Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Business Opportunities Weblog

Business Opportunities Weblog

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Buzz Your Greeting Directly To The Receivers Mailbox, Without Leaving Home

Posted: 17 Jun 2009 04:59 AM PDT

With Father’s day around the corner, many people have found themselves waiting until the last minute to grab a card for the dad in their life. While some will get the card out on time, others will find themselves in a bind while last minute shopping for that perfect card. Unless they decide to card shop at GreetingBee.com.

For the cost of the average greeting card and stamp, you can visit GreetingBee.com, customize a card, and they will mail it to the recipient for you. There is no hassle and the card shopping is done direct from your computer.

Tell us about GreetingBee.com.

GreetingBee was conceived to apply a fun, fresh, and innovative approach to the creation of one-of-a-kind custom greeting cards and to allow anyone to send environmentally friendly paper cards with the same convenience as sending an e-card.

With our service, there are no more trips to the post office or lost time trying to find the right card. Anyone with a web browser can quickly create a unique greeting card from scratch or from one of our designer templates and have it professionally printed and mailed.

What inspired you to launch your business?

I believe that some of the best ideas for new products come from solutions to your own problems. I thought that surely there was a good way to create a unique card and have it mailed from a home computer with all of the modern conveniences that the internet offered in 2006. What I found was overwhelmingly dissatisfying.

So, one summer day in 2006, I found myself rushing around in the scorching Phoenix heat trying to find an appropriate birthday card for my Grandfather who was turning ninety. As I stood in line at the post-office waiting to overnight a card that I wasn't completely happy with, I became compelled to create a service to solve the problem of mailing professionally printed cards that anyone can make using a home computer and their web browser. Soon after, I recruited the services of my long-time friend and very talented artist, Brian Westergaard, to manage the art production side of the business. Together, we set out to make the service a reality.

What separates you from the competition?

As long-time video game developers, we borrowed technology and techniques from video game production to bring fun and interactivity to making custom greeting cards. Rather than limiting our customers to rigid pre-designed templates, we created an environment that provides complete creative freedom.

Everything about our card designs, from the card's text all the way down to the candles on a birthday cake, can be edited using a simple drag and drop interface. We provide an extensive library of additional graphics for our customers to place on their cards; each graphic or text element can be rotated, resized and positioned to suit a customer's personal taste. We also gave them the ability to add their own photos to any card without placement restrictions. Essentially, we took the power of a traditional desktop card design application and made it available to anyone with a web browser.

We found that a card by itself is sometimes not quite enough, especially for birthdays and around the holidays; so we began offering to insert gift cards to some of the nation's largest retailers into the envelope along with the professionally printed greeting card. We also found that some people like to design their cards weeks ahead of time and schedule them to be sent on a certain date; so we began providing the ability to schedule cards for future delivery.

Our customers can quickly make a one-of-a-kind custom card, include a gift, and schedule the card for delivery weeks or months ahead of time to as many recipients from their address book as they see fit. It's really the combination of all of these features that sets us apart from the competition. To our knowledge this combination is unique within the greeting card industry.

How many different cards and styles do you currently have available?

We currently offer more than two hundred and fifty exclusive card designs in a standard 5"x7" folded greeting card and a 5"x7" flat card which is popular for photo cards and invitations.

How much does a card cost?

GreetingBee operates on a tiered pricing system with prices ranging from $2.65 plus postage and handling for a single 5"x7" folded greeting card all the way down to $1.60 per card for orders containing one hundred or more cards. Larger orders benefit from increased production efficiencies at the printing press and we believe in passing those savings directly to our customers.

Our flat cards typically run about $0.10 to $0.20 cents less than our folded greeting cards and start at $2.50 plus postage and handling for a single flat card and drop to $1.30 per card for orders above one hundred cards.

Both card styles are professionally printed with environmentally friendly inks on Forest Stewardship Council certified, store-quality, card stock and are mailed inside of a premium envelope with an affixed first class stamp.

What are some of the goals that you would like to reach over the next year with the business?

Our goals are probably similar to most young companies: growth in our customer base and increased brand awareness. Greeting cards are a natural vehicle for viral marketing and easily integrate into the social networking websites that are so popular these days. We expect GreetingBee.com to increase its presence in this area as we try to build community awareness around our product.

Do you think we can expect to see other customizable options to sell with your cards, like custom gifts, stickers, etc.?

We've actually talked about custom stickers and additional product lines as natural extensions to our card design technology. For now, we're intensely focused on delivering a single product line, greeting cards, announcements, and invitations. There's still a lot of room for innovation in the greeting card space. I wouldn't be surprised to see some exciting announcements from GreetingBee this year.

What previous experience did you have that you were able to apply to your business?

Developing a technology heavy greeting card publishing business requires engineering expertise, artistic talent, and the management experience necessary to execute a business plan. We were able to leverage our extensive careers in the video game industry, managing the production of blockbuster games for clients such as Microsoft and Sony, to create the perfect marriage between art, engineering, and management experience.

What lessons did your business teach you?

For an internet business, SEO or search engine optimization is everything. Establishing a customer base is challenging and takes a great deal of time and effort. Most people are under the impression that once a new website goes live, customers instantly start flocking to the site via Google and other search engines. The truth of the matter is that it takes many months to build a successful SEO campaign that lands your website on the first page of the search results.

Had we known the extent of the problem, we would have engaged a SEO expert earlier in our website's design process. There are lots of so called SEO experts in the field. The main lesson we learned is to do your due diligence and find a reputable provider; an incorrectly executed SEO campaign can be more damaging than no SEO at all.

Do you have any advice you’d like to share with anyone who might be interested in entering into the greeting card industry?

Selling greeting cards is a cents per unit sold kind of industry. Controlling overhead expenses is paramount. Consider working from home, doing the hands-on work yourself, working with students from local art schools, and contracting freelance labor. Services such as oDesk.com allow you to build a virtual workforce that scales with seasonal demand without the expense of traditional office space and without the additional payroll overhead of a direct hire employee.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


‘Penny Auction’ Sites Offer Big Bargains

Posted: 16 Jun 2009 11:11 AM PDT


Mercury News:

At a time when we’re all looking for bargains, is there a catch to buying a $150 Nikon Coolpix digital camera for 34 cents? Or nabbing a $699 Apple 16GB iPhone for $8.06?

There is: While you stand to get a great bargain, you could be bidding against several thousand others in an online auction for one item, and each time you place a bid, it will cost anywhere from 60 cents to $1.

E-commerce is taking on a different spin with sites such as Swoopo and GoBid that appeal to the bargain hunter with a competitive drive. The giveaway prices on name-brand products, the limited and timed offerings, strategy play and fast pace attract shoppers willing to bid money for the chance to buy something at a fraction of its retail cost.

How do these auctions differ from those on eBay? The sites are selling the merchandise, whereas eBay is a place where sellers and buyers meet — it holds no inventory.

But the biggest difference is that to participate in a penny auction, shoppers must buy a bundle of bids and use one every time they raise their virtual paddle. Bids cost 60 cents to $1 each and are bought in packs of 10 to 700, depending on the site.

The auction companies make much of their money not from sales of merchandise but from the purchase of these bids.

While critics have questioned this form of e-commerce as a blink away from gambling, others have called it a smart business model for the Web at a time when new moneymaking ideas are scarce.

Photo by Swoopo.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


Nutty Success Story With Fortunuts

Posted: 16 Jun 2009 10:10 AM PDT


WomenHomeBusiness.com:

Some successful business ideas come from childhood.

As a child, Nicole Simon’s mom would make her special walnut recipe for friends and co-workers during the holidays.

Friends asked for their delectable walnut treats that making it and giving it as holiday gifts became the tradition in their household.

They decided to add a fun element by adding a fortune into each bag as a reminder of how fortunate they felt each year as their giving list grew.

In December 2002, Nicole was urged to find a way to make their nuts more accessible to everyone. She sold her special walnuts, Fortunuts – which she describes as, “a little bit of sugar, a dab of salt and a whole lotta love” — to the public at The Santa Monica Farmers Market, in Los Angeles.

The nuts came in Chinese take-out boxes, with fortune messages, and they were a huge success.

Photo by Fortunuts.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


10-Year-Old Entrepreneur Takes Her Vision On The Road

Posted: 16 Jun 2009 09:09 AM PDT


Detroit Free Press:

Amiya Alexander bounds in front of a parked school bus at Bloomfield Hills Montessori Center, her smile so wide it shows off the red and black bands around her braces.

Those braces, her brown Baby Phat high tops and the poof of pink feathers affixed to her hair speak to the accoutrements of any 10-year-old girl.

Except Amiya owns another accessory: the school bus.

At age 10, Amiya Alexander is an entrepreneur — owner, founder and creator of Amiya’s Mobile Dance Academy, which travels around metro Detroit teaching kids hip-hop, ballet, tap, merengue and more.

Painted a searing shade of hot pink, Amiya’s bus has all but four seats ripped out, a dance floor installed and ballet barres and mirrors affixed to the walls. On the ceiling, glitter glimmers.

Since January, it has rolled around metro Detroit, driven by her great-uncle, Sundiata Abdul-Mateen, who was lured out of retirement to help.

Aside from Bloomfield Hills Montessori, Amiya also teaches classes at the Northwest Activities Center in Detroit and has instructed toddlers in ballet and salsa at Island Kiddie Kampus Child Development Center in Grosse Ile.

Photo by Detroit Free Press.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


7 Ways To Be Happier At Work

Posted: 16 Jun 2009 08:08 AM PDT


HarvardBusiness.org:

A recent report listed the happiest nations in the world. Guess what? The US didn’t even make it into the top ten. So much for the American dream.

Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert argues that we can train our minds to be happier.

1. Smile. Turns out, smiling is directly linked to happiness. It may have started as a correlation but, over time, the brain linked the two. Don’t believe me? Try this: smile (a nice big smile) and attempt to think of something negative. Either you will stop smiling or you won’t be able to hold the negative thought.

2. Stop worrying. Worrying happens to be one of humanity’s best traits. It is the underlying emotion behind foresight, planning, and forecasting. We worry because some future event is uncertain and that feeling is a cue for us to start thinking about how to address it. The problem is, we worry too much about things that are out of our control (like the economy, stupid).

3. Take a break. The US is one of the most overworked industrialized nations. But this is counterproductive for a nation of “knowledge workers.” Overworking people to exhaustion is a horrible way to extract knowledge from people. Taking a break provides an opportunity to reflect and often it is during such times when the best ideas, our deepest insights, emerge.

Go here for 4 more tips.

What are your tips for being happier at work?

Photo by jaylopez.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


San Francisco Starts City-Wide 311 Twitter Program

Posted: 16 Jun 2009 07:07 AM PDT


Mashable:

San Francisco is hip to Twitter, and not just when it comes to its tech savvy users. Starting June 2nd, the City of San of Francisco has been supporting all 311 services via Twitter, with the help of Twitter CRM tool CoTweet.

Now citizens can send direct messages 24 hours a day to the sf311 Twitter account to report standard non-emergency city-related sightings like pot holes, request street cleanings, and any other service already supported by the phone or website. San Francisco is the first major city to adopt a city-wide Twitter program of this magnitude.

Editor’s Note: Not sure if faster reporting of problems will make repairs faster.

Photo by uniontownshippa.com.



From Business Opportunities Weblog.


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