What to put on a website: Online business basics

(This is the sixth article in my Online business basics series. You can find links to the other posts in the series on this page: Online business basics)

Your mind is buzzing with great ideas for your business. You’re ready to create a fabulous website to showcase the exciting things you do.

But where on earth do you start?

This post is going to look at the structure, layout and graphic design of your new website. To find out about where and how to get yourself a website, see my post: Setting up an online shop: Pros and cons of each type

Pages/features your website needs

First of all, there are a few basic features that pretty much every website should have: Continue reading “What to put on a website: Online business basics”

Business Mums Blog Carnival for August

Are you a mum with a business and a blog? Join in the August Business Mums  Blog Carnival and get yourself more readers and comments!

You don’t even need to write a post for the carnival, just pick your favourite from the posts already up on your blog and send the link to the carnival host. This month your host is  Becky from www.babybudgeting.co.uk

To enter, email the link to your post to Becky (at) babybudgeting.co.uk  by 6pm on 22th August

The carnival will be posted on www.babybudgeting.co.uk on 25th August.

If you’re not sure how it all works or what kind of post to enter, you’ll find everything you need to know on the Business Mum’s Blog Carnival page. And you can get your own blog carnival badge there too!

Earning passive income: Online Business Basics

(This is the 6th article in my Online business basics series. You can find links to the other posts in the series on this page: Online business basics)

I’ll let you into a secret…

It’s only recently that I really understood that passive income was actually possible. Up until then, a part of me still thought it was the kind ‘business opportunity’ being sold by dodgy get-quick-rich scheme promoters. While there are many people out there happy to sell you misleading courses – and of course we all have to be careful to avoid them – passive income is really possible.

I know that  because I’m now making some myself.

For many people, passive income is the holy grail of internet marketing. After all, what could be more appealing than money coming in day in and day out with no work? Unfortunately, there are so many misconceptions around passive income that people often have unrealistic expectations that keep them from creating it.

So how does passive income work, really? What can you really expect if you want to start creating streams of passive income?

It takes upfront effort to make passive income

We’re so used to exchanging an hour of effort for a sum of money that it can take a while to really ‘get’ how passive income works. Passive income is a bit like a rocket. It takes a lot of energy to get it off the ground. Once it’s off the ground however, it requires far less energy. The effort is no longer on getting the rocket moving, but on steering it.

(The way we’re used to working is more like a steam train – each shovel of coal you put in takes you a a little way down the track.)

So to earn passively, you must be willing to put in the upfront work.

Ways to earn passive income online

There are many ways to make passive income online –  think in terms of getting people to a website and getting them to buy or view something, but without you needing to be there.

So for example, if you brought people to your website and sold them an e-book, that would be passive income. If you recommended them a product as an affiliate, that would also be passive because someone else would be dispatching the product and paying you commission. There will be work involved, because you’d need to set up the website and get traffic to it (e.g.  by getting it to rank highly in search engines) and maybe provide some customer service, but once you’d set it up right you wouldn’t need to be there to print, pack and post your orders.

Ways of earning online that aren’t passive would be using a blog to sell your freelance services or running an online shop. Although if you paid someone else to do your customer service and dispatch, then the online shop could be passive income too.

You can combine passive income with other ways of earning. In fact it’s a good idea to do this because passive income strategies can take a long time to learn and get right. Do you use any products in your business that you could recommend as an affiliate, for example? Could you put some of your knowledge into an e-book and sell it from your website using EJunkie?

However, it’s important to remember that nothing is 100% passive. Even if you have an e-book that can be bought and downloaded automatically, you still need to make sure your website stays high up in Google, for example. You can’t just ‘set it and forget it’.  You’ll always have to do some degree of monitoring and maintaining.

Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, once said: “Never get involved with a passive income vehicle you don’t love. If you do, you won’t maintain it.” That’s more true than ever online.

If you enjoyed this post, why not join my mailing list?  Sign up and I’ll send you copy of  my e-book Running a business around a family: 9 steps to success

Contains affiliate links

Conferences for Business Mums

Ready to get our of the house and meet some business mums face-to-face?

It’s hard to believe sitting here at the beginning of August, but it won’t be long until Autumn. And that means it’s conference season!

(Well, if you’re a mum in business, anyway!)

So here’s my list of the conferences coming up in 2011/12. If I’ve missed any, please drop me a comment and I’ll add them to the list. I’ll also post more details about each when they are closer.

Mumpreneur Conference – Sunday 25th September 2011, Heart of England Conference Centre, Meriden Road, Fillongley, CV7 8DX (near Coventry)

BusinessMums Summit – Monday October 10th 2011, Thistle Hotel, Brighton, East Sussex

Business Mums Unite Conference and Exhibition – Wednesday 19th October 2011,  Albert Hall Conference Centre, Nottingham

Cambridge Business Mums Conference – Saturday 11th February 2012, Meadows Community Centre, Cambridge

In the last year I’ve been to the Mumpreneur Conference, the Cambridge Business Mums Conference and of course Cybermummy. It makes such a difference to get out and talk to like-minded mums and to put faces to the names you meet on Twitter and Facebook. So if you’re wondering whether to go, definitely give one (or more!) a try.

I started a business with a baby: Jill Taylor Ali of Tulahberry Mother & Baby

  • Tell us a little about your business

We started Tulahberry Mother & Baby when our daughter was 1yr old.  Tulahberry is a natural, organic, skin kind mother & baby e-commerce website; we sell babywear and toddler clothing, shoes, accessories, skin creams and lotion all suitable for mums and babies – we use organic cotton and bamboo and as much as possible organic and fairtrade ingredients.

  • What was your job before starting your business?

My previous job was in a Complementary Therapy Clinic as an admin assistant.  I have also been a Complementary Therapist for many years but took ‘time out’ for another baby.

  • How did you go from your old career to your new business?

The decision came about when I was forced out of my job after requesting more flexible working hours and my boss was unable to offer me anything other than my traditional working hours.  (I worked part time hours in the middle of the day and child care costs became more than my earning potential) My job then duly ‘disappeared’ and I was offered a shift pattern that was totally unsuitable. Continue reading “I started a business with a baby: Jill Taylor Ali of Tulahberry Mother & Baby”

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