Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Friday, February 6, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
BRRRRRR! cold day in n.y. this…
BRRRRRR! cold day in n.y. this morning…
http://www.turnkeydropshipbusiness.com
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Friday, February 6, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Encouraged people achieve the …
Encouraged people achieve the best; dominated people achieve second best; neglected people achieve the least.
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
There is only one success – to…
There is only one success – to be able to spend your life in your own way.
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Failure is only the opportunit…
Failure is only the opportunity to begin again, only this time more wisely.
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Thursday, February 5, 2009
Categories: Twitter
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Turnkey, Work From Home
Don’t Get Taken by a Fake Wholesale Supplier!
We grabbed this article Written by: Chris Malta
to keep you aware and to inform you of potential “fake” suppliers out there. I know a few people that got mixed up in these systems for large amounts of money.
Written by: Chris Malta
If you want to start your Home-based Internet Business for very little money, you need Wholesale Suppliers who Drop Ship.
Why? Because working with drop shippers eliminates the need for you to carry expensive inventories. You don’t have to rent a warehouse, hire employees, establish accounts with UPS and FedEx, etc. You can sell the best brand names on earth from your home computer, and make good money at it.
Wholesale Suppliers who drop ship send the products you sell directly from their warehouse to your customer, with your business name on it. All you do it take the order from your customer and pass it to the distributor. You keep the difference between the wholesale price the distributor charges you, and the retail price you sell to your customer for.
Of course, there are a lot of places out there that want you to THINK they are wholesale drop shippers. They’ll set up accounts with, say, 10 real drop ship suppliers. Then they’ll call themselves something like “GetYerStuffHere.com”, and claim that THEY are the wholesale drop ship supplier. Then it’ll go like this:
1. GetYerStuffHere.com will place advertising all over the Internet proclaiming to be the greatest source that ever existed for all kinds of great products, and they’ll drop ship all those products to your customer.
2. You’ll get all excited because YOU can actually place everything from Sony electronics to Coleman Camping gear on your web site and sell it.
3. GetYerStuffHere.com will charge you an account setup fee, to cover their “processing”. (Note: REAL Wholesale Suppliers almost NEVER charge you an account setup fee).
4. GetYerStuffHere.com will send you a nice, shiny list of products and show you where to get the product images and descriptions to place on your web site.
5. You’ll get all excited, and put all this great stuff on your site, set your prices so that you can make a profit over what GetYerStuffHere.com.
6. You’ll launch your site, and you hardly sell a thing.
Huh? What happened? Nobody’s buying! You can’t survive on just a few orders a month!
Disappointed and discouraged, you start to go out and check other web sites that carry the same products. Maybe they have better images. Maybe they have cooler descriptions. Maybe their pages look nicer. You find that it’s none of those things. So what DO you find?
The other sites’ PRICES are lower. A LOT lower.
You just got nailed by one of the most popular scams on the Internet.
GetYerStuffHere.com took you for a couple of hundred dollars in exchange for a CD full of product images. They may have even locked you into a contract where you have to pay them every month to be a “member” of their “distributorship”.
Oh, GetYerStuffHere.com DOES ship the products they claim to. Of course they do. It’s just that when they get an order from you, they turn around and place your order with the REAL Wholesale Supplier, and take a profit. By the time YOUR price is calculated, you’re paying not only wholesale, you’re paying GetYerStuffHere.com’s extra markup of anywhere from 10% to 30%.
In order for YOU to make a profit, you naturally have to mark up the prices you get from GetYerStuffHere.com. By the time you do that, you can’t compete on the ‘Net. Your prices are just too high.
At this point, you can do one of two things:
1. You can lower your prices to the point where you’re making mere pennies on your products in order to compete.
2. You can bypass these jokers and go to the REAL sources.
I’ve been in Systems Engineering for 19 years. I’ve been involved in ECommerce since it began. In that time, I’ve seen this scenario played out over and over with companies I’ve done work for.
The real sources can be hard to find. They don’t market themselves as Internet Wholesale Supplier. They are established wholesale companies who have been supplying big chains like Sears and Kmart for a very long time.
Many of them are now realizing that a good part of their future lies in Internet sales, and they are establishing drop ship and light bulk wholesale programs. There are even a few big name manufacturers who are beginning to supply Home-based Internet Businesses right from their factories. That’s where YOU need to be. In direct contact with the actual Wholesale Supplier or factory source.
When you’re looking for a drop shipper, here are a couple of things to be careful of:
1. Any company that tells you that they’ll set up your entire web site AND PROVIDE THE PRODUCTS FOR YOU will NOT make you rich. They’ll make THEMSELVES rich on your setup and hosting fees, and you’ll piddle along with thousands of other small sites all selling exactly the same things at the same prices.
(NOTE: Don’t confuse this with companies who just offer to set up your ECommerce web site. There are a lot of great places out there that will build and host sites for you. It’s when they tell you that you HAVE to sell the products that THEY provide that you should run for cover.)
2. Any distributor who wants you to pay a “membership” or “setup” fee is probably not a true Wholesale Supplier.
3. If it sounds too good to be true, it’s too good to be true.
Written by: Chris Malta
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Categories: All Recent Posts, Online Business, Turnkey Business, Twitter, Wholesale, Work From Home
Tags: Dropship, Ecommerce, Online Business, Work From Home
Amazon under investigation by US Postal Service

Mystery continues to surround the U.S. Postal Service’s investigation of Amazon.com. For those who missed it, Amazon disclosed in its annual regulatory filing Friday that the postal service is “investigating our compliance with Postal Service rules, and we are cooperating.”
Peter Rendina, a Washington, D.C.-based spokesman for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, said in an interview Tuesday the investigation is “ongoing,” but declined to provide details. Some, however, are pointing to the internet retailer’s use of bulk mail or media mail services as the possible focus.
Ron Wiener, CEO of Seattle startup Earth Class Mail, which works with the U.S. Postal Service, said he had no direct knowledge of the Amazon investigation, but had a few thoughts.“The USPS is absolutely desperate for revenue so one of the very first things they’ll do is go after major accounts and see if there’s any revenue leakage,” said Wiener, whose company scans postal mail so customers can read it online.
Wiener said it’s plausible that the investigation has something to do with the postal service’s manifest mailing system for bulk shipments.
“While it’s hard to imagine that Amazon would do anything inaccurate, because they are accuracy freaks, it’s possible that if they’re doing fulfillment for smaller resellers, it’s hard for Amazon to know if the weight calculations are correct,” Wiener said.
Some comments on TechFlash and postalnews.com, a site frequented by postal workers, have speculated that Amazon, or those who sell through Amazon, are using the Postal Service’s Media Mail for items that don’t qualify.
Media Mail is meant for mailing “books, sound recordings, recorded video tapes, printed music, and recorded computer-readable media (such as CDs, DVDs, and diskettes),” according to the postal service website.
Amazon said it learned of the postal service probe in January 2009. The company has declined to comment beyond the bare-bones statement in its regulatory filing.
The U.S. Postal Service is lately grappling with mounting losses amid the growth of electronic communications and the worsening economy — and recently proposed cutting back mail delivery from six days to five. Amazon is clearly a big business customer for the postal service — so the stakes are high. We’ll continue to follow this story as it develops.
Posted by R.W. Casandra Date: Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Categories: All Recent Posts, Dropship, Online Business, Twitter, Work From Home, amazon
Tags: amazon, Online Business, Work From Home
