"Listen...I've been searching
the Web for Marketing information for over two years. Then one day, by
accident, I stumbled across this site, it totally impacted my life and
changed my mind-set about marketing and the Internet completely. " Jim Davis
a true disciple of Michael Senoff
I
truly believe these experiences have made me the luckiest
guy in the world! Why?
This was a pivotal point in
my life. I learned some very important lessons and began
to understand the meaning of leverage. It was clear
manufacturing tee shirts was not the path to financial
freedom. I continued my quest. I would find something
better. Something I could leverage my time with.
After graduating in 1990 with a major in advertising
and a minor in marketing, I closed my retail store and
moved to Nashville, Tennessee with my remaining tee
shirt inventory. Although I didn’t mention this before,
I’m part of a set of triplets. We are not identical, --I
have a triplet sister Robyn at the top of first
page as well as a triplet brother --but we are triplets.
Here is proof below.
One Year Old
May 2003 Brother & Sister
When I relocated to Nashville, I moved in with my
triplet brother, Joel. We shared an apartment in a
complex about 20 miles outside the city. At the time,
Joel was working his first 9-5 job out of college, a
cable and fiber optics company called Anexter
Communications.
I was flush with cash from my tee shirt business. I’d
built up a bank account of about $20,000 and felt like I
had all the time in the world to explore new business
opportunities.
Evidence that Does
Not Lie
During the day I would venture out to sell my remaining
tie-dye tee shirt inventory. I developed a
technique for selling my shirts with absolutely no
effort or “selling” involved. All I would do is walk
around town clutching a bunch of the vividly tinted
shirts in my arms.
The colors were too bright to ignore. Anyone who
saw them --and was attracted to them --would ask me if
they were for sale. My answer was always, “ well, no,
not really, but I guess it won't hurt to sell one or
two.” Was that easy, or what!
I remember one day I walked into a busy T.C.B.Y Yogurt
shop. There was a huge line of girls with their moms
standing in line waiting their turn for yogurt. By the
time I walked out of the shop, I’d sold over $200 worth
of shirts.
I learned some important lessons in human nature. 1)
Sometimes, when you try too hard to sell something, you
push the prospect away. 2) People don't like to be sold,
they like to buy. 3) People want it to be their idea.
All the ladies who bought shirts from me were proud
they “luckily” found such a beautiful tie-dye tee shirt
from a guy who “happened” to be standing in line at the
same yogurt shop. They were proud they got the shirts at
more then half off the retail price. "What a deal,"
they can tell their friends. This is the joy of buying.
I allowed these women a feeling of importance. I
satisfied an insecurity. Question: Why do you think many
women love to shop? Answer: The real reason is
because shopping gives them a feeling of power and
control that they may not have in any other areas of
their life. It makes them feel important. Shopping
satisfies their insecurity in the world, even if only
temporarily.
How To Make Great
Money Selling On Consignment
Another effective way I sold off my remaining tee shirt
inventory was by placing my tie-dye shirts in local
retail shops on a consignment arrangement. For every
shirt sold, I would take 60 percent of the retail sale
price, giving the shop owner 40%. The shop owners
loved this deal because they had nothing invested in the
inventory.
They had nothing to lose. No risk. If you have a
product you know will sell in a retail location and you
have the capital to invest in the inventory, consignment
selling is a great way to go. What's the lesson? When
you remove the risk --the insecurity or fear of loss--
you greatly increase your chance of a sale. I
levered this concept to build a successful pen business.
More on that later in the story.
Thank God For
Multi Level Marketing
Had I noticed a couple of significant clues. One day I
answered a Sunday Ad in the paper and received videotape
titled, How to Make $20,000 A Month With Your Own
Business. This was a promotional tape put out by a
guy named Mark Yarnell. He was a successful MLM
distributor with a new and upcoming network marketing
company, NuSkin.
This guy was doing a very effective sales pitch on
NuSkin and the distributor opportunities available with
the company. He was making $20,000 a month. He was
living in San Diego, California. I could see the
beautiful San Diego bay behind him in the background.
There were these sailboats, blue water and sunshine. The
Nashville whether in the summer was too hot and humid.
The winters were too cold for me and the thought of
living in a place with a reputation of having one of the
best climates in the world with an average temperature
of 70 degrees year round sounded good to me.
A month later, I was a NuSkin distributor and had my
mind set to move to San Diego California
A college friend of mine and I packed up our cars and
headed west --3000 miles to San Diego California. I
drove a white 1987 Honda Civic. My dream was to make a
million dollars, surf the pacific, roller skate on the
boardwalk, live on the beach and retire filthy rich.
I Was Young,
Dumb, Single And Free.
We made the three day drive across the country safely.
It was the only time I have driven across the county. I
remember stopping in Austin Texas and going to this
killer piano bar called Catz. Man-- the beautiful
college girls of Austin, the beer, the singing the
songs at the bar was a great time. I was young, dumb
single and free.
When we arrived in San Diego, I insisted on living on
the beach. We rented the top of a duplex for $900 a
month. It was a nice clean one bedroom vacation condo.
It overlooked the pacific. You could open the sliding
glass door and smell the sea. You could look over the
balcony and see the girls skating buy in their bikini's.
Man this was exactly like the Beach Boys song,
California Girls. I was living the California Dream.
When I was in college at Alabama, I have bought a
pair of very nice black roller skates. I knew how the
skate. I had a five mile boardwalk right under my
balcony. I would roller skate the boardwalk every day
and lay out on the beach and eat great Mexican food. If
you have never had a carniosado burrito or three rolled
tacos, you have got to get out here and try this food.
It is incredible.
The first nine months in California I blew through my
$20,000 on NuSkin, other network marketing company
opportunities, ocean front apartment rent, and daily
living expenses. I found myself broke and completely
frustrated. We were pushing these MLM business
opportunities. This was a bunch of hype. We would go out
and network with people and try to sell them on the
dream of making a killing selling soaps, shampoos, herbs
and basically a bunch of bull. We had are little fingers
in the pot of all kinds of business opportunities.
Oh and the time I was conned by some guy who was gong
to get one of our products on TV. I still remember this
man. He wanted $1500 upfront and for us to fly him out
to San Diego, put him up in a hotel and he was going to
get our product on TV. His name was Gary. God was I
stupid and gullible. I guess when your desperate and
rely on others to make you rich, that's what you get.
And I had been ripped of before big time.
Bum Of The Street
When I was living in Alabama, I had a bunch of money
from my Tie Dye tee shirt business. I answered a
postcard mailing having to do with investing in gold. I
called the 800 number and was sucked into the allure of
gold coins as investments. I has the cash and gold coins
sounded like a good place to put my money.
The company was called Thomson and Cartwright out of
New York City, New York. I had invested over $20,000 in
these gold coins. Later that year, I was in New York and
wanted to meet with my salesman. He reluctantly agreed
and boy was he a disappointment. You know the feeling in
your stomach. It was like I had swallowed a brick. I new
I had been ripped of after looking into his eye for two
minutes. This guy looked like a bum of the street, his
hands were shaking. What an idiot. Agggggggg.
I was ready for a change. This first year in San Diego
was a “bust,” but a great learning experience,
nevertheless. I learned that network marketing is a very
difficult way to make a living.
Most people are drawn to MLM network marketing
companies because they promise easy money. “Sign up with
this company and I'll put 5, 10, 15 people under you,”
is what they tell you. In fact, you become the recruiter
for their business opportunity. Very few of the people
signing on are going to do actual selling of product.
There are too many details to go into here, but take my
word for it, network marketing is not the easy road to
riches.
Where Wealth
Begins
Why do some men prosper while others remain poor? After
breaking up with one of my girlfriends, I took a month
off to visit my brother Joel. He was transferred by his
company and was now living in Washington D.C. I planned
to stay there until I figured out exactly what I was
going to do next. During the day, while my brother was
working, I would take a bus downtown to the National
Library of Congress. If you’ve never seen it, this is
the most complete library in the world. Surrounded by
stacks of rare and important books, I would research and
study anything -- old or new--related to sales and
selling.
I discovered many of the great books on selling, books
that almost no one had heard of today. The authors were
the real pros. Men like Elmer Wheeler, Elmer Letterman,
Frank Bettger, A.W.Shaw, Claude Hopkins, Bruce Barton,
Sidney N. Bremer, Ph D. They were all pioneer sales
masters back in the 1910s, 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s.
My first great sales book was Zig Zigler Secrets of
Closing The Sale
I knew by studying and learning from these master
salesmen from the past, that I could leverage my
business and my selling education in a big way. Fired by
enthusiasm, I would stay all day at the library, then
head home for dinner.
How To Make $100
Per Hour Drilling Holes
I am mot sure how I got the idea but After dinner, my
brother would lend me his car so I could go drive to
nearby residential neighborhoods to install peep holes
in the doors for homeowners. (a peep hole is a door
viewer to see out the door when someone rings the door
bell.)
I’d park the car, get out and knock on the doors; doors
with no windows or opening for viewing the person
outside before opening the door. I had my proven sales
pitch totally committed to memory. With my green Makita
drill by my side, it looked like a gun, I would simply
say..."Hi, I'm the guy installing all the peep holes in
your neighbors doors, did you want one?"
It was as simple as that. If the homeowner asked how
much it cost for the peephole, I knew they were sold.
Each sale meant another $20 dollars cash in my pocket.
If you are ever in dire need of a fast way to make cash,
try this.
I could go out with my Makita drill and a pocket full
of two-dollar peepholes bought from the local Home Depot
and make $150 -$200 in two hours flat. That was more
money then my brother made all day long at his desk
job--and in one-fifth the time.
I thought selling was the key to my financial freedom.
But there was a missing link I had yet discovered.
Even installing peepholes and painting address numbers
on curbs imposed limitations. I was limited again by my
time. If I could duplicate my efforts somehow, If I knew
how to multiply myself, If I could learn how to clone
myself to 100 Michael Senoff's, then I would be
RICH!
<Play to listen to a short recording one of my
customers revealing how he made big money installing
door viewers and painting address numbers on street
curbs. Play this second recording>-
I did for a twenty year old Texan
named Frank. Frank
called wanting my
best advice of exactly
what he should do to start making money installing
door viewers. My advice to Frank on how to do this
business is very different to how I operated my peep
hole business fifteen years ago. If you follow this
advice to frank, get a used or new drill and a
pocket full of door viewers you'll start making fast
rent money selling door viewers, door knockers,
door flashing, dead bolt locks and more. If you go
out and use this advice, let me know of your success.
Here is a great example you can use to start your
curb painting business. It's a flyer from a San
Diego company paining address numbers on curbs.
Download
here
Take $2000 and
Call Me In the Morning
I thought I had found a way to at least double my
efforts when I teamed up with a friend to sell Skin
Guard, a hand-lotion that created a barrier to protect
hands from chemicals. My partner and I sold the
product under our own private label. We had no
money of our own, so we were bank rolled by a financier
who took a huge portion of our profits.
We were busting our butts to make it, and making
progress. Then I discovered that my partner was
embezzling some of the money put in by our financier.
I’d had it. No more partners. No more splitting
profits. No more placing my faith in anyone but myself.
My Skin Guard Product
Why You Need
Courage To Go It Alone
To this point, all my moneymaking projects while in San
Diego were with partners. There can be some benefits to
having partner, but in my opinion going it alone is
best. I’m the type of person who makes fast decisions
and works fast. I think fast and act on my ideas
immediately. I like to take all the risk. I want the
control. A partner can stifle that control, slowing down
the momentum you need when working on a project.
Many times, people partner up because they are afraid
to fail on their own. My advice is go it alone.
Take the risk reap all the rewards. Answer only to the
face in the mirror. Your confidence will skyrocket and
you won't waste time stopping to ask your partner if you
can write a check for five bucks!. Or even worse,
wasting time with a partner who turns out to be not
quite as honest as you thought.
When You're Down
These Is Only One Way To Go
I was busted! My partner’s embezzling landed me
in debt. I moved from a house into a tiny studio.
When my trusty Honda Civic had bad breaks and a bad
clutch. I had no money for the repairs of rent, so
called and ad in the auto trader magazine to sell my
Honda Civic.
I snapped this photo with my Polaroid camera, (the same
camera I was using for the bumper stickers promotion)
moments before the buyer was towing my car away. He paid
me $1200 cash. I paid my rent, walked up the street to a
used car lot and bought a brown 1981 Honda Civic for
$200 down and three payments of $300 a month.
My White Honda Civic Being Towed Away For Good
This was the lowest point in my career. It was so
low, in fact, that I actually took a job working for
some one else. Selling vitamins for a
telemarketing company. It only took me a few days to
discover the huge mark-up on the vitamins—what a
rip-off—and I couldn’t continue. I walked out. Now
what? I was down on my luck. I had just split with my
business partner, I had no money and no job.
Then I got a knock on my door at my plush one bedroom
apartment and there was a guy selling cable TV. His name
was Craig Williams. I don't remember if I ever did buy
cable from him but we got to talking.
I was asking him about his job. He told me that it was
a pretty good job and that you could make $100 or more a
day. I wanted in. I asked Craig if he could get me a
job. He gave me the name of Mike. Mike was the area lead
manager.
Mike called me the next day and agreed to meet me at
the Wendy's hamburger restaurant on Grand Ave. in
Pacific beach. I got the job and began my career as a
South Western cable direct door to door salesman.
The Job was pure direct sales. Mike the manager would
give you leads of homes that had just moved and or who
had no cable and I would go out and call on these homes
individually. It was a good job and came to me a good
time.
I made some good money but I knew selling cable TV was
limited and was not going to get me to where I wanted to
go.
Between my cable job, I drove the streets of San
Diego looking for items to buy and sell for a profit.
One day, as I was wandering around, I walked into a
printing company. I was talking to the owner and soon
learned he had been in the bumper sticker business. He
was selling to major national accounts.
The partners had recently had a falling out, and they
were on notice to vacate their building within two to
three months. Upstairs they had thousands and
thousands of bumper stickers. I asked them
if they may be interested in selling me some.
After I took a closer look, I decided I could hustle
these stickers by the thousand and make some fast cash
selling the bumper stickers.
I made a deal to buy them for a penny and a half each
as needed. I arranged to leave the stock in their
warehouse, and take trays of 10,000 at a time to sell.
I’d load up my brown $900 Honda Civic with these heavy
trays of bumper stickers and hit the road. I called on
liquor stores first to resell the bumper stickers. My
strategy was to take Polaroid snapshots of the liquor
store owner with the bumper stickers, then use that as a
“testimonial” when I pitched the next liquor store.
My Brown Honda Civic
There were tons of liquor stores in the area, and all
the owners knew each other. In fact, I think they were
all from the same town in Iraq, and all nicknamed “Sam.”
My marketing technique worked. I unloaded the
bumper stickers at a tidy profit and learned three
essentials of marketing. One, photo presentations help
sell product. Two, a mark-up of 900% is good, and three,
if you can sell to a business person from the middle
east, you have got to be pretty good. These guys are a
hard sale. They grow up negotiating from the time they
are young children. I respect their skills.
People want to be seen
bumper sticker customers
These photos were a sales device to commit them to
the order of the stickers
Disclaimer: Every effort has been made to accurately represent our
products, recordings and their potential. Any claims made of actual earnings
or examples of actual results can be verified upon request. The testimonials
and examples used are exceptional results, don't apply to the average
purchaser and are not intended to represent or guarantee that anyone will
achieve the same or similar results. Each individual's success depends on
his or her background, dedication, desire and motivation. As with any
business endeavor, there is an inherent risk of loss of capital and there is
no guarantee that you will earn any money using any of the ideas and
products sold herein.