How Do You Define Success?
Home > Profit > Articles
by
Bob McElwain
Many people
have selective hearing. That is, they hear only what they are listening for. When
such people tune in to the notion of getting rich on the Web, they can't seem
to hear anything else. They are deaf to the news of dot-com failures en mass.
Deaf to the certain doom that lies at the end of any path claimed to be quick
or easy. And deaf to any mention of how tough it is to succeed in business anywhere,
online or offline.
If you have fallen into this trap, there
are only two options. Continue on your chosen path and fail. Or redefine what
success means to you, then begin working to achieve it.
Getting
Rich Is Unlikely
It is no easier to become wealthy online
than offline. The only advantage to beginning a business online, rather than offline,
is in the lower startup costs. The rest of it is work, learning, then implementing
what you learn. Which, of course, is more work.
What are your
chances of opening a new business in your home town and becoming a millionaire?
Unless you have very special talents and skills, it's unlikely. The chances of
doing so through a Web site are no better.
Would Making
A Living Suit You?
Do you have what it takes to open a
business on Main Street and earn a comfortable living? If you lack essential information,
are you willing to take the time to hunt it up? If there are things you do not
know, are you willing to learn them? If you lack needed skills, are you prepared
to develop them?
One who can answer a resounding, "Yes,"
to the above questions, can succeed. Online or offline. Until you can shout this
right out loud to your family, friends, neighbors, and even strangers on the street,
any effort to build a successful Web site will break your heart. And waste a ton
of your time. And more than a few bucks.
One Path
If
you want to succeed on the Web, you must first come to grips with what you mean
by success. If your definition can be simplified to making a good living with
the opportunity to make more, then all is quite doable. And one of the best ways
to start is to begin part time and grow your business as you learn. For a description
of such a path that works, send any email to mailto:onepath@sitetipsandtricks.com
Getting Real
Whether you have started
a business or are still only thinking about doing so, you may find it informative
to check out some successful sites. Successful, that is, according to the definition
of their owners.
Common Elements
While
the following sites may appear quite different from one another, they have much
in common.
Nobody is making a million bucks a year; this was
not the goal. Rather they are making a living (their definition) and are in an
excellent position to increase their income.
The site designs
are quite simple; very few fancy graphics are to be found.
Each
site is well focused.
Each site is loaded with content.
Some
face stern competition; others have carved their niche and conquered it.
You
will probably note ways in which each site can be improved. But this is true of
any site, large or small. And it's true of yours. And mine.
MoHotta.Com
http://www.mohotta.com/
Features hot peppers, sauces, and such. A great example of
niche marketing. Not many are into hot in this fashion, but those who are search
constantly for more and hotter. Note there are a few such people in your community.
Every nursery stocks pepper seedlings in the spring, labeled, "HOT!"
This site tapped into this wide, if thinly spread interest. Something impractical
in even a major city, but easy to do on the Web.
YouCanSave.Com
http://www.youcansave.com/
A super smooth catalog site. They resell TV direct sales merchandise.
Their growth has come through the site and all business is transacted on it. Beyond
what you see there is undoubtedly at least one person who spends a good part of
each day with routine business chores, solving problems, dealing with customer
complaints, and above all searching for even better deals for existing customers.
PrairieFronteir.Com http://www.prairiefronteir.com/
This company began as a marginally successful local wild flower
seed company in Wisconsin. They grew significantly when the owner took the business
online, expanded the product line, and reached out to a national (and to some
extent, international) audience. In the reply to a message, Deb Edlhuber said,
"It [the site] has totally amazed me and continues to grow."
Specialist-Herbal.Com
http://www.specialist-herbal.com/
Malcolm Simmonds launched his first site in late 1997,
selling herbal products, which he had been making and selling offline since the
early 80's. He learned HTML and did the entire site himself. Within a year, it
had paid for itself. Since then, he has expanded and enriched the site enormously,
increasing his profits in the process. While looking ahead to
even further
increases, he is doing quite nicely now. All this in addition to his continuing
success offline.
ParaPub.Com http://www.parapub.com/
Dan Poynter had a successful self-publishing company going
before he launched his Web site. What used to be a travel/phone/direct mail company
is now strictly a Web-based company. In a reply to a message, Dan said, "This
morning I checked the order-email account and found we sold 21 reports overnight.
The customers benefited because they received the reports instantly (on a Sunday)
and did not have to pay for shipping or sales tax. Para Publishing benefited because
we did not have to print, inventory, wrap, ship, or place postage on the reports.
This is truly a win-win situation made possible by the Internet."
CarAccessories.Com
http://www.caraccessories.com/
This site was built by a mother-daughter team. They first
learned the brick and mortar catalog business, then expanded to the Web. The site
is now a profitable component of their business. For their delightful story, see
"Net Lessons from the Monster Girls" by Rob Spiegle.
http://sitetipsandtricks.com/art/a082900b.html
(An
Aside: Rob also pointed me to a couple of the sites above.)
Wrapping
Up
A while back, a visitor asked, "Do you know of
a small site that is successful?" I referred him to one of the above. A short
while later, he replied, "You gotta be kidding. That's nothing!"
If
you visited any of the above sites and found "nothing," then you probably
need to know more about business and the Web in order to build a successful site.
Reevaluate your definition of success, learn what is needed, then take another
look. These sites are successful. That is, successful in the eyes of their owners.
And in the eyes of their customers. What else matters?