
Business Model #6 – Coaching
One of the fastest ways to start earning money from your online
business is to offer coaching.
This comes as a surprise to a lot of my students. They join my
program looking to create an online information product. But as they
build their email list, people message them saying: “Hey, I love what
you do. Do you offer coaching?”
There are a few great reasons to take them up on this offer:
- You can charge premium prices for one-on-one work or group masterminds.
- You’re basically getting paid to do customer research. With coaching, you’ll learn their deep fears, desires, and barriers — information you can use to create an online product that thousands can use.
- It’s a chance to get great testimonials to sell more coaching/other courses.
You don’t have to build anything or have a big audience to get started
with coaching, and you can earn money quickly. While online courses
let you earn revenue automatically and impact a broad audience.
If you can’t choose, do both.
Here’s something that will help. Click the link below for a free report
on how to get your first coaching clients — even if you’re in a brand
new industry.
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