You might have heard of him from @myfirstmilpod, and how he flipped a niche site for $10m.
Now he's fucking around and doing $35m+/yr in revenue with a dog ramp company.
@ramonvanmeer@thesamparr@rajaonskis@myfirstmilpod Ramon mentioned he's going to be doing a couple more threads about his website flips, give him a follow so it'll guilt-trip him into tweeting more.
The guy comes out with bangers like this once in a blue moon and then just disappears 😂:
I made over $2.2m dropshipping (75% profit) from 2017 to 2019. It's what helped me get started online. Here's what I learned (so you won't make the same mistakes), and why I wouldn't dropship in 2022. 👇
Background story first, my business partner Albert approached me with the idea of a home decor dropshipping store. We decided to pool together $5k as a "write-off" and give it a shot.
I remember clearly that we burned nearly $4k, and we were about to call it quits, but then something in our FB ads just clicked.
One of the latest products we added for testing was getting sales. Then more sales. Then a lot more sales.
I bought a towing lead generation business for about $10k 2 years ago.
It was the first time I worked with a business model like this, but I implemented tons of B2B best practices and took it from $450 to $2400/mo in just 3 months 🧵
We implemented cold email campaigns, a nice dashboard, worked with data scrapers, and on-boarded someone to take over sales. This took us from $2400 to $7400/mo in the following 9 months. If you want to see the tools I used, signup for my newsletter 👉 @indexsy.
The first year was intense and fun, but after that, well, I started getting bored, or burned out, or both. I let it go autopilot, and our clients started churning. We then went from $7400 to $5500/mo.
Pieter started @NomadList with a spreadsheet he shared on Twitter.
He wanted to crowdsource info about fun places to work remotely. The spreadsheet got thousands of people to add data about their favorite places to work/live in the world.
@levelsio@NomadList He didn’t need a fancy website or a single line of code to start, and he didn’t even have a large Twitter following to send his product to.
He took a simple concept he knew would work and sent it to people who wanted it, that’s it.
A bit early this month but I did a total of $298.5k USD in revenue in the month of July.
This is up $144k from June.
Here's my breakdown between 7 revenue sources...
PS: Feel free to AMA by replying to this thread 👇
$190k from selling my towing lead generation business.
Here are the details behind this business:
Purchased 75% ownership for $10k
Hold time of around 2 years
$51k invested
$133k of revenue since purchase
Gross profit of $175k+, excl. payouts to team members of Indexsy etc.
$46k from the SEO agency, Indexsy, and this is down $6.8k from June. This drop is from dips in our link building revenue. We plan on building out better customer retention programs for this.
While doing keyword research what actually ranked for SEO related keywords eg. "best seo companies", I found sites like Clutch and DesignRush.
The results were fucking terrible and they were ranking sites like these at #1 😂😂
I looked into how they were determining the rankings, and it was a black box methodology (💰🤔👀) combined with reviews (which we all know can easily be faked).
I respect the hustle and am a flaming capitalist myself, but come on..
I did a total of $154,534 USD in revenue in the month of June. This is down $16k from May, and down $180k from all time highs (February 2022).
Here is my breakdown between 7 revenue sources..
$57.7k from Binance affiliates, this is up $26.7k from June, but down $73k from Feb 2022. Profit here is near 100%, and it's passive. We have a couple crypto sites driving 10-100 referrals a month.
$52.8k from our enterprise SEO agency, Indexsy, and this is down about $7k from May. This is mostly because our link building services business took a 50% hit in revenue. Our consulting side grew slightly this month.