Developing Multiple Streams
of Income for Your Home-Based Business
By Vishal P. Rao
Many home-based business
owners have a single service or product they provide.
They may sell e-books or crafts or speech-writing
services. Specializing in one area is good for
many reasons. For one, it makes marketing easier
and helps that business build a solid reputation
in one area.
Although specialization
has its benefits, businesses who derive all of
their profit from a single area are overall more
susceptible to economic fluctuations and less
profitable long term.
A good example of multiple
streams of income at work in traditional business
is the modern newspaper. A newspaper company brings
in revenue in three ways: by selling the
papers, by selling advertising space, and by selling
classified ads. Each of these is another stream
of revenue for the newspaper. Furthermore, some
newspapers have added an additional stream by
charging for access to their online content.
For the home-based business
owners like yourself, the key is to follow the
advice of the old saying: "Don't put all
of your eggs in one basket." Instead, you
should work on developing multiple streams of
income.
Think in terms of a river.
One river may have hundreds of small tributaries
and streams emptying into it along its path. Without
these waterways, the river level would fall considerably
and may one day disappear completely. The same
is true in business. Your revenue is like that
river; it needs to be nourished by many sources,
not just one. If that one source slows down or
dries up, the negative impact on the flow of your
revenue is dramatic.
Once you understand why
you need multiple streams of income, the question
is how do you create them. One home-based business
owner who specialized in writing secured her multiple
streams of income by owning her own business,
doing freelance work for two other companies,
and teaching a class at a local business college.
Another home-based business
owner joined affiliate programs offered by big
name retailers and earned money by imaginatively
incorporating them into her heavily trafficked
web site.
Still another took his existing
product which was designed to help marketers produce
effective e-zine articles, made some minor changes,
and re-packaged it as a tool for students struggling
to write school essays.
As these examples show,
multiple streams of income can be derived in a
number of ways if you think creatively. The key
is to look for ways that complement your existing
business.
If you sell gourmet cookies,
for example, you could produce cookbooks. If you
work with Internet marketing, set up an online
bookstore full of marketing books via an affiliate
program. If you design web sites, teach a course
on it at your local college or offer it online
through your existing business site.
The possibilities for establishing
multiple streams of income are endless. But you
must always remember that the key to successfully
managing multiple streams of income is not to
lose focus on your primary revenue generating
activity.
Have you ever been to a
web site so covered in ads that you could not
tell what service or product was even being sold?
Most people have. The people who run those sites
do not realize that visitors are not coming to
see banner ads for other companies' products,
but to learn more about theirs.
When visitors are bombarded
by these other ads, they leave in frustration.
In the long run, the site loses money because
it simply isn't generating enough sales to justify
charging a decent rate for advertising. The idea
is balancing these other ways of earning you money
without taking away from the income stream you
already have.
Once you have your streams
in place and learn how to maintain this equilibrium,
your revenue will flow like a steady river and
will keep your home-based business on solid ground.
Vishal
P. Rao is the editor of Home Based
Business Opportunities
A website dedicated to opportunities, ideas and resources for
starting a home based business. He also runs the Work at Home
Forum - an online community of folks who work at home.
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