An Excellent Piece Of Advice


wealthymattersLast night I received an excellent piece of advice from from a person who has used it to devastating effect in his professional life.His advice is to know what your own business priorities are and continue working on them,irrespective of the proposals or deals others bring along or whatever else their own priorities,needs or demands are,even if these are a result of a specific request,suggestion or proposal originating from him.This is an excellent use of the principle of ‘ want,but only that much ‘.

This attitude gets  people working extra hard to please him,to get his attention,to drop their own demands,do without themselves and adjust their schedules and priorities to his needs and convenience.This way the people who hang on demonstrate their need and therefore weakness/desperation and he is able to cut deals on terms advantageous to himself.

Home Buyers Budget Across Cities


Home Buyers Budget Across Cities

Most Preferred Floors to Buy Apartments


Most Preferred Floors To Buy Apartments

How To Bootstrap Your Business ?


wealthymattersHere’s a five-step process you can follow to give you the best chance of success while bootstrapping your business:

Step 1: Prove Your Concept

With limited funds, it’s more crucial than ever to prove your business concept before investing your valuable resources. If you’re reselling an existing product, this step is a bit easier given the existing demand. But make sure you’re very clear on how you’ll be adding value — and don’t say via low pricing! Will you be offering a unique branded experience or adding informational value?

If you’re creating a new product, make sure you’re able to validate that people want — and are willing to pay for — your product before you invest heavily in mass manufacturing. Get your prototypes in front of as many people as possible, take pre-orders or even launch a Kickstarter campaign. Nothing is worse than manufacturing 5,000 new items that nobody wants.

Step 2: Do/Learn as Much as Possible Read more of this post

Kurt Heinrich’s Story


Kurt Heinrich

“You should definitely start a drop-ship business and sell things online. That’s what I did. I started an online shop for iPod accessories and made $17,500 during my first Christmas season. That was in middle school, then I kept the business throughout high school and grew it from there. Here’s the long story:

When I was in middle school, I used to look forward to getting my monthly issue of Popular Science magazine. In one particular issue, they had a how-to guide on how to turn an Altoids tin into an iPod charger. I thought this was awesome, so I went to RadioShack, got all the parts, then built it. I then took it to school to show all my friends. Before I knew it, all my friends wanted one too, so I started selling them for $20 each. Read more of this post