profitable. It is the fastest to set up but the fastest to die off due to price competition with other resellers. The profitable life span of each product is short unless an exclusivity agreement prevents others from selling it. Reselling is, however, an excellent option for secondary back-end2® products that can be sold to existing customers or cross-sold22 to new customers online or on the phone. To purchase at wholesale, use these steps. 1. Contact the manufacturer and request a “wholesale pricelist” (generally 40% off retail) and terms. 2. If a business tax ID number is needed, print out the proper forms from your state’s Secretary of State website and file for an LLC (which I prefer) or similar protective business structure for $100-200. Do NOT purchase product until you have completed Step 3 in the next chapter. It is enough at this point to confirm the profit margin and have product photos and sales literature. That’s reselling. Not much more to it. Option Two: License a Product I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. — WOODROW WILSON S ome of the world’s best-known brands and products have been borrowed from someone or somewhere else. The basis for the energy drink Red Bull came from a tonic in Thailand, and the Smurfs were brought from Belgium. Pokémon came from the land of Honda. The band KISS made millions in record and concert sales, but the real profit has been in licensing— granting others the right to produce hundreds of products with their name and image in exchange for a percentage of sales. There are two parties involved in a licensing deal, and a member of the New Rich could be either. First, there is the inventor of the product 22 called the “licensor,” who can sell others the right to manufacture, use, or sell his or her product, usually for 3-10% of the wholesale price (usually around 40% off retail) for each unit sold. Invent, let someone else do the rest, and cash checks. Not a bad model. The other side