| Nov. 21 2008 at 12:32 PM |
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The Importance of Testing
Two days ago a very nice lady wrote me an email. She was desperate because her online store had been open for 6 months and she had only made one single sale. I asked her how much money she had invested in the company so far. She confessed that the amount was well over $25,000.
I see this happening all the time. Having done online marketing for over six years and owning a web design and Internet marketing agency, people tend to come to me when things are not working out for them in the online world.
Do you want to know what one of the biggest mistakes that entrepreneurs make is? Not testing enough. We often put six months of our lives and a big chunk of our savings into a business. We call it “our baby”. We then throw a big launch party and the next day we sit by the phone waiting for orders. But nobody calls.
Thinking that your business will work just because you think it will is, at the very least, arrogant. Do you have a crystal ball? Can you predict the market?
It doesn’t matter that all your friends told you that it is a great idea. They are not going to buy your products, are they?
But I don’t want to spend too much time talking about the wrong approach. I want to talk about the right one. Most successful businesses started by accident. Some girl started to make cookies, her family loved them, her friends did too, and then someone suggested that she should get a stand to sell more cookies. So she did. And everybody in her neighborhood liked the cookies, so the girl talked to her best friend and she got another stand too. Before they knew it, they had five stores in the state.
This girl wasn’t trying to start a company and maybe she was extremely lucky. But there was something she did right. She started small, realized there was demand for her products, and then expanded. She grew her business using her profits, not a loan or startup money.
I wish that someone had taught me the importance of testing five years ago. In 2003 I started a leather accessories business with two friends. We invested a lot of time and money, opened our online store, and got two sales in four months. We were trying to sell luxury leather goods with a brand that nobody knew through our e-store. People didn’t know about us or our collection and since they were shopping online they couldn’t even touch the items to appreciate their quality before giving us their money.
We got really frustrated and decided to sell our inventory for whatever we could get. We went to a very wealthy area in Colorado and sold our items to accessories stores in less than one day. Once the store owners could get their hands on our products they were sold already. They later re-sold these items for three times the price that we were charging on our website and it only took them a week to do it.
If I could go back in time, this is what I would have done:
- I would have spent $200 instead of $4,000 getting professional photos. I would have started with a couple of items, not 150.
- I would have used a basic e-commerce solution instead of getting a fully customized e-commerce website.
- I would have used Google AdWords to buy 200-300 clicks and see what kind of results we could get.
It would have cost me $1,000 instead of $25,000 to figure out that those items wouldn’t sell well online and that I should try something else (like selling them to stores).
Test out your ideas with as little money and time as you can. If they work, then put more money and time into them. If they don’t, drop them and look into new possibilities. After all, if you go to Vegas and only have $5,000 to gamble, you wouldn’t put all your chips at once on number 11, would you?
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Zeke Camusio
Professional Web Design
Blog: www.TheOutsourcingCompany.com/blog
info@TheOutsourcingCompany.com
(1)877-581-3921 (Available 24/7)
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| Nov. 21 2008 at 4:52 PM |
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I opened this post expecting the worst. Testing is a good idea, but I had NO clue how to go about doing that for my business. The good news, I invested <$1,000 in this business including web design. I made a few mistakes along the way and if that didn’t happen, I would have spent less.
Now I’m at the point where I can continue testing and seeing where this can go. But I am still learning that process.
Green + Chic
Green + Chic Blog
About the business of Green + Chic (Blog)
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| Nov. 22 2008 at 3:35 PM |
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Lots of people know, nowadays, that eBay is a flea market. But even so,
it's a big market. One option is to put one or two examples of the type
of product you intend to sell up for auction on eBay, "just to see what
happens."
You may not sell them, but you'll get a number of "views" and
"watchers." This should at least show one type of interest. Is there
any interest at all.
But the problem is how to do the market testing when eBay isn't giving
a solid and objective feedback system. A lot of people do buy leather
goods online, so how come that particular business didn't work all that
well?
Another issue is the timeline involved. Knowing that clothing and
tactile goods are harder to sell, what with the "feel the leather"
aspect, would you have the same expectations for sales as you might
have for coffee mugs or tee-shirts.
Craig Landes
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Defining the undefinable. "There are 10 kinds of people in the world---those who understand binary numbers and those who don't." - Unknown
International Society of Curmudgeons
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| Nov. 23 2008 at 12:56 PM |
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eBay is definitely a huge market. However, unless you test your business and the apetite of the market, eBay and other sites won't help you. You need to make sure that there is a willing buyer who will purchase your good/service at the end of the day. Check out our FREE entrepreneur guide that discusses testing and the importance of it, as well as tips to start, grow and operate your business in today's web 2.0 world.
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| Nov. 26 2008 at 6:56 PM |
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If you liked my article, you will definitely love my blog. Check it out: www.TheOutsourcingCompany.com/blog. Join Our Entrepreneurs Group on Facebook
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Zeke Camusio
Professional Web Design
Blog: www.TheOutsourcingCompany.com/blog
info@TheOutsourcingCompany.com
(1)877-581-3921 (Available 24/7)
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