The narrator introduces 5 unsaturated digital product ideas that anyone can create and sell online to earn extra income. These include:
Digital baby announcements - Cute announcements to text or email the news of a pregnancy, baby shower, etc. This shop has earned $70,000 selling these.
Vision board kits - A compilation of inspirational images, quotes, templates, etc. that people can use to create vision/mood boards. Couple it with journals, planners, etc. to increase value. One shop is making tens of thousands selling this.
Printable party games - Downloaded PDFs with fun group games/activities for different social events. Focused on a specific niche like baby showers. Low competition with only 1,000 Etsy search results.
Personalized kids activity sheets - Fun educational activity sheets personalized with the child's name. Great for parents, teachers, homeschoolers. One shop makes thousands from a single listing.
Notion templates - Create templates for planning, goal-setting, project management etc. and sell access to them. The narrator uses Notion personally.
The narrator then demonstrates how to easily create these products using Creative Fabrica templates that can be customized and resold.
The narrator explains how he has made hundreds of thousands of dollars selling his own digital products as well as other people's products online. He shows proof of over $30,000 in sales from one of his products.
He then outlines a step-by-step process for creating, selling, and marketing your own digital product to make money online, including:
He emphasizes giving people real value, not just trying to make quick money. By helping people first, your business and income will grow in the long run.
Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the text:
Google Maps can be a money-making machine. The narrator shares three ways to make $10,000/month with Google Maps:
1. Contact local businesses without websites or reviews on Google Maps. Offer to help them get more customers by improving their Maps presence. Charge $1,000 to make them a website using Template Monster.
2. Add mini "money makers" to Maps for service businesses like electricians. Refer calls to real businesses and take a % cut. Each one averages $750/month profit. Adding just 1 per month hits $10k after a year.
3. Create virtual 360 tours for restaurants using smartphone apps. Upload tours to Maps listings. Charge businesses $600 per tour. Doing 2 tours per day could make $1,200 daily.
The narrator claims these methods enable making money passively and at high margins with Google Maps.
The narrator introduces their MCR SSR course creation model, which stands for Map, Create, Record, Set Up, Sell and Review. This framework breaks down the course creation process into manageable phases.
Before using ChatGPT, the narrator emphasizes knowing your target audience's struggles and desires. This ensures course topics solve real problems and have demand.
The narrator shares ChatGPT prompts for each phase:
The narrator notes to customize ChatGPT's output and not fully depend on its suggestions. Feedback is key to improving courses. Ethical AI use enables faster course creation without overwhelm.
The narrator discusses a new type of web page called a "hybrid landing page" that combines helpful content with sales content to increase traffic, generate leads, and make sales. This format helps overcome visitors not converting from "helpful content" to becoming a customer. An example company used this type of page as their top converting landing page.
The hybrid landing page looks like an article, starting with a compelling title and intro connecting with the reader's problem. The length depends on the traffic source - shorter for paid ads, longer and more thorough for organic search. It then transitions into a sales pitch, introducing the business, main benefits, customer testimonials, an explanation of the working process, and a call-to-action.
Key benefits are emphasized over features, focusing on the results for the customer. ChatGPT can help generate ideas. Testimonials should highlight results and address concerns, with bolding to emphasize key phrases. A simple 3-step process outlines what working with the company looks like.
While emotional reasons drive most purchase decisions, logical reasons help tip customers over into taking action. Therefore, the page lists out product/service features at the end before the final call-to-action.