12 Months to $1 Million: How to Pick a Winning Product, Build a Real Business, and Become a Seven-Figure Entrepreneur (Unabridged)
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- $23.99
Publisher Description
Your road map to a seven-figure business...in one year or less
By cutting out the noise and providing a clear and proven plan, this road map helps even brand-new entrepreneurs make decisions quickly, get their product up for sale, and launch it to a crowd that is ready and waiting to buy.
This one-year plan will guide you through the three stages to your first $1 million:
The Grind (Months 0-4): This step-by-step plan will help you identify a winning product idea, target customers that are guaranteed to buy, secure funding, and take your first sale within your first four months.
The Growth (Months 5-8): Once you're in business, you will discover how to use cheap and effective advertising strategies to get your product to at least 25 sales per day, so you can prove you have a profitable business.
The Gold (Months 9-12): It's time to establish series of products available for sale, until you are averaging at least 100 sales per day, getting you closer to the million-dollar mark every single day.
Through his training sessions at Capitalism.com, Ryan Daniel Moran has helped new and experienced entrepreneurs launch scalable and sustainable online businesses. He's seen more than 100 entrepreneurs cross the seven-figure barrier, many of whom go on to sell their businesses.
If your goal is to be a full-time entrepreneur, get ready for one chaotic, stressful, and rewarding year. If you have the guts to complete it, you will be the proud owner of a million-dollar business and be in a position to call your own shots for life.
Customer Reviews
Be cautious!
Be cautious of anyone who claims to have a rule or formula that always works in business, because no such thing exists! These people tend to overestimate the impact their hard work and decision making had on their success and underestimate the factors outside their own control. This book is no different. The first half hour is the author just talking about his own success and a few examples of where his success has helped others.
Now, in fairness, it provides some valuable lessons that serve as great business advice, but everyone’s circumstances, the challenges they face, and the amount of time and resources they can commit to it are always going to vary. Therefore, the author CANNOT guarantee this formula will succeed, but they can recommend it as sound business advice.
Another thing to consider is this formula worked for the author and for some other start-ups, but doesn’t account for all those who failed in spite of following it to the letter. If a business fails it is not always because of a lack of effort or lack of adherence to the plan. Sometimes factors that the plan either doesn’t account for, or can’t protect against, will still result in it failing.