Warren Buffet – Are the Glory Days Over?

Buffet or BS?

Warren Buffet is often called the “Oracle of Omaha.” When he speaks, the world listens. When he buys, markets move. I have tremendous respect for Warren Buffet. He’s obviously a very smart man and a great investor, but could it be that his time has past?

His company, Berkshire Hathaway (BSH), didn’t do well in the stock market during the crisis. BSH crashed along with the rest of the stock market. It’s my opinion that a professional investor’s portfolio should do well in an up-trending market and even better in a down-trending market—but that’s just my opinion and philosophy.

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Back To Paying In Gold & Silver

Back to gold and silver

by Robert Kiyosaki

Bad News For The Fed and IRS

This month, Utah became the first state in the country to legalize gold and silver coins as currency.

So what does this mean to you, me, the Fed, IRS, and the world? To understand the significance of Utah’s actions, you need to understand the definition of the word “currency.”

As strange as it may seem, governments determine what they think money is. For most of us, money or currency is the paper in our wallets. It only has value because governments have the power to declare paper to be money.

In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt made owning gold illegal. The president declared that money now was paper. The key to this scheme working, is the government only accepts its own “paper” as money. You cannot pay your taxes with gold or silver…only official government paper.

To make sure we only used “paper” the government imposed a very high capital gains tax of 28% on gold and silver. That means, if you bought gold or silver for let’s say $10 and it increased in value by $10, the government would tax you $2.80 for your gains, even if you held the gold or silver for several years.

A 28% tax is nearly 100% higher than long-term capital gains tax of 15% in the US. For example, if I bought a stock for $10, held it for a year, and sold it for $20, my tax would be $1.50 on my gains.

The reason Utah’s actions are significant is because Utah is taking on the Federal Reserve Bank, IRS, and Washington, D.C.

The Utah state government is bypassing the Fed and the Treasury by accepting gold and silver as money, for example, allowing taxpayers to pay their taxes in gold and silver.

Let me explain further. Let’s say I bought gold in the year 2000 for $300 an ounce. In 2011, with gold at $1500 an ounce, if gold is now treated as money instead of being treated as an investment, I do not have to pay that 28% capital gains tax to the US Treasury.

In this example, of $300 per ounce to $1500 per ounce, a gain of $1200, I do not need to pay 28% of $1200, or $336 per ounce, in taxes to the US Treasury. On 1000 ounces, using the same buy and sell numbers, that is a savings of $336,000 in taxes, or $336,000 staying in my pocket for me to use. Thank you Utah. Tom Wheelwright adds that the change by Utah does not mean that gold will now be treated as money by the Federal government. It should mean that Utah will not tax it when used as money. It will be years before the courts decide whether this change means a change in how gold and silver are taxed.

Not only does this challenge the Fed, IRS, and the US government, it makes gold and silver more valuable. Using gold and silver as money, rather than a taxable investment like stocks, bonds, and real estate, makes gold and silver more desirable, at least in Utah.

One reason there is such a high tax, 28% on gold and silver is simply because the Fed and the tax department do not want us to hold gold and silver. By holding gold and silver, we pull their phony dollars out circulation and mock their corrupt system of counterfeit money.

Utah is truly a story of David taking on Goliath. Minnesota followed Utah later this month, taking a step closer to make gold and silver legal money. North Carolina, Idaho, and at least nine other states have similar bills being drafted. A Republican lawmaker has introduced a bill in Congress to explore the option for the entire US.

If the 28% tax on gold and silver is repealed, you may see a massive rush to own more gold and silver. Repealing the 28% tax is like a 28% increase in value. More importantly, it means 28% more money for those who have been following COR.

In many ways, history is only repeating itself. After all, gold and silver, especially silver, has been real money for thousands of years.

Thank you for supporting COR.

Robert Kiyosaki

PS: I thank the people and state of Utah for taking the first step to dismantle the conspiracy of the rich. This is big.

 

Simple Software For The Productive

Give Me Simple Software With Great Predictable Results.

by Jurie van Dyk

I don’t know if this is sad or amazing but listen to this:

While downloading a picture form iStockphoto.com for my upcoming blog post I decided that the picture would fit the theme of my blog better if the border had a white fade-in and alight flash photo effect.

What happen next astounded me. Rather than opening Photoshop I e-mailed it to my phone, opened the image in camera and added the desired effects. One minute later I e-mailed the image back to my pc. Quality of the image: “Perfect for my blog”

This brought up an interesting thought. The software on my pc cost thousands of dollars,whereas the app on my phone cost 99sent. Why did I prefer to use the phone app? In a word: Simplicity. Yes, I know how to  use Photoshop and Coral Draw, but I’m not doing graphic designing. Just choosing the output setting would have taken longer than the whole editing process on the phone. Similarly, I uploaded movie clips from my latest trip to my iPad. Within 5 minutes I created something that would have taken me hours to create on programs like Pinnacle or FinalCut.  Best of all, not only did the app allow me the benefit of speed and great quality, there is no learning curve involved.  It was the first time I ever used iMovie.

For all the critics and naysayers that wants more control over their creativity, there are 95% of people, like me, simple looking for simple software with great results. Why do we need to spend big money or time on features that we will never use. It is time Windows strip down there software and give the masses what they need, simple app that deliver excellent results, not more options.

I would much rather spend my time getting on with life then having to buy a Dummies book so that I can make small changes to a blog photo.

Workaholics; Hire them or Fire them?


Workaholics;  Hire them or Fire them?

by Jurie van Dyk

A lot of employees have lost sight of the fact that it’s not about how hard you work, it’s about what you get done.

In a culture where workaholics are celebrated, most employers would answer that the perfect employee is someone young, unmarried, that has no life or responsibilities, does not mind working 80 hour weeks and pulling all-nighters.

I tend to disagree.

The individual described above can normally be summarized as: The Office Hero.  People that get off on “self sacrifice” and letting the rest of the office feel inferior for merely working reasonable hours.

The problem I have with these individuals is that they throw time at every problem.  Rather than looking for a more elegant solution that will save time and increase effectiveness, more time is their default solution . The problem with the more time solution is no thinking is required. They try and make up for intellectual laziness with busy-ness.  Constantly burning the midnight oil and 14 hour working  days are unsustainable, and when the burnout inevitable comes good judgment goes out the window.

Workaholics always brag about being tired and hours spend working on a project; don’t be impressed!  Tired minds pick the easy problems to solve, if any, and leave  bigger problems for later, thus projects drag on forever.  More often than not, the added hours does not make up for gross ineffectiveness that is a result of tiredness.

Working hard and long is not a prerequisite for success. Its a path to mediocrity. Who works the hardest, the mine worker that works 16 hour shifts a day, banging away with a jackhammer, or the investment banker that does one multi million dollar deal from his island resort house once a month?  Of course the mine worker works the hardest.  Which one do you want to receive an inheritance from?

I much prefer the employee that tells me:”I’m taking the rest of the week off as I have changed the way we used to do (X), it now takes 1/10 of the time and the quality has improved” as apposed to: “I have worked the whole weekend and through the night, but still have not completed anything that we can invoice for.”

In the words of Jason Fried: ”Workaholics don’t save the day, they just use it up.


Is your pass success costing you your future success?

What Humans Can Learn From Fishing!

by Jurie van Dyk

I’ve taken up the sport of carp fishing not too long ago, if you can even call fishing a sport.

I’ve noticed that the carp never bites on the same bait two days in a row.  If you caught a lot of carp last week using almond syrup and garlic floaties, chances are slim that you will be fairing well with the same bait setup next time you go fishing.

What I find strange is that a lot of people will continue unsing the bait that worked for them before, even if it is not proving successful on the day.

I have to subscribe this to most humans inability to accommodate rapid change.  So often success in the pass,  prevents us from having success in the future.

Whether you made money on the stock market,  flipped a couple of properties, or sold popcorn when the circus was in town, are you sure you made money through sound business principals, or were you the beneficiary of fortunate events.  Its like Warren Buffet said: “A duck is sitting in a pond in the rain, yes its going up in the world, but does he really have anything to do with it?”

What I find sad is that a lot of  people that  made easy money in the past, become addicted to that feeling and then spends the rest of their lives trying to repeat something that they had nothing to do with, meanwhile losing out on amazing opportunities daily.

I know it is not always easy, but being able to change with circumstances and change quickly, is key to success.

Don’t try and use the same bait every time, the big fish will get away.

I would like to leave the following quote with you from — Eric Hoffer
“In times of change, learners inherit the earth, while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists.”

Is Now The Right Time To Buy Property Again?

Is now the right time to buy property again?

by Jurie van Dyk

As the stormy seas of the property recession seems to be calming and the uninformed starts shouting: ”The recession is over, buy now before prices starts increasing again”, lets look at the facts and make an informed decision.

Never before have we seen a property boom of the likes that we have encountered from 2002-2008 when inevitably, the bubble burst.

Houses as always, has been seen as places to live and maintain, not as cash cows. Economist Robbert Chiller concluded that between the years 1890-2004 residential investments showed a 0.4% real annual return.

When it comes to the value of property, nothing has changed; the only thing that did change was the availability of credit. In a market where credit was cheap and easy to obtain, most developers could buy a property and develop it for less than 10% payment down, sometime even 0% down. You could buy a property make a quick buck and be out.

Like any bubble, rumor started that you could make a quick buck and property prices would always go up, and madness followed.

People have forgotten to look at real market value indicators when determining property value. The value of a house is not determined by what the banker or estate agent believes it should sell for; market value of a property is determined by the income that it can generate. Any other indicators, be that golden taps, granite tops or an amazing sea view, still come down to what someone is willing to pay to live there per month.

Lets use some real world figures. In 2002, less than 10 years ago, I was renting a small 2 bedroom bachelors flat for R1,100.00 per month. The unit was for sale for R95,000.00 – then adding levies and expenses to your bond payment will be in line with a months rent.

Property price and rental prices should always be within 15% of each other.

An acquaintance is renting a small 3 bedroom house for R4,000.00 at the moment in a beautiful coastal town. The house is on the market for R1.5 million. A bond payment, rates and taxes and all the other pleasures that comes with pride of ownership will come to about R15,000.00 per month. Can you see the problem? Why would anyone buy a property that will cost them R15,000.00 when the maximum rent it can produce is R4,000.00. When it comes to real world value, which is determined by what you can generate in income, it is clear that this house is 2/3 over priced.

A lot of last moment speculators where caught standing in the “musical chair like” craziness that came with the bubble and are still trying to offload their losses onto a bigger idiot.

It could take years for the market to right itself after the lunacy of the bubble. The 7 trillion debt that President Obama was talking about in 2008 has not been absorbed by the market. In my opinion the property market is trillions over priced after the bubble and property speculators need to accumulative lose that amount for property prices to get back to their market related value. For the next couple of years property is toxic, stay away!

Remember property is only worth the income that it can generate, not what you speculate your capital gain might be. If that ratio is more that 15%, you are buying someone else’s bad deal, and you have just become the bigger idiot.

Is Apple the Modern Day Ford Motor Company?



Apple the modern day Ford Company.

by Jurie van Dyk

I took out my old iPod Classic as they are know today.  This device is approximately 5 years old.  I have not used it in a while; I do most of my audio listening on my iPhone these days.

The thing that struck me as I was quickly syncing my iPod and started listening to my latest play-list is that it works as well 5 years later as the day I bought it. Even the battery life has not deteriorated much.  That is pretty amazing!

To bring this into perspective, 90% of Mobile Phones (or electronic gadgets for that matter) do not even last the lifespan of their accompanying 2 year contract.

Having read Henry Fords autobiography: ”My Life and Work”, I could not help but notice a direct correlation between Henry Ford’s business philosophy and that of Apple’s today.

At the time, car companies believed that it was good business to sell cars that need to be replaced ever 5 years, pretty much like the norm today.  They also believed that is was good business to build the car with low quality parts.  It made sense to them because they are creating their own repeat business, by selling parts to their existing customer base.

Henry Ford’s business philosophy was quite different.  He believed in selling good quality cars that will outlast their owners.  He rightfully believed that people will want to own more that one vehicle, if the quality is lasting and the vehicle affordable.

Henry also believed that you make more money, by lowering the price point through innovation in production and design.  Where this notion is counter intuitive, (you have 100 cars that you are currently selling at $1000, if you drop the price, to say $800 you have made a net loss of $20 000.00,)  Henry Ford showed that every-time he managed to bring the price down by innovation, better design and manufacturing, he sold more units, and his net profit increased.

The reason why  lowering the price works is, every time you drop the price, it opens up a market that has previously seen the product as unaffordable.  By constantly lowering cost and increasing value, you very quickly end up pricing your competition out of the market, and have a loyal following of customers, evangelising your products.

This is no more evident in the massive success of the iPad over the past year.  Not only have Apple created a new product range, but by innovation, research and manufacturing no-how they have priced their competitors out of the market.  The fact that the iPad 2 is selling at the same price has now created a huge iPad 1 used market.  A lot of people that previously might not have considered an iPad, not knowing if they will use it to its full potential is now happy to pick up a used iPad for Pennies to the Dollar.  Every new customer becomes part of the Apple eco system, ie money for Apple.

The same can be said about the updated innovation and free upgrades that existing customers constantly receive.  You don’t need to constantly replace your gadget, because the latest one has deemed yours obsolete, rather your existing device moves with the constant development at  Apple.  Thus you can focus on the next great product that you would like to buy, with even more trust and confidence after a good first experience.

I think the legendary comeback and the current financial and business state of Apple speaks for itself, their business philosophy seems to be working just fine.

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I recently wrote a blog post “do you have heroes?”  It was not surprising to me, when searching through a Steve Jobs bio website, that one of Steve’s Inspirational figures is Henry Ford.


Do You Have Heroes?


From A Hero

Bono once said: ” I understand fans, because I am the biggest one.” “ I understand that fans will sometimes invade your privacy, because when I was a young struggling musician, I wanted to knock on the doors of my idols and tell them how much their work inspired me.”

Successful people have heroes.

Human-beings do not know what they want straight of the bat, they need to see something and then picture themselves in that position. Explain to a person that has never seen a motorcycle what a bike looks like and then ask him what type of bike he would like. He would not have a clue. Give him 3 seasons of American Choppers to watch and see how the outcome changes.

When it comes to what we want for ourselves, the same principal applies. We see, we want.

Tragically a lot of people see it beneath themselves to have heroes. People that inspires them, who’s careers they follow and whose paths they try and imitate. So inevitable they start imitating the Joneses i.e. the majority. Since studies show that 10% of the people on earth own 90% of the wealth and the other 90% of people have to share the remaining 10%. Do you really want to follow the majority?

Heroes make things look easy. They get you through those tough times. When you make decisions you ask yourself, what would Steve Jobs or Donald Trump do in this situation.

Read up on your heroes, follow them, see what they are up to and learn from them. Look at people older than yourself on the same path as you are on and make sure you want to imitate their results.

Follow in the footsteps of the worthy.

Just for interest sake, here is a list of my heroes:

Architects:

Frank Lloyd Wright and Frank Gehry for the way they reinvented the language of architecture during their life time.

Artist/Musicians:

U2, the way they reinvented themselves after Rattle and Hum and came back with Actung Baby.

Inventors:

Michael Czysz, amazing architect that is rewriting the rules of motorcycle design.


Steve Jobs, (I’ve added this later, would you like to know who Steve’s heroes are?) for his vision and game changing design philosophy. R Bukminister Fuller and Thomas Edison and Burt Rutan.

Business men:

Richard Brandson, The Donald (love him or hate him) and Henry Ford.


Jason Fried on How to Make Money in 6 Easy Steps


After my blog post on Good Work Never Happens At Work, I found this new article by Jason Fried “How to make money in 6 easy steps” featured on Inc.com blog.  Original Article Click Here.

Here follows a re-post of that article, over to Jason Fried:

A few years ago, I decided I wanted to learn to play the drums. I’ve always loved the drums. Whenever I listen to music, I hear the drums first. I can listen to a great jazz drummer like Art Blakey for hours on end. I’d give up almost anything to be as good as Glenn Kotche ofWilco.

The path to learning the drums is pretty clear. You sign up for some lessons, you get some pads, you get some sticks, you learn some drills, and you practice. And you keep practicing. Every surface—your desk, your leg, your steering wheel—becomes a drum. You get better over time, but you never really stop practicing.

This is how we learn most things. Whether you want to be a writer or a musician or a painter or a baker or an accountant, the way to get there is fairly clear. Not everyone’s going to be as good as he or she would like to be, but at least you know where to start. Lessons, classes, books, internships, workshops… All of these things are accessible to most people who want them.

One of the interesting things about picking up the drums was that I realized it had been some time since I had actually tried to learn something new. We spend most of our childhoods learning new things. But as you get older, the frequency with which you develop new talents slows down. Sometimes it stops completely.

That said, when I first started playing, I was bad. I sounded like someone was tripping over a drum set and knocking it on the floor. When you suck so badly at something new, it’s comforting to know there are other things that you actually are good at. And being bad at drums reminded me of what I have gotten pretty good at: making money.

Today, I run 37signals, a software and design firm that I co-founded in 1999. Sales have grown at double-digit rates every year for the past decade; so have profits. (Like many private companies, we don’t disclose revenue.) How did I learn how to do this? I have a degree in finance, but I don’t remember taking any classes that even remotely taught me how to make money. I’ve read plenty of business books. Same thing—lots of talk about money, but not much about how to actually make the stuff.

One thing I do know is that making money is not the same as starting a business. For entrepreneurs, this is an important thing to understand. Most of us identify with the products we create or services we provide. I make software. He is a headhunter. She builds computer networks. But the fact is, all of us must master one skill that supersedes the others: making money. You can be the most creative software designer in the world. But if you don’t know how to make money, you’re never going to have much of a business or a whole lot of autonomy.

This is not about getting rich (though there’s certainly nothing wrong with that). Instead, for me, making money is about freedom. When you owe people money, they own you—or, at least, they own your schedule. As long as you remain profitable, the timeline is yours to create.

It took me a long time to figure out how to make money. Here’s how the lessons unfolded.


1. Understanding the buyer is the key to being a strong seller

It started when I was about 14. In Illinois, that’s when you can start working (with your parents’ permission). So I went with my dad to get a worker’s permit and got a summer job at the local grocery store. I don’t remember learning much there. But a year later, at my next summer job, the lessons flowed.

I was working at Shelby’s Pro Shop, a golf and tennis retailer in Deerfield, where I grew up. I sold shoes and tennis rackets. I didn’t play tennis, but I learned how to be a very good tennis-shoe and tennis-racket salesman. That’s because I made the discovery that people’s reasons for buying things often don’t match up with the company’s reason for selling them.

Manufacturers used to dispatch reps to the pro shop to educate us on their latest and greatest technologies. They’d tell us about the new ethylene vinyl acetate midsoles that made shoes more comfortable; the Goodyear-brand rubber outsoles that made the shoes more durable; the new variation of Nike Air that was miles ahead of the competition.

They thought they were arming us with facts that would impress the customers. But, it turned out, none of that stuff mattered. In fact, it had a negative effect. When you describe things in terms people don’t understand, they tend not to trust you as much. Trust is important. You can bluff your way into money, but for only so long.

Once I stopped slinging the technical terms, I realized that when customers shop for shoes, they do three things. They consider the look and style. They try them on to see if they’re comfortable. And they consider the price. Endorsements by famous athletes help a lot, too. But the technology, the features, the special-testing labs—I can’t remember a single customer who cared. I sold a boatload of shoes and tennis rackets that summer.

Understanding what people really want to know—and how that differs from what you want to tell them—is a fundamental tenet of sales. And you can’t get good at making money unless you get good at selling.

I learned this as a teenage shoe salesman, and it still drives how I operate.

To be sure, this is hardly a unique insight. But judging by the number of companies and products that totally miss the mark, day after day, it’s a lesson that needs to be learned again and again.

2. In which I sell electronics, knives, and throwing stars and learn that it’s all about passion

After a couple more summers at the pro shop, I decided to start my own business. It hadn’t taken long to notice that retail was pretty simple: The store bought stuff from distributors, marked it up, and sold it at a profit. Why couldn’t I do that, too? It turned out, I could. I got a reseller’s license from the state of Illinois. This allowed me to buy stuff cheaply from distributors.

This is where I learned my second key lesson: Sell only things you’d want to buy for yourself.

I originally got the reseller’s license so I could buy stereo equipment, computer equipment, a cordless phone, and a radar detector. (My rusted-out Datsun 510 was held together by bungee cords and duct tape, but I still liked to drive fast.) I soon realized that if I wanted these things, my friends probably did, too. I could sell them stuff below what they’d pay in the store and still make a profit. So I picked some prices that seemed reasonable, pitched my peers, and the orders came in. I didn’t sell a lot, but picking up an extra $100 here and there is a big deal when you’re a teenager.

I began offering more items. Somehow I got hold of some military-supply and sporting-goods catalogs. I cut out the pictures of the stuff that looked cool—butterfly knives, throwing stars, pocketknives, and some other things I’d prefer not to mention—and created my own catalog, which I photocopied and gave to my friends. The stuff, as they say, sold itself.

I didn’t have a credit card—remember, I was in high school at the time. So I ordered the items COD, cash on delivery. I’d learn when UPS would be coming and feign illness so I could stay home from school. The delivery guy rang the doorbell, I gave him the cash, and he handed over the boxes. I don’t know if they do COD anymore, but man, was it exciting back then. No one got rich—and I don’t think anyone was injured—but it was a great education. And the lesson stuck.

3. How, and why, to charge real money for real products

Around my senior year of high school, I started getting interested in computers. I also liked music. My collection of tapes and CDs was growing, and I wanted a better way to keep track of what I had and what I’d loaned out to friends.

This was before the World Wide Web. So I tossed one of those junk mail AOL CDs in the computer, installed the program, and convinced my parents it was worth the monthly fee. (“It’ll help me research and study!” I argued.) I started searching for tools to help organize a music collection.

There were a ton of them. Most were made with software called FileMaker Pro, a program that makes it easy to create simple databases without really knowing how to program. FileMaker also lets you design your own interface, so you can make things look any way you’d like. Most of the music-organization programs were free and pretty lousy—ugly, hard to use, loaded with unnecessary features.

I decided to figure out how to make my own. I got FileMaker Pro (I paid for it with the stash I’d saved up selling stuff to my friends) and started messing around. After a few months, I had solved the problems I had with organizing my music. I knew what music I had, where it was, whom I had loaned it to, how much I paid for it. The solution was elegant and easy to use. I called it Audiofile.

Most of the music-collection products on AOL’s file section were freeware. Download them, install them, and you don’t owe the author a dime. There were a few shareware options (you pay if you use them, but it’s mostly an honor system), but most were free.

I’d already learned that I really enjoyed making money. And I thought that Audiofile was good. And even then, I thought that if something was good, then it was worth paying for. So before making it available to other AOL users, I added a limit in the program—people could file 25 CDs for free; after that, it would cost $20 to unlock Audiofile and remove the limit.

I remember my first customer. One day my parents gave me an envelope. It came from Germany and had those airmail stripes at the top. I opened it up, found a screenshot of Audiofile printed on a piece of paper—and a crisp $20 bill. More envelopes rolled in. Over the next few years, Audiofile probably generated $50,000—not bad for a kid in college in the early ’90s.

The lesson: People are happy to pay for things that work well. Never be afraid to put a price on something. If you pour your heart into something and make it great, sell it. For real money. Even if there are free options, even if the market is flooded with free. People will pay for things they love.

This lesson is at the core of 37signals. There are plenty of free project management tools. There are plenty of free contact managers and customer relationship management tools. There are plenty of free chat tools and organization tools. There are plenty of free conferences and workshops. Free is everywhere. But we charge for our products. And our customers are happy to pay for them.

There’s another lesson in here: Charging for something makes you want to make it better. I’ve found this to be really important. It’s a great lesson if you want to learn how to make money.

After all, paying for something is one of the most intimate things that can occur between two people. One person is offering something for sale, and the other person is spending hard-earned cash to buy it. Both have worked hard to be able to offer the other something he or she wants. That’s trust—and, dare I say, intimacy. For customers, paying for something sets a high expectation.

When you put a price on something, you get really honest feedback from customers. When entrepreneurs ask me how to get customers to tell us what they really think, I respond with two words: Charge them. They’ll tell you what they think, demand excellence, and take the product seriously in a way they never would if they were just using it for free.

As an entrepreneur, you should welcome that pressure. You should want to be forced to be good at what you do.

4. There are different pathways to the same dollar

Don’t just charge. Try as many different pricing models as you can. That’s a great way to get better at making money.

Before I launched 37signals, I worked as a freelance Web designer. I charged clients by the hour. I work quickly. But I soon realized that charging hourly penalizes efficiency. If I can finish something in an hour that might take someone else three or four hours, why should I be penalized? So when we launched 37signals in 1999, we charged clients by the project.

It worked great. But as the projects started getting bigger and costing a lot more, I noticed that clients became more reticent about signing on. Big numbers and long time frames make people nervous. More money and more time mean more risk, and risk is something all companies would prefer to avoid.

I thought about the problem and decided to try something new. Instead of doing long, expensive projects, we’d do short, affordable ones. Instead of billing $50,000 for a 15-page website redesign that would take three months, we’d charge $3,500 per page and offer to complete the page in a week. If you want another page, it’s another $3,500 and another week. We called it 37express.

It took off. It took the risk out. It let companies try us out before committing to something big. And it was a lot more fun for us—fewer meetings, less stress, fewer decisions to be made. Just a quick one-week project for a fixed price. If you want more, we’ll sell you another.

We no longer design websites, so we don’t offer 37express anymore. But it was a fantastic way to make money. Remove the fear, and people will be more willing to pay you. People don’t like uncertainty—especially when they have to pay for it. A week and a fixed price is certain.

We’ve continued to experiment with pricing models. It’s been a great way to get a 360-degree view of how customers think about their money and our products. Our apps, for example, are available as monthly subscriptions for $24 to $249 per month. We’ve sold our book Getting Real as an instant download for $19 and as a paperback for $25. We’ve sold tickets to our eight-hour workshops for up to $1,000. Listings on our job board are $400 for 30 days. We sell listings on Sortfolio, a service we built to help small businesses find Web designers, for $99 per month.

We’ve even sold promotional T-shirts, for $19, when just about everyone else in the business gives them away. People wear shirts they paid $19 for. People turn free T-shirts into rags. Rags don’t promote anyone.

5. The true value of bootstrapping

I began learning these things when I was 14. And I’m glad I did, because the habits entrepreneurs develop early in their careers go a long way toward determining their success.

I’ve borrowed money to start a business only once. My parents gave me $5,000 to buy my first computer when I went to college. I’m embarrassed to admit I never paid them back, but that’s only because I knew they’d never accept the money. One day, I’ll figure out how to make that happen.

But that’s it. Everything else has been bootstrapped—even though dozens of venture capitalists and private equity firms have offered us lots of money. Instead, my customers have always been my investors. My goal has always been to be profitable on Day One.

I can’t say enough about bootstrapping. Whether you’re starting your first business or your next one, my advice is to bootstrap it. Bootstrapping forces you to think about making money on Day One. There’s a fundamental difference between a bootstrapped business and a funded business. It’s all about which side of the money you’re on. From Day One, a bootstrapped business has no choice but to make money. There’s no cushion in the bank and not much in the pockets. It’s make money or go home. To a bootstrapped business, money is air.

On the other hand, from Day One, a funded business is all about spending money. There’s a pile in the bank, and it’s not there to collect interest. Your investors want you to hire, invest, and buy. There’s less—and in some cases, no—pressure to make money. While that sounds comforting, I think it ultimately hurts. It replaces the hustle, the scrap, the fight, with a false comfort of “we can worry about that later.”

Anyone can spend money. Making it is the hard part, and being forced to do it early is one of the best ways to get better at it later.

6. A word about practicing

Like I said at the outset, it’s all about practice. Whether you’re playing drums or building a business, you’re going to be pretty bad at something the first time you try it. The second time isn’t much better. Over time, and after a lot of practice, you begin to get there.

So here’s a great way to practice making money: Buy and sell the same thing over and over on Craigslist or eBay. Seriously.

Go buy something on Craigslist or eBay. Find something that’s a bit of a commodity, so you know there’s always plenty of supply and demand. An iPod is a good test. Buy it, and then immediately resell it. Then buy it again. Each time, try selling it for more than you paid for it. See how far you can push it. See how much profit you can make off 10 transactions.

Start tweaking the headline. Then start fiddling with the product description. Vary the photographs. Take some pictures of the thing for sale; use other photos with other items, or people, in them. Shoot really high-quality shots, and also post crappy ones from your cell-phone camera. Try every variation you can think of.

I love doing this, because there’s no real risk involved. If you already have a business, you don’t need to dream up a new product line or rock the boat with crazy experiments. If you don’t have a business, it’s a perfect way to work on your chops.

Jason Fried is co-founder of 37signals, a Chicago-based software firm, and co-author of the book Rework, which was published last March.

Read more of Jason Fried’s columns for Inc. If you enjoy them, consider subscribingto the magazine.





Great Work Never Happens At Work


If you ask anyone:”When do you get your best work done?”  “Late at night, at my beach house when I’m all alone, under a tree in the garden” The answer varies greatly, but it seldom is at work.

Jason Fried is the Co-Founder of “37 Signal” and at the Ted Conference he discussed his view on working at an office, and getting your best work done.  Jason is one of a new breed of business owners that are no longer focuses on looking over their employees shoulders and confining them to a 9-5 corporate prison.  Instead he places great value on creativeness and productivity and realizes that this seldom happens at work.

Jason Fried, co-author of the best seller  business book “REWORKED” with his business partner, David Heinemeier Hansson, contributes 37 Signals’s astounding success to the above mentioned factor and their minimalist approach to business as described in their book.

Jason Fried Co-Owner of 37 Signals and Co-Author of REWORKED