Creation of A Product On A Mac _ Part One
25/10/08 21:01
We’re going to talk about product creation on the Mac now. It doesn’t matter if you have the newest Power Mac, iMac, Airbook, Mac Mini, or whatever, the process is the same.
What are people buying?
What are people interested in?
Now, don’t get me wrong. I am not advocating selling or marketing ANYTHING that people want. You must draw the line. What is the best product?
What is the good product?
What product fits with your morals and ethics? You must be able to sleep at night with yourself based on the products you create.
Someone once said that if you give people what they need, they would beat a path to your door to buy what you have.
Not so.
People buy what they WANT.
So, your biggest challenge is to find out what people are buying and develop a product around an already successful niche. How do you find out what’s popular?
Go to the magazine rack at your local bookstore. Thumb through the ads. What ads keep coming up over and over in different publications? What ads keep showing up in the same magazine?
Once you have found an interesting niche, put on your thinking cap. Can you create a report about this? iWork would be perfect for this.
Can you interview someone about the niche? Burning a CD would work nicely on your Mac for this.
Is there someone who would show you his or her skill in a particular niche?
You could use iMovie and iDVD for this product.
But before we continue further, we need to test market our product.
The best place I have found to test market products is Ebay. You have millions of people shopping every day for a special item. You can place an ad for an information product and in three days know if the market is interested in it.
You don’t have to pay for a website. You don’t have to get a merchant credit account. You don’t have to do a joint venture. You don’t have to wait for a print ad to come out. You don’t have to answer the phone.
And best of all, you can get a product up and for sale in a few minutes. You can create a product in a few hours. Then you can make money, week-in, week-out.
Just like I’ve done.
More Info? Go To: www.MacintoshCash.com
What are people buying?
What are people interested in?
Now, don’t get me wrong. I am not advocating selling or marketing ANYTHING that people want. You must draw the line. What is the best product?
What is the good product?
What product fits with your morals and ethics? You must be able to sleep at night with yourself based on the products you create.
Someone once said that if you give people what they need, they would beat a path to your door to buy what you have.
Not so.
People buy what they WANT.
So, your biggest challenge is to find out what people are buying and develop a product around an already successful niche. How do you find out what’s popular?
Go to the magazine rack at your local bookstore. Thumb through the ads. What ads keep coming up over and over in different publications? What ads keep showing up in the same magazine?
Once you have found an interesting niche, put on your thinking cap. Can you create a report about this? iWork would be perfect for this.
Can you interview someone about the niche? Burning a CD would work nicely on your Mac for this.
Is there someone who would show you his or her skill in a particular niche?
You could use iMovie and iDVD for this product.
But before we continue further, we need to test market our product.
The best place I have found to test market products is Ebay. You have millions of people shopping every day for a special item. You can place an ad for an information product and in three days know if the market is interested in it.
You don’t have to pay for a website. You don’t have to get a merchant credit account. You don’t have to do a joint venture. You don’t have to wait for a print ad to come out. You don’t have to answer the phone.
And best of all, you can get a product up and for sale in a few minutes. You can create a product in a few hours. Then you can make money, week-in, week-out.
Just like I’ve done.
More Info? Go To: www.MacintoshCash.com