Make Money With Info Products Creation!
Feb,23
at7:26 pm
byadmin
Info Products Creation Guru is an e-book that I recently had the opportunity to read and review. There are many e-books available with tips on how to make money online. This book has an introduction and five chapters. The introduction starts out Iâm going to show you so simple secrets of creating effective, for more detail visit to www.create-video-product.com profitable information products. These are the very same SIMPLE secrets used by information product gurus. Simple yes, but also deadly effective and hugely profitable…and the author explain some reasons he believes information product creation is the best way to go.
Chapter One: Pick Your Information Production this chapter the author includes a list of approximately a dozen very popular possibilities and also shows some FREE and up-to-the-minute sources you can utilize for your own ideas.
Chapter Two: Product Creation and Branding This chapter discusses branding yourself and/or your product. This chapter discusses branding yourself and/or your product. For example, Cesar Milan IS “The Dog Whisperer”. If someone mentions cooking you may think of … BAM!!!!….Emerald Largesse.
Chapter Three: Creating Your Info-Product Audio, video and e-books are some of the product types that are discussed in this chapter.
Chapter Four: Pricing and How to Get Testimonials This chapter focuses on different ways to get testimonials for your product and how to decide on the proper price for you offering to get the buyer to click on that ‘Buy Now’ button.
Chapter Five: Selling Your Product Now we get down to it. After all, it is about making money! This is the bottom line reason anyone would offer information on the internet. This chapter discusses the free and pay methods of selling your product.
Review this e-book is thirty-two pages long and there is no fluff. Everything the author does for himself he outlines and explains here for you. There are numerous screen shots and step-by-step instructions on how to do anything and everything necessary to create and market your products. For more detail visit to www.explosive-product-launches.com there are also links to different sites that help you find your subject matter, create it and market it. I have read a lot of books about marketing and I like this one a lot. As I mentioned earlier there is absolutely no fluff or filler in those thirty-two pages. The author even warns you about keeping an eye on those not free things you might try so they don’t get out of hand. I give this book two thumbs up (I’d give it three if I could!). All of these topics are covered in much greater detail in the free Info Products Creation Guru e-Book.
reenajain
http://www.articlesbase.com/international-marketing-articles/make-money-with-info-products-creation-694441.html
I am looking for any info on copyright laws for recipes, products (tortes,pies) or ideas involving baked goods
I am a pastry chef 18+ yrs, and someone wants to start a bakery using my ideas etc…But she also wants anything that we use in production to be Hers ( the bakery’s ) with out letting me use it to make a profit in the future.an example would be like this… We want to add a new torte to the production, so I come up with the recipe, flavor combination and overall design and look of the new torte. I then proceed to teach all of the employees how to efficently produce the torte for sales. Say, I might do this hundreds times over. Next… It’s a big hit, we make tons of money, maybe I have enough to take the plunge in my own sm business. But… I can’t use anything I’ve created in the past because now it "belongs" to her company… How do I protect myself????
Recipes, creations of flavors, designes,are all being questioned. She ownes the company, but I would be the company. Can I legally protect myself for a future business that I may own someday? Thanks AJ
If you work for her then what you make is legally hers unless you have a contract stating otherwise. Remember you’re not making the idea as yourself, but as an employee.
It sounds like you want her to take the risk, but then you profit if it works. I’m sorry but I don’t think that’s right. If you came up with an idea and tried it out on your own and not at someone elses bakery I’d feel that you should profit from it.
Bottom line is if you’re not the one willing to take the risk then you shouldn’t be the one to profit. Unless she’s willing to allow you to keep your products then I’d find another way to produce them. Open your own business and find bakeries willing to be sold "use" rights for your tort, etc In this way you don’t need to be making them and you clearly own the rights to the recipe. You could then even offer to "consult" with the employees on how to actually cook them, etc.
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Copyrights generally aren’t much help in protecting recipes, because recipes are functional, so there is not much creativity in the writing as writing (unless it rhymes or something, which still wouldn’t stop anyone from taking the ingredients and instructions out of that form).
What you’re talking about here are trade secrets. (Both trade secrets and copyright are branches of intellectual property law, though, so you still get good grades for your guess!) Your created recipes and the processes for making them are your proprietary trade secrets. You will want to secure a contractual agreement with your partner, and you will probably want non-disclosure and non-compete agreements with every single person who is going to be taught your dishes. You will need to actually keep the recipes and instructions secret, and the more dramatically so the better. (Think Coke and its secret recipe that only a few living souls are said to know, kept in a special safe at company headquarters.)
Unlike copyright, trade secret law is going to be largely determined by the state law of your locale. You should absolutely consult with a locally licensed attorney specializing in intellectual property, preferably with experience in your state’s trade secrets law. States vary widely in terms of what kinds of non-disclosure or non-compete agreements they’ll recognize and enforce, so you need to work with a reliable expert.
Other respondents are incorrect if they assert that your creations belong to the company’s owner. Typically, that would require a specific, written agreement between the two of you, where you specifically undertake to make recipes that will belong to the company in exchange for some compensation. The problem is not that the recipes would belong to the shop-owner, it is that you would have released them into the public domain without keeping any sort of control over them.
Do yourself a huge favor. Consult with an attorney. Have a successful venture.
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