How a 34-year-old turned $200 into a company he sold for over $10 million in a matter of months

  • 📰 CNBC
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 97 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 42%
  • Publisher: 72%

ประเทศไทย ข่าว ข่าว

ประเทศไทย ข่าวล่าสุด,ประเทศไทย หัวข้อข่าว

How a 34-year-old turned $200 into a company he sold for over $10 million in a matter of months. via CNBCMakeIt

Thirteen years ago as a broke college student, Trevor Chapman took a job selling pest control door-to-door to make extra money. Eventually, he launched his own sales operation — a solar panel installation company that quickly expanded across three states. But two years in, something was missing — and it wasn't a shortage of time spent in the office.

Within three months, Chapman went from putting in 12-hour days at his solar company to spending just an hour and a half each week on his site by the time he hit his first $1 million in sales. Then, in 2018, he sold LDSman, along with his corresponding e-commerce logistics companies, to a holding company in a deal worth over $10 million.

But before he gave any real thought to leaving his day job, he wanted to see for himself if it was possible to make a living selling things online."It requires work like everything else, but you don't have to risk your full-time job to do this," the 34-year-old says. Out went Mormon art and in came inflatable lounge chairs, a popular staple among online stores selling viral products. Sourcing from Chinese manufacturers on Alibaba and Aliexpress, Chapman found other products for $4.99 that he could resell for $59.99. To avoid the cost and risk of taking on inventory, he would set up arrangements with suppliers to have his orders shipped directly from their warehouses in China to the customer in the U.S. — a practice known as drop shipping.

Like any good businessperson, Chapman also turned the setback into an opportunity: He bought a 9,000-square-foot warehouse in Salt Lake City and hired a five-person fulfillment staff. It's a move that enabled LDSman to take the business to the next level but something Chapman concedes isn't for everyone, given the capital investment and commitment.

While a few of the people in his online courses have come close to replicating his initial success, the most common sales total at the one-month mark in one of his early classes was under $12,000."As with anything," Chapman says,"you get out of it what you put in." His own mother, Chapman notes, was able to build up a site of her own after she followed his lessons despite not knowing anything about e-commerce.

 

ขอบคุณสำหรับความคิดเห็นของคุณ ความคิดเห็นของคุณจะถูกเผยแพร่หลังจากได้รับการตรวจสอบแล้ว

MakeIt sure I'll turn $200 into $10 million. $200 is the max withdraw limit on ATM machines.

MakeIt Capitalized on capitalism. Bernie/Warren want to take this op from you.

MakeIt

MakeIt Coolness godbless from Oahu Hawaii!

MakeIt Inspirational story. But with TradeWars in place, it is no longer portfitable for small companies to survive from importing goods from China and resell.

MakeIt Click bait bullshit story...not even close to true

MakeIt It’s a new way to make money and make businesses. I hope my students realize that IOT, AI and the use of technologies will boost the economics and we should think in a different way. USCOoficial

MakeIt By scamming people with $5 dollar goods selling for $60 bucks? So inspiring.

MakeIt That’s nothing. I heard a 42-year-old SV Svengali and hedge fund manager recently turned much more than $10 million into not much more than $200 in a matter of months! ☺️ TeslaCharts

MakeIt Is it profitable?

MakeIt

MakeIt

MakeIt It's truly shocking how our current socio-economic system favors opportunism over innovation. The drive of an entrepreneur should come from a deep purpose to add value back to the world, not prey on and maintain our disgusting materialism for financial gain.

เราได้สรุปข่าวนี้มาให้อ่านอย่างรวดเร็ว หากสนใจข่าว สามารถอ่านฉบับเต็มได้ที่นี่ อ่านเพิ่มเติม:

 /  🏆 12. in TH

ประเทศไทย ข่าวล่าสุด, ประเทศไทย หัวข้อข่าว