traveling and working abroadIn the past twelve month, I’ve:

  1. Traveled to 5 continents
  2. Spent time in 12 countries
  3. Literally lived out of a car for two months in New Zealand
  4. Almost got stomped by an elephant in Africa
  5. Snorkelled the Great Barrier Reef
  6. Driven through the deserts of Namibia to find cave man paintings (found them!)
  7. Had way too many doble espresso con crema’s in Argentina
  8. Canoed around the Amazon
  9. And a lot of other crazy stuff (that’s been documented) but for the sake of brevity, let’s move on…

In that time, I’ve also run into a lot of travelers

Inevitably, after hearing how long my wife and I have been traveling or how long we plan to continue traveling, we get the following question:

“How?”

People want to know how we do it.

Or rather: they want to know how we pay for it.
(more…)

Indonesia is a funny place.

On the one hand, you find some incredible artisan craftsmanship – stuff that would cost 10 or 20 times more in the States (minimum).

On the other hand, you have someone trying to sell you something (anything) every ten feet.

*true story: as I was walking down a street in Bali, amongst the offers of lunch, massages, and places to stay, a guy asked me if I wanted a tune up for my car.  I was walking… I had no car.

I’m not going to lie: I definitely got sold more than I’d like to admit while I was there.

Most of the purchases I wanted or needed, of course, but still – I was impressed by this culture of people who are so willing to - and so skilled at - closing a sale.

But nothing tops the two 5 year old girls I met in Kuta, Lombok.

Learning Online Sales from Two 5-Year-Old Peddlers

We just arrived in Kuta after a full day of travel (no, not your conventional travel– think: 1 hour boat ride in a rickety boat that almost capsized multiple times, negotiating a ride with middlemen who triple the rates to get their cut, and finally getting a ride only to find out he’s not taking you where you want to go, etc.).

Needless to say, we were pretty tired and just wanted to relax for a little while before another day of travel the following day.

After finding a place to stay, we dropped off our luggage and decided to explore the small beach town of Kuta.

It didn’t take long after hitting the main road for these two to find us:

IMG 1035 - The 5 Most Effective Online Sales Techniques I Learned from Two Girls in Indonesia

I never did get their names, but I do have their bracelets (yes, plural).

And while the value of the bracelets is probably only a few cents, the lessons on selling I learned from them are priceless.

1. Be First

These two girls didn’t wait to swarm: they were on us the first moment we stepped foot on the main road.

They literally raced ACROSS the road in traffic (albeit light traffic) to get to us first.

Why does this matter?

Simple - because I had never been to Kuta before, I had no idea what the town was like.  I would come to realize (just a few minutes later) that the town is full of little girls trying to sell you bracelets.  If I had known that, I probably would have ignored them.

But because these two got to me first (before I knew what I was getting into), they got my cash.

IMG 1067 - The 5 Most Effective Online Sales Techniques I Learned from Two Girls in Indonesia

Me saying no to dozens of more salesmen (it pays to be first)

How to Apply This Online

There are millions of people searching for things every day online.

The majority of these searches are for things that are brand new to the person searching.

If we already have a trusted website for something, we go there first.  If we’re unsure, we search.

If you don’t recognize the power of being first (in rankings, in someone’s inbox, and as the first person people recommend for service X or product Y), you’re missing a great opportunity to increase your sales.

*note: being first is mandatory for selling commodities, but it’s also important when it comes to more premier items because exposure to your name, brand, and ideas matter (see: the exposure effect for reasons why).

2. Get in Front of the Customer

These girls didn’t wait for me to come to them.

They ran to me.

If they had waited, I would have walked right by – but because they got in my face (in a polite but demanding way), I felt compelled to stick around and see what they had to offer.

They closed the sale precisely because they instigated the conversation.

But more important than this simple action (getting in front of the customer) is actually understanding WHY and HOW it works.

It works because these girls KNEW their target demographic (white adult males – we’re suckers).  At a young (but wise) age, they knew who they should approach, who they should spend their time ‘selling’, and who they should avoid (time wasters – people not in their target demographic).

These little girls understood the 80 / 20 principle of selling to a T: the top 5% of your customers will bring in the most cash.  Focus on them.  Ignore the rest.

How to Apply This Online

Simple: you need to get in front of your customers.

As in ACTIVELY get in front of them.

A newsletter (like The Resistance Broadcast) is a great place to start - it allows you to get an 'okay' from your reader / customer / client to start a conversation in their email inbox.  If they're on your list, they want to hear from you (or they can unsubscribe).

This is Permission Marketing 101.

Taking this a step further: sending direct messages / emails / video messages makes things even more personal (and therefore even more powerful as a sales tool).

I can’t tell you how many ebooks, programs, and other digital media I’ve bought because someone approached me and asked me to buy.

And honestly, the reason they asked wasn’t as important as the fact that they asked me - directly.  Not a mass email – a personal email, or a personal message.  That closes a sale better than being passively on top of a search engine.

*note: I’m using this technique right now when I promote this blog post to The Resistance and to my social networks – I’m actively getting in front of my target audience – something anyone trying to sell anything (from art, to widgets, to ideas) ought to do.

3. Be Attractive

Looks matter.

They do.

If you like your facts backed up with scientific studies, here you go.

While some might be discouraged by this, it really should be seen as a positive because ‘looks’ are highly controllable (whether we’re talking about how you dress, to your webdesign).

These little girls obviously didn’t deliberately plan this, but because they were so cute (even the one in the hijab – I mean, come on!), I couldn’t help but pay attention.

How to Apply This Online

Make sure your website looks good (enough).

Make sure your sales page is easy to read, your products look sexy, and spend more time than you think you should on the visual aesthetics of whatever you’re working on.

This isn’t just important for closing a sale, but for charging a premium.

The same beer in a high-end hotel sells for double (or more) what it sells for at a gas station (this is true even if you’re not in the hotel, but simply told the beer CAME FROM the hotel).

Is your website (product, or service) a high-end hotel or a gas station?

4. Get the Product in Your Customer’s Hand

The first thing these girls did, once they stopped me in my tracks, was get the bracelet they wanted to sell me on my wrist.

It’s still on there months later.

IMG 1040 - The 5 Most Effective Online Sales Techniques I Learned from Two Girls in Indonesia

Me forking over cash...notice the bracelet already on my arm.

Getting the product on the customer’s hand (or back, head…whatever) matters because it increases our perceived ownership of the product.

Once those girls got their bracelets on my wrist, it wasn’t a matter of ‘do I want to buy this?’ but ‘do I like wearing with / could I see myself wearing this?’

And yes, that question changes everything.

How to Apply This Online

Give a piece of whatever you’re creating away for free.

It doesn’t have to be the whole eBook, or the whole collection of digital comics, or the whole program / manual / guide / whatever.

Just a piece of it gives me ownership over the product.

Software companies do this with free trial periods and the ‘freemium’ business model (basic use is free – if you want the good stuff though, it’ll cost you).

Point is, I’m (and human beings in general) more likely to buy when I get to hold the physical product in my hand (and whatever equivalent that looks like in the digital space).

5. As a Last Resort: Use Sympathy (warning: use with caution)

I only agreed to buy one bracelet - from the girl on the right.

She got her money and was very happy.

Then the girl on the left said: “What about my bracelet?”

Me: “I just bought one and it’s great but it’s all I need.”

Girl: “but you bought from her, not from me.  Be fair.”

She got me.

I had to be fair.

How to Apply This Online

I wouldn’t recommend this except as a last resort.

If you’re product isn’t selling, it could be because it’s boring, bad, unnecessary, lame, or something else people don’t want to buy.

In this case, you can use sympathy.

The only problem is sympathy-purchases canabalize sales (and customers), which is to say: once you made a sympathy sale (someone bought because they feel bad for you), you’re not making another sale from that person.

Sympathy sales only work once.

Once your Kickstarter campaign is over, don’t try going back to the same customers to back another product launch.  I’ve seen this done many times before, and every time the second launch is weaker (or fails).

Again, use just for last ditch attempts and realize you’ll be ignored afterward…so count the cost before you decide.

Summary

These are, hands down, the 5 most effective sales techniques for anyone trying to sell anything online (or off).

Nothing beats the hard work and hustle of someone interacting DIRECTLY with her customer.

Is it easy?

No.

Are there other techniques that automate the sales funnel, transactions, etc.?

Yes.

But realize this: none of the big players you see got to where they are by starting with automization.  Even Bezos started in his garage, making calls and closing sales – one at a time.

So if these techniques seem old-school, it’s because they are.

And they work.

* * *

From New Zealand, to Indonesia, to Australia, to South Africa...

So I’ve been on the road for a while now – for the past 6 months, actually.

The Resistance Headquarters is now in South Africa, based in Cape Town for the next month.

If you’re in South Africa, reach out and let’s connect!

If you’re not, stay tuned for more lessons on selling, marketing, artisanship, and entrepreneurship from the road.

Started, finished, and shipped in Cape Town, South Africa.

Writing time: 1 hour 56 minutes

Formatting time: 55 minutes

In this report, I share a behind-the-scenes look at how I launched The Complete Guide to Pay What You Want Pricing, which resulted in over $1,000 in "Pay What You Want" sales in the first two weeks of release.

The purpose of this article is to give you a look "behind-the-scenes" of a book launch that used an uncommon pricing strategy (Pay What You Want Pricing).

My hope is that if you’re getting ready for your own launch – whether you're using Pay What You Want or fixed pricing – this report will show you what to do (and exactly what NOT to do) so your launch is a success.

What You Will Learn in This Report

  1. My launch strategy (a detailed look at my plans for pre-launch to post-launch and how they panned out)
  2. Why product positioning is everything (and how I learned this the hard way)
  3. How I used pre-orders to validate my product before going into full production
  4. What I did to build awareness and excitement for the product before, during and after the launch
  5. How to leverage friends and acquaintances with large audiences to spread your work
  6. Where you need to focus 90% of your effort (if you care about making money from your work)
  7. How to use the right incentives to get people to pre-order at a premium (and what I did horribly wrong that cost me thousands)
  8. What I’m doing now and in the future to create more sales from my guide (the launch is just the beginning)

If you have any questions or would like me to clarify any part of this, don’t hesitate to email me: tom at tommorkes.com.  I always try to respond as fast (and in as much detail) as possible.

This is Tom Morkes,

If you’re reading this, you ARE The Resistance. 

*   *   *

Experimenting With Pay What You Want Pricing

I started using Pay What You Want pricing (PWYW for short) back in March of 2013 as an experiment with the release of Notes From Seth Godin's Revolution Conference.

The book itself was a compilation of notes (over 60 pages worth) I took while at a 2 day Seth Godin seminar/meetup. 

The reason for PWYW pricing was twofold:

First, I didn’t want to restrict access to the notes/book – I wanted it to be freely available to anyone, no matter their financial situation.

Second, it wasn’t really a book – not in the conventional sense. Just compiled notes from a conference, carefully curated and edited. And while I added my insights and ideas to supplement the notes, it wasn't original source material. I received permission from Seth Godin to share the book, but I still didn't know how to make it available (and Kindle forces a minimum $.99 price point on its platform).

From that perspective, it was a difficult book to price. 

One thing I did know I wanted, though, was validation – both for the book and all the other work I had done up until this point (100+ blog posts, several guides and ebooks, a podcast, etc – all of which I gave away freely).

The only way to truly "validate" anything, though, is by means of an exchange of money…but how could I do that without creating a barrier to entry for some people who didn’t have the funds to pay for the book?

That’s when I discovered Pay What You Want pricing.

Pay What You Want is a pricing technique that gives the customer the power to set his or her price (rather than the price being set by the seller/producer).  A completely unorthodox pricing technique to be sure, but I had nothing to lose.

To be honest, I didn’t think I’d make a dime.

I released the book and let my readers know they could take it for free…but, if they liked the work I had done up to that point, they could contribute a few dollars to support my creative work.

Instead of a bunch of people grabbing my book for free, I made close to $500 in the first month.  I was completely shocked – I never expected people to pay money for something they could get for free…but here they were, not only giving money but giving generously (sometimes as much as $50 - $100).

Research and Development Phase

The surprise success of 2 Days led me to test out Pay What You Want with a bunch of other stuff.

Since then, I’ve released several products as PWYW – from guides to workbooks to CDs.

I’ve had a lot of success (and some failures).

Each project has helped me to understand not only my own audience better, but how PWYW actually works.

In August of 2013, I documented the results of my PWYW book Notes From Seth Godin's Revolution Conference on ThinkTraffic.net (now Fizzle.co) and later my blog.

After my guest article on Think Traffic, I received dozens of questions about Pay What You Want:

  1. Does it work for services?
  2. Does it work for brick-and-mortar businesses?
  3. Is this a sustainable way to make a living?

I was blown away by the incredible amount of interest in the subject.  What I had done as a small (but happily successful) experiment was something people wanted to know more about – a LOT more about.

So I got to work.

Questions About Pay What You Want Pricing That Had to Be Answered

  1. What makes Pay What You Want work?  (and, more importantly: what makes it fail?)
  2. How can others use this information in an easy and intuitive way that creates results (ideally in a way that makes them more money than fixed pricing)?

To answer these questions, I started connecting with entrepreneurs and artists from all around the world who were using PWYW successfully.  People like:

+ Anthony Vennare of The Hybrid Athlete (a fitness website that sells PWYW products)

+ Tara Joyce (who’s been using PWYW for 5 years for her consulting business)

+ Joost Van Dongen (who created the PWYW video game PROUN and made $20k on launch)

After I’d collected hundreds of examples of PWYW being used successfully (and, in some cases, unsuccessfully), I began synthesizing this data into a useable framework.

I continued to collect, analyze and synthesize data over the course of 3 months (over 6 if you include my personal tests and tracking I did with Pay What You Want prior to creating the guide). 

Figuring out the ins and outs of such a unique pricing model was time-intensive but extremely rewarding work (especially knowing I was answering a question that many people wanted to know the answer to).

When I finally launched, I made over $1,000 in less than two weeks.

In the following pages, I’ll show you exactly how I did it (and how you can apply it to your own product launch). 

*   *   *

Pre-Launch Strategy and Actions

Here's how I organized my launch:

Product Positioning

When I first came up with the idea to teach Pay What You Want pricing, the first question I needed to answer was:

How do I deliver this content?

There are lots of ways to deliver content online, including: eBooks, eGuides, eCourses, and Membership websites (among others).

From a purely ‘value’ based standpoint, eCourses and membership sites can sell for the greatest amount.  But membership sites require a serious commitment to updating content every month, which means income from new members would be much less passive than an eCourse.

With that in mind, I decided to create an eCourse.  Out of the various options that were available, I thought an eCourse would be considered the highest value and still deliver the content in the best way possible.

I created 6 modules, scripted out over a dozen videos and started recording the screen captures using a PowerPoint template to highlight specific content as I taught.

While it was looking great, midway through developing the course I decided that this information would be better digested as an in-depth PDF (plus additional bonus materials for those who really want to master Pay What You Want pricing).

Why the change of heart?

Not sure – it just felt right.  I figured the product would be better this way, and I believe it is as a result.

But what I failed to consider was the impact that changing the medium in which the information was delivered (eGuide vs. eCourse) would so dramatically impact its perceived value (more on this later on in this report). 

Prepping the Launch

I officially announced the guide to my newsletter readers at the beginning of November, 2013.

I figured I was close enough to finishing the project that I wanted to set a hard and fast deadline to ship, otherwise, I’d let it trail into December (or possibly into the new year -- and that was the last thing I wanted to happen).

#ResistanceProTip: Set your ship date EARLY in the product creation lifecycle [click to tweet]

I chose 25 November arbitrarily – I simply wanted to have something ready to go before December.  I also figured tying it in with Thanksgiving might encourage people to be more generous, (although I can’t confirm or deny this actually worked).

Prior to the launch, I wrote about 3 in-depth articles on the concept of Pay What You Want – what it is, how it works, and how it can help make you more money than fixed pricing.

Something interesting I noticed was that as I started to write on this topic, I got more subscribers than usual to my newsletter.

#ResistanceProTip: Teaching the material from your product will increase subscribers and sales [click to tweet]

Building Awareness and Excitement for the Launch

Besides writing for my own blog (where I spend the majority of my time and effort crafting and creating content for my readers), I linked up with a couple podcasters to do interviews.  One I reached out to, the other found me through a mutual friend.

Both podcasts aired their episodes on the week of release (coincidence), which let me share the content with my readers at the perfect time.

I also wrote up an article for Medium.com (a publishing platform that lets just about anyone write for it).

To be honest, I didn’t think this would have much effect, but I figured for the couple hours of time I spent on it, it wouldn’t hurt to spread the message further (as you can tell from above, I didn’t do much guest posting or a very good job of spreading the world about my new product beside writing to my own audience.)

#ResistanceProTip: Getting in front of other people’s audiences should be priority #1 for your product launch [click to tweet]

The Medium.com article ended up doing way better than expected.  In the first day, the article caught the attention of Medium curators and they tweeted it out to their twitter list.

This brought in thousands of readers to my article in just a few days.  I was getting ready to launch the guide the next day, so I immediately released the book and linked to it from the article, to hopefully capitalize on the attention.

resistance pro tip - other peoples audiences

I netted 20 sales worth $80 from this.  Not a huge amount, but not bad for one article.

*note: the article also helped me get dozens of new twitter followers and subscribers to my list.  So while it didn’t have the impact of guest posting on a website with a particular target audience (like my Think Traffic post), I was pretty happy with the results.

Asking for Social Media Shares

When the guide + bonuses were finally ready to ship (literally the day before launch…I didn’t give myself anywhere near enough time to properly prep this launch, if you haven’t noticed), I sent them to a couple dozen friends of mine with audiences online, and I asked them to share it with their audiences if they found the book and content at all helpful.

Some of the people I reached out to included:

They all ended up sharing it on Twitter at least once (and on a couple occasions, multiple times or on Facebook).

The result?  2 sales from Twitter for a total of $39 and 5 sales from Facebook for a total of $85.

pay what you want sales by referrer

*note: this may also have included my OWN shares on both channels, as I didn’t track which shares resulted in the sales (mine or someone else’s)

#ResistanceProTip: Social media is overrated (especially for launching a product) [click to tweet]

That said, it definitely didn’t hurt.

Lessons Learned From Marketing My Book On Social Media:

At the end of the day, if you can get tweeted / shared by the same person to the same audience several times – that definitely improves conversion and sales (but it’s also something you can’t demand nor count on unless you’ve made a prior arrangement).  But even that isn’t nearly as effective as getting mentioned in someone else’s newsletter.

#ResistanceProTip: The highest ROI marketing tactic you can use for your product launch is leveraging other people’s newsletters [click to tweet]

I didn’t have enough time to properly coordinate this for my product launch, which means I lost out on potentially dozens (or hundreds) of sales.  However, I’ve seen the tactic used to great effect for others who released similar style information products.  The key is to target audiences that are similar to yours and could benefit from what you’re offering.

*note: you will see this tactic used all the time if you subscribe to any newsletter for a period of time, so subscribe to a few and study them if you’re interested in exactly how to do this.  

My Big Pre-Launch Failure #1: Not Differentiating My Guide from Other eBooks

I mentioned earlier I originally started creating an eCourse around Pay What You Want, but switched it to an eGuide midway through the product’s development.

This shouldn’t have been a big deal, but I made a couple mistakes that cost me a lot of potential revenue.

*for those looking to launch their own PWYW product or service, take notes on this section – it will seriously save you from losing out on hundreds if not thousands of dollars in contributions*

When it comes to selling content online, readers are generally aware of price ranges for certain types of products, and they’re usually savvy to the pricing of comparative, competing products.  When you think ‘eBook’, you probably picture an Amazon Kindle book priced from $2.99 to $9.99.

For many of us, this price is anchored in our mind.

Therefore, if I’m writing an eBook, I’m forced to contend with this price anchor.  Which means writing an eBook is not a great idea if you want to make decent money from your writing.

Guides and Reports aren’t anchored the same way as eBooks.  Guides and Reports can sell from anywhere from $19 - $199+ depending on the material, the industry, etc.  I’ve seen (and purchased) such guides and reports for over $200, so I know what is required to price a product at a premium like that.  That’s why I put so many bonuses into ‘The Complete Package’ of my product – I wanted something that was easily worth $249.

But…

I failed to convey this value to my readers and customers.

Instead of clearly defining the benefits of what ‘The Complete Package’ will do for the user, I only explained the features (if people contributed over a minimum amount they get 12 bonuses, from cheat sheets, to video tutorials to expert interviews to a half dozen case studies, etc).

#ResistanceProTip: Benefits (not features) give a product value [tweet]

Had I continued with the eCourse version of this product, I have no doubt readers would have valued the product much higher by default.  A guide or report could similarly sell for quite a bit, but there’s more work involved in explaining what differentiates a guide or report from an eBook (whereas an eCourse is already price-anchored in many readers minds in the several hundred dollar category). 

My Big Pre-Launch Fail #2: Creating Incentives That Devalue What I’m Selling

The day I announced the guide (to a subscriber list of 444 people), I received about 30 preorders worth over $200.  Not bad, certainly…but way below what I expected (I’ll explain below).

When it came to perceived value, I made things worse by ‘discounting’ the minimum contribution to receive bonuses for subscribers who preordered the product before it launched on 25 November.

In hindsight, this doesn’t make sense.

Think about it – the product is Pay What You Wantwhy would I discount it?  What effect does that have on the reader or customer?  And why would any reader contribute more than that discounted minimum (if the incentive is a lower price, then I’m basically telling them they ought to contribute less)?

I didn’t realize this until after the fact, but by giving a discounted price for early subscribers I was actually DEVALUING what I had spent months creating. 

Instead of dealing with the standard eBook price anchor, I made things worse by lowering the minimum contribution to $4+ for all the bonuses.

The biggest problem with this is that it completely defeats the purpose of generosity.

The whole point behind why I use PWYW is to run a generosity-based business (for my writing and content on Tommorkes.com).

By lowering the minimum to get the bonuses, I effectively said to my audience: don’t be generous - contribute less.

Fail.

#ResistanceProTip: To increase pre-orders and sales revenue for a PWYW product launch, include exclusive bonuses for early adopters

Lucky for me, while I botched my PWYW pre-launch with a well-intentioned but misdirected incentive for my readers, many of them were still generous, contributing $20 or more in some cases. 

Pre-Launch PWYW Sales Results

Even after all the mistakes I made, I still consider my launch a success.

pay what you want product launch gumroad results

The day I announced the guide (to a subscriber list of 444 people), I received about 30 preorders worth over $200.  Over the next couple of days, I received about 20 more preorders, worth over $350 cumulatively.

Not bad, but also way below what I could have made if I had (1) demonstrated the value of my product better to the reader, and (2) created a better incentive for contributing early (and generously).

Had I made those corrections I pointed out above, I have no doubts in my mind I would have made over $800 in pre-orders the first day (assuming the same number of readers would still preorder the product at an average contribution of $20). 

Launch Day

The Complete Guide to Pay What You Want Pricing (Just the Book and The Complete Package) actually shipped the evening before launch day (25 November).

This meant people who preordered should have gotten their products earlier than the ship date (a good thing if you can swing it).

On the day of the launch, I sent out one email to my newsletter.

The newsletter headline: ‘Share Your Work – Make a Profit (new guide releases today!)

Subscribers: 467

Open Rate: 38.4% (179)

*average for my newsletter: 39%

Click rate: 12% (56)

*average for my newsletter: 9%

Unsubscribes: 2

This brought in about $150 in sales.

Many marketers will tell you to email-blast your newsletter 3 times in the days leading up to launch, and then another couple emails the day of and the day after launch.  They also suggest pressuring your audience to buy by setting time limits on discounts, spaces available (if it’s a membership site), etc.

I didn’t do any of this because I don’t like that style.  That said, I’m also aware that when it comes to results, the numbers don’t lie: the more you market (emails through your newsletter, shares on social media, or talking directly to people in person), the more you’ll sell.

#ResistanceProTip: The more you market, the more you sell [tweet]

I may have missed out on sales by not sending out several emails on launch day, but my hope was that readers would notice that they weren’t being bombarded and appreciate being on my list even more (there is no way to track this, of course, so it’s all blind faith).  

First Week Launch Sales Figures

Prior to launch day (25 November), I had accumulated over $500 in pre-orders of my guide.

pay what you want product launch first week sales

For reference: it took me over a month to do that with 2 Days With Seth Godin.  By that standard, I had far and away exceeded my prior benchmark in much less time.

The week that followed brought in even more contributors, this time with many more contributing at or above $19 (the minimum amount for all the bonuses).  Within the first week of launch, I was closing in on $1000.

pay what you want product launch purchases over time

Here’s a breakdown of the purchases by price over time (*note: all the preorder receipts came due on 25 November, thus the large amount of sales volume on that singular day):

Revenue, Expenses and Take Home Profit -  An Analysis by the Numbers:

Here’s the results at a glance:

 First Week SalesRevenue
The Book31$118
The Complete Package61$836
Total92$954

I made $954 in sales from The Complete Guide to Pay What You Want Pricing (including both tiers: Just the Book and The Complete Package).

But $954 is not what went into my pocket.

Gumroad.com, the sales platform I used to sell my products, charges 5% + $.25 per download.

Since I sold 92 products, that’s -$23, and 5% of $954 is -$47.70, for a total of $70.70 out of my pocket and into Gumroad’s (of which I’m happy to pay, for the record).

So now I’m down to $883.30.

Because I’m a jack of all trades (I’m not really – mostly just stubborn), I did the cover design, interior design, and just about everything by myself (although I did pay $5 on Fiver.com to turn my 2d book cover into a 3d image), which helped me minimize expenses.  I also had some incredible volunteers help me edit the finished product (thanks Tom and Diana Owens!), which gave it a professional spit shine without the steep cost.

So that means $883.30 is all mine, right?

While this would normally all be the case, I decided to enlist the help of my brother, Seph, to help me finish the product and ship on time.  Having someone give feedback as I created the material helped me to finish and polish the book and bonus materials to a very high standard (from video tutorials to interviews to cheat sheets to the workbook etc.).

I told Seph that if he can help me create a quality product and ship on time, I’d split launch profit with him 50 / 50.

That’s a pretty big split, but there are two reasons for this:

1. Launching on time with a great product and splitting profit is better than launching late and keeping all the profit to myself.

2. Seph is a college student getting ready to graduate.  I figured the best thing he (or anyone else in his shoes) can do is learn to run an online business, not only in the short term to pay down student loan debts, but because commerce is continuing to move online, and if you don’t know how it works, you’re at an incredible disadvantage (no matter what job or business enterprise you’d like to pursue).

I feel the best thing I can do is not only teach this stuff to as many people as possible, but when the time and money allows, help others learn by working directly with me.

So, after paying Seph half of $883.30, I’m down to $441.15 takeaway profit.

My Per Hour Salary from Selling a Digital Product

I’ve mentioned before in The Art of Instigating that many entrepreneurs, because of the hours they commit to creating something, work for sweat-shop wages.

My case is no different.

I worked on this project for about 1 hour a day in September, for a total of 30 hours that month (this is a conservative estimate).

In October, I spent about 3 hours a day on the project, coming out to about 93 hours that month.

In November, I worked on the project for about 6 hours per day for the first two weeks (84 total hours) and about 10 hours per day for the remaining 10 days (for a total of 100 hours).

All in all, I put about 307 hours into this product (conservatively)

$441.15 from 307 hrs of work = $1.43 / hour

So after at the end of the day, my time was worth about $1.43 (ouch).

Maybe I should have stuck to my day job…

The Power of Digital

Or maybe not.

I mentioned I made about$1.43 per hour from this product, but that ignores one important aspect of selling digital goods – this product is a new income stream, no matter how small, that supplements my other income.

Here are the results of the first three weeks after launch:

pay what you want launch results first 3 weeks

As you can see, after launch week, I’ve made another $100+ from the guide.

$100 a week isn’t enough to live off of in the States in most cases, but in Bali (where I’m currently writing this from) it goes a pretty far way.

What you’ll notice is that while the majority of sales came during the major announcements and hard sells of the product (5 November and 25 November), I’ve managed to maintain decent sales going forward.  This is in part due to new people finding me from recent podcasts I’ve been on explaining Pay What You Want and how it works.

#ResistanceProTip: Once you’ve shipped a product, the real work starts – continue teaching, marketing and selling

Wrap-Up

So was it a success or failure?

In the end (after reflecting on this months later and doing an update to this post), I'd call it a draw.

You’ll see a lot more from me in the coming months as I teach and spread the word of Pay What You Want.  Already, readers who bought the guide have told me they’ve seen an increase in sales and revenue.

Think about that for a second...pretty powerful stuff, right?

These are just two small examples, but they show the power of Pay What You Want (and the value of the book by extension). 

It also tells me this message is important and more people should hear it (and use it).

With that said, financials aside – it was a success.  And I’m looking forward to my next product launch…although this time I’m giving myself a bit more time to complete and ship it.

Want More Help?

Interested in Pay What You Want pricing and want to learn more about how to use it?

Go here to pick up your copy of The Complete Guide to Pay What You Want Pricing.

If this article was informative, share it with someone you know.

Every single share allows me to continue producing content for you.

Thank you in advance for your support.

p.s. if you liked this report, subscribe to my newsletter (The Resistance Broadcast) to get stuff like this sent directly to your inbox about once a week.

---

Started in Brisbane on the way to Cairns Australia (in a Juicy relocation 'Campa' van).  Graphics were created on a terrace off the rainy streets of Ubud, Bali.  Finished the article and finalized the PDF in Jakarta, Indonesia (with the help of a quadruple shot Americano).

Current beard length: 3 inches

Total writing time: 20 hrs

cross