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Are Reprint Rights A
Good Idea For Your Business?
By Terry Dean
Are reprint rights a
good idea for your business? The answer is, "Yes"
and "No." I wish there was a
simple answer to this question, but there really isn't. Buying the reprint
rights to a hot selling product could be the deal of a lifetime.
You could end up with
a product that already has a hot market ready to buy without having to do
any of the research, creation, or ad writing. It could be the perfect
opportunity. Or it might not be. This same 'perfect
opportunity' might be sold by thousands of businesses already...It could
be outdated...and it may never have sold well in the first place! So, reprint rights may
be right or wrong for your business depending on a number of factors. I have experienced
both the successful aspects of reprint rights, and have been able to avoid
most of the pitfalls...but not all. I have created many of
my own products such as the "Instant Internet Cashflow System" series of
ebooks and our newest video course "Internet Publishing." Even though I have
created my own products, we have still used reprint rights licenses in
many ways to either expand or generate new profits. I purchased reprint
rights to several products when I first wanted to market online. The early
success I experienced through selling these products led to the business I
am in today. Doing a quick run-down
of the office shows that we currently have reprint licenses on 23
different products. One of these products has 19 videos and 2 manuals in
it. Another one has 24 audio tapes, 2 videos, and a manual.
Other products consist
of electronic books only. There are advantages and disadvantages to each
format. The primary advantage of an electronic manual is that it is easy
to setup and sell and requires no fulfillment or shipping costs which can
be major hassles. The primary
disadvantage of electronic books which no expert seems to like to discuss
is that most people don't like to read on their computer. They prefer to
read a hard copy book, listen to an audio tape, or watch a video. Plus, it
is much harder to show the uniqueness of an electronic book.
Both types of products
(electronic and hard copy) have the unique advantages and disadvantages. I
have been successful buying reprint rights on both! So, I am speaking from
a position of authority. Reprint Rights have been a part of my business
from day one. SECTION ONE: What
Are Reprint Rights? First, let's cover the
different types of rights that are available out there on different
products. 1. Affiliate Programs
- Affiliate programs could be considered a form of rights, although a very
basic one. Most of my readers understand exactly what an affiliate program
is so I won't go into here. The advantage of affiliate programs is that
they have little or no cost to get involved in.
The two major
disadvantages are that you receive the smallest piece of the action from
an affiliate program (10% to 50%) and that you will have thousands upon
thousands of competitors. Always remember this, the cheaper and easier it
is to start a business, the more competition you will have. Affiliate
programs usually have no cost and no time involvement to sign up, so you
can expect to have the most competition through them. The advantage here is
that the affiliate owner actually takes care of all the fulfillment, order
processing, and everything else. So it is a great way to get started
promoting products or to expand your product line. As I said above though,
this could end up being a double edged sword. It is easy for you to sign
up. It is also easy for ten thousand others to sign up. 2. Resale Rights - A
resale rights are a little more involved. Usually when resale rights are
involved, you pay an up-front fee and then you are given the right to buy
the product at a discount. In some cases you buy the product wholesale and
sell it retail.
In most cases though,
you take retail orders for a product and then send the product owner a
certain percentage to fulfill the order for you. This is often called
dropshipping.
For example, you may
want to sell a video set we have and offer to pay a resale fee of $500.00.
Then, you take orders for it for the full $297.00 retail price. Every time
an order comes in, you process the card and send us $125.00. We then
duplicate, process, and ship out the order. You would never have to touch
the product. That is dropshipping. You make much more
money this way than an affiliate program usually, but you do a little more
work. You take the orders and process them yourself. Then, product
fulfillment is handled by the owning company. 3. Reprint Rights -
This takes the product selling to another level. With reprint rights, you
actually take over the whole process yourself and don't have to pay anyone
else. All of the money is yours to keep. When an order comes in for
$297.00, you process, duplicate, and ship the order yourself. Then, you
keep all of the money that is left over.
If it was an
electronic manual you owned the rights to, then you would take the order
and have digital delivery. All of the moneyleftover after processing fees
would be yours to keep. So the advantage to
reprint rights is that you get to keep all the money. The disadvantage is
that reprint rights usually have a premium price on them. For most
products, you will pay 10 to 25 times the actual retail price of the
product for reprint rights. Digital products usually are on the high end
of the scale at 20 to 25 times the price, while audios and videos usually
are closer to the 10 times value level. So, a $29.95 ebook
will usually cost $600 to $700 for rights while a $29.95 video will
usually cost $300 to $400. The reason for the higher prices on the ebooks
in most cases comes from the inherent dangers of reprint rights to the
creator of the information. As a product
developer, it is much more dangerous to sell reprint rights to an ebook
than to a video. Since a video is a hard product, there are costs
associated to selling it (low costs of around $3.50 per video plus
shipping). Since an ebook has no cost in delivery, a customer could buy
reprint rights to it and give it away for free or almost nothing. For example: Just
recently I looked at the online detective ebook (which is actually more of
resale rights not reprint rights) and saw a price of $4.95, $9.95, $19.95,
and $29.95 after looking at several different sites. All of them were
offering the same product, but at vastly different prices.
Someone could buy
reprint rights to your $97.00 ebook and sell it for $9.95 from their
site...destroying your business in the process (if you rely on only one
product). If it is a hard product such as an audio set or video set, they
will be much more unlikely to do this type of thing since there are costs
involved in distribution. For the reprint rights
buyer, owning a successful product can be an awesome start to your
business or an expansion to your business if you can afford the extra
investment required. 4. Master Rights -
This is the ultimate type of rights to purchase for your product. When you
buy master rights, you also receive the ability to sell reprint rights to
other businesses. This added benefit
comes at a premium price. You will usually have to pay 3 to 5 times as
much for the master rights as you do for reprint rights. For example: Let's
take a $297 video set for an example. Resale rights may be $500 (which
gives you the ability to have it dropshipped for $125). Reprint Rights may
be $2995 so that you could sell the product itself and keep all of the
money. Master Rights would probably cost $8,000 to $15,000 so you could
sell reprint rights at $2,995 each in addition to selling it at retail. Now, I hope that the
above numbers didn't get you confused. They are just meant to be an
example. All deals will be different based on the product and the
creator's goals with it. In most cases, you
really shouldn't even be thinking of paying the premium price for master
rights unless you know you have reprint rights buyers already lined
up...or it will take quite a bit of cash flow from you for a while.
1. Buy Reprint Rights
To Get Started Online. I bought a low cost
reprint rights license to get started online for the first couple of
years. They gave me a good foundation to start with. The product was
already done and I received sales materials to go with it (I couldn't
write an ad worth a flip in the beginning). You may find the same
method will work for you? There is one caution to keep in mind. Don't buy
something just because someone says it is the best opportunity ever.
Avoid this type of
hype when buying reprint rights. As a beginner, try to find a product you
would want to buy yourself. Purchase the retail version first, try it out,
then purchase the rights if you are still interested. Owning a product that
you bought rights to can give you a good start. You don't have to worry
about writing ads at first or producing a product. You can jump in, get
your feet wet, and start learning about online marketing. This first
product probably won't make you rich, but it will give you experience for
all of your later projects! 2. Buy Reprint Rights
For Back End Products You have your first
product out. It is making money, but what about the backend? All direct
marketers know the real profits of business do not come from your first
sale to a customer. They come from continually selling over and over to
the same customers. You can expand your
product line by purchasing reprint rights to high quality products. This
will help you generate additional cash flow from your prospects and
customers. In many cases, this is
the better direction to take than selling a product you bought rights to
up front. One of the reasons that an author sells rights to his product is
to generate leads for other products they sell. Very rarely, if ever, are
you allowed to remove the contact info of a product you bought rights to.
So, selling their product does generate other backend sales for them.
For this reason, most
experienced marketers will purchase and use reprint rights for backend
products. DON'T BUY REPRINT
RIGHTS IF: 1. You Don't Have a
Market. Don't buy a $1,000
reprint rights package if you don't already have a plan in mind to sell
it. Just because it is the most awesome book on the planet doesn't mean it
will sell.
The best situation is
when you already have a market lined up to buy from you, such as your own
newsletter list or daily traffic at your site. You should examine the
product by buying a retail version. Then, figure a way to sell it. Then,
buy the reprint rights. Finally, go for master rights once the reprint
rights have started earning you a profit. 2. It is Outdated. A lot of people don't
offer reprint rights on a product until it is already outdated. Instead of
updating it, they sell off reprint rights to unsuspecting buyers. I made this mistake
myself in one case and bought rights to a tape set which was badly
outdated. It cost me $2,000, but it wasn't worth even a couple of hundred. I was speaking to
another experienced Internet marketer recently and he told me that he
bought an $8,000 master rights package to a set of CDs when he first got
started online. Little did he know at the time, the whole set was years
old and most of the information on them were wrong now. It was a quick way
to lose thousands of dollars!
3. The market is
saturated. This danger will only
usually occur for one of two reasons...either rights are selling way too
cheap and everyone is buying them OR someone buys rights to an electronic
book and prices it at almost nothing.
This again comes back
to the point that sometimes a bargain (especially dealing with reprint
rights) isn't a bargain at all. The cheaper the rights are, the more
likely the product will be offered everywhere and at too low a price for
anyone to compete. How to Find Resale,
Reprint, and Master Licenses... I have made references
and have seen others make references that the easiest way to find reprint
rights to products would be to do a search for "reprint rights" on the
search engines. Well, guess what, I have never bought a reprint rights
package this way. Most of the sites that
come up when searching for reprint rights aren't selling the types of
products you should be buying rights to. If you could find them simply by
using the search engines, then everyone else could do the same.
You need to put a
little more effort into it. The mistakes I have
made in buying reprint rights came from using the search engines to find
them...every time. I was too desperate looking for rights and a hyped
sales letter did the trick to finish me off. Over half of my good
reprint rights products were purchased because I was a customer already of
the person I was buying from. I knew they had good products which I could
sell.
Several of my products
were purchased by directly soliciting the owner of them. They wouldn't
have any posting on their site about rights, but I would send them an
email and offer them cash of $1,200 or so (whatever I thought I was
willing to pay). They would usually think about it and email me back a
counter offer.
Some would outright
reject the offer. So, what. It didn't hurt me any. For those who
countered, I either paid the counter price or went into more haggling on
price. I have also heard of
other methods. For example, I have heard Ted Nicholas say that he has
called up publishers of older books and asked for license rights to them.
Sometimes if it is a book they are done with, they would sell rights for
as low as $300. It all depends on what they want. If you make an offer,
all you can receive is a yes or no answer. So, go ahead and make an offer
to people. If your offer is high enough, the greed factor might step in
and bring you the rights even if they never thought about it before. Also mention to them
that you will leave all information on the product exactly as it is, so
they will receive more leads for other products they sell. Their name will
be published all over the Internet by you. So, they may receive additional
advantages of selling to you besides the up-front cash.
Terry Dean, a 5 year
veteran of Internet marketing, will Take You By The Hand and Show You
Exact Results of All the Internet Marketing Techniques he tests and Uses
Every Single Month" Click here to Find Out More: |
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