One day this past summer, while vacationing
at a cottage in the Okanagan Valley, my
favorite watch went missing. By the time I
remembered that I'd left it by the swimming pool, it was gone.
This wasn't just any watch. It was the
first watch in years that caught my eye and
kept it. Moreover, it also kept time! Most
of you probably don't consider 'keeping time' a
special feature, but I have a box full of
watches that stopped working almost
immediately after being put on my hyper-magnetic wrist.
This very special watch was a piece of
signed and numbered wearable art by Eduardo
Melies of Watchcraft® Inc. studio in New
York City.
As soon as I got home from my vacation, I
phoned Watchcraft® to have the watch
replaced. It was good to speak with people who
fully comprehended and sympathized with my
loss. Unfortunately, they couldn't do
anything about it. As the manufacturer, they
had to point me to their distributors, of which
there was only one in Canada.
I phoned the owner of the shop
recommended by Watchcraft. She told me that
although they carried the line, she didn't
have the specific piece I was looking for.
She estimated that shipping from New York to
Toronto and then out west would take between
a few weeks to a month. Although that was
disappointing news, hearing the high price
of Watchcraft in Canada was decidedly worse.
After speaking with her, I puzzled over
the issue, knowing there had to be a better
way to handle the problem. I then phoned
Watchcraft back to beg and plead. Strangely
enough, that worked, but not the way you
might be thinking.
Alex, the Watchcraft representative, and
I had traded pleasantries during our first
conversation. One fact I'd shared with him
was that I make my living marketing various
products on the 'Net. Knowing that, Alex
suggested that while he couldn't sell me the
product as a member of the public, he could
if I wanted to become a distributor.
I didn't have to think long about that
offer. High quality and demand are my first
two criteria when choosing products and
services to offer my online customers. I
personally loved the product. It was
attractive, unique and of ultra high quality.
Regarding demand, I knew that many of Melies
customers are repeat buyers. In a newspaper
article about Eduardo's work, I read about a
woman who owns six of them. I also knew that
an older Watchcraft timepiece had recently
traded for more than $1700 on eBay,
indicating high interest in the product.
The icing on the cake was being offered a
drop-ship arrangement. All I had to do was
forward the completed orders, and Watchcraft
would take care of shipping. This fit very
well with my 'Work Less - Automate More!'
motto.
The site was easy to set up, as
Watchcraft sent me a CD with all the watch
pictures on disc, and a list of their wholesale
prices. All I had to do was research the
retail price of Watchcraftonline, (and make
mine lower), advertise the site and start
selling watches.
The only hard part is trying not to buy
too many for myself! :-)
© Copyright Rosalind Gardner, All
Rights Reserved.
Article by Rosalind Gardner,
author of the best-selling "Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797 in One Year Selling Other People's Stuff Online". To learn how you too can suceed in Internet and affiliate marketing, go to:
http://OnlinePowerWomen.net