My Name is Stacey Boxalle, most of my friends call me Boxie. I am 24 years old, currently engaged, and i am making fantastic money on the internet. I think it is now time for me to share my exciting story that i have kept as a secret for a while now.
Trust me, i am an everyday kind of woman, i like to sleep,eat, cinema, hang out and draw. i love the beach, music, writing and speedboats.
Feb 1st, 2005 was my last job working for a paycheck. I want to clarify... that was my last day working FOR a paycheck. Because in the past couple of summers, etc I have done some annoying jobs like working in McDonalds, and done some really odd jobs..That out of the way...Going back a little before that, I dropped out of a Law Degree Course from Sheffield University and moved to Brighton. That was one of the smartest decisions I've ever made.About 6 months after my move to Brighton, I met a few entrepreneurial types and slowly but surely started reading the right material that got me into an "un-employable" mindset.There was 1.5 pages worth of text in Cashflow Quadrant that I still view as a real turning point in my life.From that point on, I first got started with network marketing. First venture, I did horribly (but that was my first ever introduction to business, marketing, etc). With the second network marketing venture, I replaced my job income in just 4 months.About two years later, I had a lot of experience in network marketing and saw the flaws, so I shifted gears to an info publishing, direct response, software developement, and affiliate marketing model. I've since used that for more and more frequent £500+ net income days and a recent £5,000 week. 2010 is already mapped out to be very big and I'm sure I'll hit my first £10,000 month.Though it took longer than my naive-self first expected (back few years ago), it's been WELL WORTH the journey and, the fact is, those who shell out £50,000 + in college education and study for 6-8 years for a Masters (let alone a PhD) would have invested more money and time yet achieved a lot less than the asset, the hands on experience and the freedom that I now have.
Years back, i only dreamt of this type of lifestyle, now i am living the dream. The honest truth is i dont go around exposing myself, or driving flashy cars (well my fiance loves his flashy cars..lol..)i do not have a 9-5 job, but i used to, so i know what it feels like. some people have told me that i am too young to make money...ohhh, i tell them that age is just a number..!
My biggest advice to you is that there is SO MUCH MONEY to be made on the internet, if you want a honest review, i would say go for affilate marketing. That is where the money is, because you do not need to sell or beg anyone to buy anything from you.
With appreciation.
Stacey Boxalle.
Friday, September 25, 2009
I'm going to take this lazy Friday morning here on the beach in Beau Vallon to write about something that hopefully can help everyone.
Every week at least, I get someone trying to pitch to me an idea, JV opportunity, business opportunity, etc.
95% of the time, I can tell if they have any experience simply by how they pitch it to me. So here are some tips that I think every person who pitches an idea needs to have.
Not wordy. - The initial pitch should not be long and lengthy. I want the potential investor to invest as little of his /her time as possible until they are interested. If you write a 10 page book on your idea, you've given far too many details.
Not speaking of the benefits. - This is the MOST common problem that I absolutely hate. If you're pitching an idea to someone, don't just talk about the idea. Speak of what is in it for the person. I can't tell you how many emails I get from people saying they're launching X product or X service and want me to promote it. This is especially important if you do not know the person very well.
Not giving product details. - Look... Nobody cares you're making a product called "Really, the best product." If you don't explain how it works and what it does to benefit customers, it means nothing. I don't want to hear just that the product is a twitter marketing product, etc. I want to hear how it works, what it teaches in a brief, no fluff paragraph.
Not taking all the risk. - When you're trying to get someone to partner with you, you should be the one taking all the initial risk. I'm not going to want to risk anything based on people I have no trust in, no relationship with, etc.
I know all these points seem super simple, but it's surprising to me how many people just absolutely do not include most of these items.
I didn't go to business school or have any fancy degree but these are the things I think are essential in formulating a well thought out pitch based only upon the sheer number of terrible pitches I get.
Every week at least, I get someone trying to pitch to me an idea, JV opportunity, business opportunity, etc.
95% of the time, I can tell if they have any experience simply by how they pitch it to me. So here are some tips that I think every person who pitches an idea needs to have.
Not wordy. - The initial pitch should not be long and lengthy. I want the potential investor to invest as little of his /her time as possible until they are interested. If you write a 10 page book on your idea, you've given far too many details.
Not speaking of the benefits. - This is the MOST common problem that I absolutely hate. If you're pitching an idea to someone, don't just talk about the idea. Speak of what is in it for the person. I can't tell you how many emails I get from people saying they're launching X product or X service and want me to promote it. This is especially important if you do not know the person very well.
Not giving product details. - Look... Nobody cares you're making a product called "Really, the best product." If you don't explain how it works and what it does to benefit customers, it means nothing. I don't want to hear just that the product is a twitter marketing product, etc. I want to hear how it works, what it teaches in a brief, no fluff paragraph.
Not taking all the risk. - When you're trying to get someone to partner with you, you should be the one taking all the initial risk. I'm not going to want to risk anything based on people I have no trust in, no relationship with, etc.
I know all these points seem super simple, but it's surprising to me how many people just absolutely do not include most of these items.
I didn't go to business school or have any fancy degree but these are the things I think are essential in formulating a well thought out pitch based only upon the sheer number of terrible pitches I get.
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