It contains the best, cheap, and most reliable ways to earn passive income and that too with minimal investment.
Download Link 📥 https://tinyurl.com/starting-from-zer...
This book is mainly about how you can make your own e-commerce store with minimal investment, while generating millions of dollars in revenues. If you know nothing about Fred Lam, then let me inform you that he is one of the youngest entrepreneurs of USA; who has already launched some many useful and effective affiliate marketing and passive income products like Zero Up, iPro Academy, and Water Liberty.
He is generating an annual revenue of around $40 million with his successful business ventures.
And now, he is providing his secret passive income earning eBook for only $1.99.
So, I must suggest you not to miss this exciting limited period offer.
Fred Lam has shared his 5 step passive income earning secret and the steps are as follows: —
1. In the first step he has shared how marketers can use some free and paid platforms to increase their presence on the internet. 2. Second step is the inventory arbitrage, where Fred Lam has described how you can save money on making your own e-commerce store, without having your own inventory. Fred Lam has described in this step that how you can use the inventory of large e-commerce websites like Amazon or Aliexpress, while leveraging the best selling products to promote. 3. The third step is all about how you can generate a targeted traffic to your own website; of the hungry and crazy visitors; who are willing to buy your items anyhow. Internet is like an ocean and if your website is not getting any traffic from this ocean, then it’s just like starting a new garage at the 2nd floor of building, where your customers cannot reach you. 4. Fourth step is all about how you can multiply your profit by simply making small micro-niche e-commerce stores and selling them for large profit. 5. Finally, 5th step is how you can repeat all the earlier steps so that you can maximize your potential and profit as an affiliate marketer and e-commerce store owner.
If you are new to e-commerce store selling, and looking forward to earn lucrative income from this business, then I must recommend this eBook for you.
However, I have also pointed out some cons of this program (not the eBook).
I have realized that Fred has exaggerated the earning potential. Secondly, some premium products in the Starting from Zero program like Shopzie and Tiny.ie are already available as the free alternatives like Bit.ly and Oberlo.
Anyway, this program is provided by Clickbank; so you always have a choice to try it for 60 days and ask for a refund if you are not happy with the features of the program.
The $1.99 Starting from Zero eBook is the must for every person willing to earn money from home.
Fred Lam's ebook and corresponding video were advertised to me through ClickBank, an affiliate program with which I have an old account. The advertisement asked me to "save your seat" for a video presentation through GoToWebinar during which I would watch this guy "build an entire online business in less than 17 minutes!"
After I signed up through ClickBank, I was put on Fred Lam's personal marketing list that sent its emails through "SendLane." This in itself was dubious because the email body was truncated in Gmail's webmail view. If you are teaching people how to market their own online business, your own marketing email should be readable. Learn how to send unreadable emails like mine! is not an appealing pitch to me. Yet sometimes when I see projects that are executed very badly I feel the need to pursue them to see how much water is at the bottom of the rabbit hole. That is what happened here.
The free PDF has some value but it could be reduced to a tenth of its length. It begins with the standard useless padding of How I suddenly began making tons of money overnight with no effort. When it finally gets going, it addresses itself to an audience that has never heard of e-commerce or affiliate marketing, is fuzzy on the value and modern role of Amazon and Facebook, and doesn't know the rudiments of setting up a website. Its instructions are presented in the format of Look at this screenshot and click exactly this box on the Internet. Congratulations, now you have a website! rather than more high-level concepts of what sort of website might work best for you.
Readers are advised to identify their "passion" by writing down the first thing that comes into their head, and then to build a business of selling miscellany related to that topic (real example from the book: dolphin-themed necklaces). How this could have been better: The reader could be asked to think of a dozen topics they find inherently interesting and be told how to evaluate for themselves which ones can best be monetized through selling miscellaneous crap. If your passion is "social work," I don't know what dolphin necklace you are going to sell, sorry.
Lam recommends the platform Shopify to set up an online store. Initially you are just supposed to point to warehouses that have stuff in their inventory so that customers can buy things while you nap on the couch, but eventually I guess you're supposed to make the transition to having your own inventory because, suddenly, crammed in at the very end of the ebook, he mentions buying bulk quantities and putting your own private label on it, sending thank-you notes to customers, and hiring a personal assistant. That kind of business transition would have been far more interesting to focus on.
The PDF will have a short shelf-life because it relies so heavily on exact screenshots from different platforms. Companies change their user interfaces all the time.
The end of the PDF says “Please don’t let this book just sit on your bookshelf or coffee table collecting dust” on the same PDF page where there is a clickable link to the video. Clearly it doesn't know that it's an ebook and that it can't get dusty.
What really irked me was an undercurrent of dishonesty. When I clicked the email solicitation to reserve my spot in the webinar, I was asked to pick from three timeslots on the same day. I chose the earliest. This was advertised as being a "live" presentation with "no replay." (What about the two replays later in the day?) The video was "live" only in the sense that a pre-recorded television show can be viewed at the hour the channel chooses to air it (and again later if it is replayed), not in the sense that the viewer watches it as it is being filmed. The webinar was obviously prerecorded and was weakly faked to make it appear interactive. Throughout the video, the speaker asked the virtual audience to participate by typing a brief comment to show their support, and then he immediately announced that he was thrilled by the positive response as he rattled off first names and locations. This was impossible, as no user would have had time to type and submit the three required fields (name, email, comment) in the split-second allotted; the information transfer and lag-time for him to read it would realistically have taken a few extra seconds, which anyone who has ever taken a real online course would know; furthermore, there was no fourth field to enter one's location, so he wouldn't have received that information. He never asked any questions that would have warranted real interactivity so that kind of tech support wasn't needed. This was the webinar equivalent of a Romper Room television host squealing: "I see Mary and Hank and Susie and Robert and all of you boys and girls out there!" No you do not. That is fake and so is your Televisionland magic mirror. You can probably sign up to watch this prerecorded "live" video whenever he feels like streaming it again. The ebook PDF contains several links to schedule your webinar visit, so clearly it's designed to be an ongoing thing.
Because all of that was elaborately and repeatedly faked, I was unable to trust his presentation of several profiles of his students who allegedly made huge amounts of money. If he's faking his audience names, he might be faking his students' names, too.
The video was unpleasant to listen to because he was basically yelling his sales pitch the whole time. It gave me a headache very quickly.
The promise that he was going to accomplish something in 17 minutes was also a bit misleading. The video was still playing after a full hour with no indication of when it would end, at which point I turned it off. During the video, he talked about having "students," but it wasn't clear how one would sign up to enroll in his class, if one wanted to, so I don't even really know what he's selling. Maybe he only wants students who are gullible enough to click fake interactive buttons for over an hour while being yelled at. His product is not intended for me.
UPDATE July 2021: Definitely glad I came back to this book. I skim read it more than anything but this and RDPD and ever I’ve learned about finance and business since then have been very instrumental in my financial journey. My first online business in 2017 never launched unfortunately but I’ve learned my mistakes from this book and am seriously contemplating building another one!!
Great, simple advice to start your own online retail business. I found that the advice tailored to my needs well, and provides profoundly efficient ways to promote and launch a business online. Luckily I got this ebook as a free offer, but it is bringing me one step closer to my business goal