Wednesday, 21 March 2007
Double your money...
In Michael's radio show he posed a question:
If you woke up in a strange town, knowing nobody and with only £100 and the clothes you were wearing, what would you do to double your money and how long would it take?
The idea here is just to open up your mind. You don't need to think of things and then actually go and do them, just brainstorm and be creative. Here's a few I thought of right away.
I guess the key to making a profit must be to a) Keeping the overheads low while b) Offering a fair exchange of value. That makes the venture low risk and profitable, while building customer loyalty. I'm going to try thinking 'outside the box' and see if I can come up with any money making ideas which don't fit these 2 rules. If anyone can think of one please leave a comment.
Statcounter
If you woke up in a strange town, knowing nobody and with only £100 and the clothes you were wearing, what would you do to double your money and how long would it take?
The idea here is just to open up your mind. You don't need to think of things and then actually go and do them, just brainstorm and be creative. Here's a few I thought of right away.
- Buy a 'pay as you go' mobile phone. Spend a small amount on printing leaflets offering a dog walking/sitting service and giving the phone number. Distribute these to houses in the local area and hopefully some people would call. The same could be done for a gardening or 'odd job' service if enough of the £100 was left for tools.
- Buy a cheap guitar and go busking.
- Buy cans of cold drink at the cash and carry, take them to the park/beach and sell them for a profit. Variations on theme could suit different climates/seasons.
- Visit charity shops, junk shops, car boot sales, garage sales etc. and look for bargains which could be cleaned up/fixed/improved and sold via eBay or a market.
- Set up a small market stall.
- Buy a Polaroid camera and film. Find a busy square/beach/fair etc. and charge people to have their photo taken.
- Buy some supplies and set up a car-wash, giving a percentage of the profits to the car-park owner.
I guess the key to making a profit must be to a) Keeping the overheads low while b) Offering a fair exchange of value. That makes the venture low risk and profitable, while building customer loyalty. I'm going to try thinking 'outside the box' and see if I can come up with any money making ideas which don't fit these 2 rules. If anyone can think of one please leave a comment.
Labels: customers, profit, trading
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