Networking marketing is such an interesting phenomenon.

Some people love it to the point of practically a cult-like obsession. That bothers me.

Some people hate it to the point of closing their mind to ever learning what it really is and really isn’t. They loathe it. That bothers me.

Some people have never heard of it. Have no idea of its potential. That bothers me.

What I wish everyone knew about my network marketing business with Vemma?

That I don’t love it to the point of obsession, of cramming it down people’s throats and of thinking that it’s a fit for everyone and of sneaky marketing tactics and of exaggerated success stories and of disrespectful, unprofessional business methods.

I love it for what it is.
I love it for what it offers.
I love it for what it can offer to those that are looking for it.
I love it for what it has done for me and my time freedom and my financial picture.
I love it for the growth it has inspired.
I love it for its honesty. Its modesty.

I love my Vemma business for what it is. And just as much for what it is not.

THAT is what I wish people knew.

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I’m pretty sure I posted this on Facebook a few months ago, but I ran into it again today and, honestly, it’s just so darn entertaining.

So, because it’s a random Tuesday in March and because you deserve a giggle, you need to spend two and a half minutes and eat this up:

Why don’t I watch Ellen more often?

Still giggling,
AS

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If you have a belief

March 6, 2012

Thought: If you have a belief that’s strong and hairy and big enough, nothing else matters.

The speed bumps don’t matter.
The “how” doesn’t matter.
The haters don’t matter.

Let your belief, whatever it may be, guide you. Allow it to keep your mind focused and clear. Use it to keep the drama, the complicatedness, out of your mind and out of your life.

And out of your way.

Belief. Believe. What do you believe?

I believe that Hubz and I will be 100% financially free within the next 5 years. I picture the residual income we have coming in from multiple sources being larger than the expenses we have to live the lifestyle that we want. I picture both of us with time freedom to enjoy that lifestyle. I picture being able to educate, spend time with, travel with, and raise our children with complete flexibility, with every option available. I picture both of us working when we feel like it, on what we feel like, knowing that we’re only doing it for enjoyment as, after all, we won’t need to.

I picture it to the point that I know it’s true. I believe it is possible and I believe we will make it happen. It’s a future truth. That is my belief.

And you know what’s also true? Nothing else really does matter.

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It’s official. Our second real estate investment property is rented. A lease has been signed and move-in will happen in just two weeks. Finally!

It’s been quite the journey from when we closed on the house late last fall. Here is what we learned.

Use our experiences and be ye a smarter investor.

Ahem.

1) Timing matters We closed on this property the second week in November. It didn’t need a full remodel, but there was a good list of nitpicky items that needed to be taken care of by our contractor. He started his work the third week in November and finished about four weeks later. We then met with our property manager and immediately got the house listed on the rental market.

Third week in November + four weeks later = your house is up for rent right before Christmas, stupid.

Whoops.

You know how many people are interested in moving during the holidays? Yeah. None. The market picks up a little bit once you get a couple weeks into January, but even then the weather in most parts of the country is a major deterrent. Luckily, with the odd, spring-like weather the Midwest has been experiencing this winter, we didn’t have that problem.

Finally, three full weeks into February, we had a signed lease.

Timing is important. Next time we’re out on a real estate tour in October or November, ready to pick up another property, remind us to put out wallets back into our pockets, will ya?

Purchase in December or January, renovate and update in January or February, rent in late February or March; much better.

Stay away from purchasing a property that will go on the rental market after mid-November or before mid-January.

2) Luck matters Due to the fantastic weather, showings of our property started really picking up once the holidays had come and gone. Starting in mid-January we had several parties every weekend tromping through the place, at a minimum. Every week the management company received two or three requests for applications. But week after week, no renter. Many of the apps were never even submitted. The couple that were were, umm, not acceptable, to say the least.

With our first property, a couple parties viewed the house within a day of it landing on the rental market, one of those folks applied for lease and was accepted the next day.

With this one, dozens and dozens of people were viewing, no one was biting.

Sometimes, we realized, a little bit of luck is involved. Sometimes your perfect renter shows up right away, other times you have to go through 50 showings before they’re there.

We were really frustrated about the lack of all of these showings resulting in a signed lease, until we remembered how quickly the first property rented. Nothing rents after one showing unless you have a bit of luck on your side. We’ll remember that for next time.

3) Visibility matters Property one, while not on a busy street, is located on a corner of a housing development. Meaning, every person who drives into or out of that development sees the house. And, sees the giant For Rent sign in front of the house.

Property two is tucked further into its development, in a location that only immediate neighbors would drive by.

We placed one For Rent sign with a big arrow at the entrance to the neighborhood and our showings immediately increased.

When we thought about it, it made sense. If we were in the market for a new place to rent, yeah the Internet would be used a little bit to scope out a few places, but our primary means of finding possible places to call home? Driving around.

If that’s what we would have done, we figured it should be the same for everyone else. And it was.

I think I picked up the For Rent sign at Lowe’s for $15. Money well spent. The arrow pointing in the appropriate direction was done with a simple dry erase marker. Next time, while the location within a development won’t be a strong consideration in the actual purchase of the property, we will adjust our marketing efforts accordingly.

Timing, luck, and visibility. This second property went so smoothly, yet provided three simple lessons; three little ways we will be ahead of the game for next time. Can’t complain one bit about that.

Also in the department of No Complaints: we have two cash-flowing rental properties!

Booyah.

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I heard an amazing quote yesterday while watching an interview with Oscar nominee Viola Davis. She said:

They say that the two most important days in a person’s life are the day you were born, and the day you discover why you were born.

How striking in its simplicity is that thought. Right?

I was born April 11th, 1981. It was a Saturday. The Masters golf tournament was broadcasted on the television in the hospital. Or so my Dad reminds me of every year. :)

I just typed out that I’m not yet sure if that second most important day in my life has happened for me, but the more I think about it, if I’m not sure it has, I’m sure it hasn’t.

Mull this one around for yourself today. See what it stirs up.

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Plane taking off

Want your business to grow? Want your LIFE to grow? Try these:

1. Burn the boats. If you land on an island and command your squad to start fighting the natives, what’s the surest way to gaurantee that you win? Burn the boats.

Put yourself into a situation where there’s no turning back. That way you HAVE to succeed. No matter what. Figure out what that means for you and your situation. If you allow yourself a fallback, what motivation do you truly have to push and be creative and make success happen? If you don’t have a fallback, if you’ve burned the boats, your mindset about being successful switches from something like “It would be nice if this works” to “It has to work, it will, it must.” Don’t underestimate how powerful that can be.

2. Ask a question. Looking for a new client for your consulting business? Send an email to ten of your closest, most professional friends and ask them if they know anyone who could use your assistance. Better yet, pick up the phone to call them instead. Not sure if you can figure out how to set-up your ebook shopping cart on your website? Post a tweet and ask if anyone else does. Looking for customers to buy your vitamin supplement? Ask, ask, ask. You won’t know until you do. And until you do, you’re just sitting around thinking about being in business. Which brings me to…

3. Know your exact intentions. Say you’re building a network marketing business. What’s your goal? I mean, your number-one, most preferred, perfect world intention? Probably looking for one or two other people to do exactly what you’re doing. Right? Although wonderful and necessary to business, your top intention probably isn’t to find a new customer who places a one-time order, or to find a distributor who is only halfway interested in sharing the product with one person over the course of the calendar year.

Love and support all your clients/customers/team members where they are, but be honest with yourself about what, or who you are really looking for. The clarity and confidence it will provide you in moving forward and simplifying your business will be worth it.

4. State your exact intentions. It’s not enough to simply know what they are. People in my Vemma business come to me all the time saying that they can’t find anyone open to building a business like they are. They’re struggling to duplicate themselves. “Are you actually ASKING people if they’re open to building a business like you are?” I inquire. The response is almost always, “Oh, hmm, not really.”

If you want it. Ask for it. Put it out there. Because how are you supposed to, say, attract and sign that perfect legal practice that wants the year-long social media consulting package that you’re offering if you don’t specifically ask them to hire you for a year-long social media consulting package? How are you supposed to nab that monthly column in the fashion magazine if you just send them your portfolio without a specific request for the monthly column job? The answer: you won’t. Practically never. People can’t read your mind, and rarely is what you exactly want handed to you without asking. Ask, and you’d be surprised how often you receive.

5. Know where you’re going. You have heard this one before. The late nights spent sending a few extra emails, picking up the phone to make those uncomfortable phone calls, rearranging your childcare to attend the networking event. None of that will happen, or you will quickly tire of it, if you don’t have an exact definition of where all of it will take you. And exact means EXACT.

“Any extra money I earn will help my family pay off our credit card debt.” Not clear enough.

“The first $500 I earn will go towards paying off my Banana Republic card. After that, all extra will go towards my $9500 in student loans.” Perfect.

Earning your first $50 might not seem like a big deal when compared with the looming destination of “paying off my credit card debt,” but when you measure it up against your first destination of a $500 store card balance, you can see the impact. Know exactly where you are going and the intention you have for what you’re doing, and make it easier on yourself to stay motivated and celebrate the impact of the little victories.

Right after Christmas, Hubz and I set a quirky little goal that required us to come up with $6000 in extra in just 4 months. We wrote our $6000 countdown on the white board in the office and every extra tidbit that we can nab – a freelance writing check here, selling a couple pieces of furniture from the dusty corner in the basement there, extra added to our savings after a pay period, etc – we record and subtract from the total. Now, we’re not rich by any means but we enjoy our lifestyle, and we have never appreciated an extra $50 or $100 more than we do right now. Before, it was just money. Now, it’s a specific step towards this destination. We didn’t change our spending habits nor our lifestyle, just defined our destination. It feels like that $6000 is appearing out of thin air. Really powerful.

6. Open your mind. Learn something new. The biggest step in personal development isn’t actually learning something new, it’s acknowledging the fact that you don’t know everything and that you COULD learn something new.

There are a few people in my life – whom I love dearly, don’t get me wrong – but who read a finance book or a business book or a nutrition book, close the back cover, and then declare, “It was an ok book, but I knew all of that stuff already.” You did? Really? You might as well have spent those last four hours watching Mad Men, because you surely didn’t get any use out of reading something when you weren’t in a mindset to learn.

Open your mind to the possibility that you can always – always always always – be better and stronger and smarter and kinder, and you will migrate towards ways to make that happen. Whether it be through reading a book or meeting a mentor or attending an event of likeminded people. Automatically.

Same thing, super-short version:

1. Make success a requirement, not an option.
2. Ask for what you want.
3. Be honest about your intentions.
4. Announce your intentions to others.
5. Know the exact path you are on.
6. Acknowledge what you don’t know, and how you can grow.

Practices. Practice them. They’re easy to do, they’re easy not to do. It’s your choice. Can’t wait to see you put them into action.

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Congratulations Mollie Jorgensen and Roog!

I randomly selected a couple commenters and you two won the prize: a book of your choice from Amazon.com. There are many, choose wisely.

Winners email me at annie AT anniesorensen DOT com to claim your prizes! Thanks for all of the wonderful responses, everyone.

Today…

…because I finished Richard Branson’s book this morning and it left me feeling exhausted and unaccomplished… (His attitude towards life and business is unlike anyone else’s I’ve ever come across. Add that to his unique childhood, his writing style, his personal experiences, and his sense of adventure; I closed the back cover, threw it down on the dining room table, and let out an audible sigh. Then I promptly got up and ate some Chex Mix.

Babygirl. She made me do it.)

…and because it’s a dreary Monday here in western Missouri…

…and because I just ate the rest of that bag of Chex Mix…

…and because, mostly importantly, I love ya, my five, lovely readers, I’m going to ask you a few questions! And then you’re going to answer them! And then, and then, and THEN I might just maybe perhaps if you’re lucky be giving away prizes to random commenters.

Are you ready?

Here are your Ask the Audience questions of the day:

1. If you had the week off from work, and you had no other family or household obligations, and if you were going to indulge in a relaxing staycation at home, what would you do all week? Sleeping or catching up on laundry do NOT count. How would you choose to spend your time at home or in your home town if you could do anything you wanted?

2. Chex Mix or Gardettos?

3. Do you have a favorite book? If you’re not a reader, what about a favorite blog? It doesn’t have to be your all-time favorite, just one you particularly enjoy. If you have one, share it.

Answer away, my friends. In a day or two, I’ll draw a commenter or two at random for the giveaway and update the post with the winners.

The prizes will be shiny. And literary in nature. Probably.

In the mean time, my answers to the questions are:

1. The first morning would involve a trip to B&N for a couple girly paperback novels, house decorating magazines, and a newspaper or two. The rest of the week would be spent on the couch with Hubz and the canine (and the iPad) (and my notebook) reading everything, watching movies, talking life and business, and sipping wine coffee. Oh, and never changing out of my yoga pants.

2. Chex Mix AND Gardettos. I…I…I love them both equally.

3. Rich Dad Poor Dad, Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry, Oh The Places You’ll Go.

Add your answers in the comments! Can’t wait to read ’em. Ready…GO.

To your Monday,
AS

UPDATE: Thanks for the fun and fancy responses, all! Winners will be posted soon.

17 comments

You know how you sometimes have books on your shelf that, for some reason or another, you just can’t ever get yourself to pick up and read?

Poor little books. It’s like they’re the last ones chosen for the pick up soccer game at recess. Hopeful and wide-eyed, wishing that every time I approach the book shelf that this, this will be their moment that they finally get a chance to play.

I’ve written before about how I choose what book to read next; it all comes down to impulse. If you’re not feeling it, you’re not feeling it. And if that means that a poor little copy of one of Robert Irwin’s awful terrible crazy so-so real estate investment tomes sits unopened for two years, then so be it.

Sometimes, a book just isn’t destined for several dedicated hours of face time. And that’s where skimming comes in.

I wrote about it. Skimming, that is. About how I do it and still get some use out of it and save a lot of time. You can read it if you’re into that sort of thing. Here’s the link:

How to Skim a Book (without wasting your time)

But this was totally not the point of this post.

The point of this post was to ask you a question, dear Internetz. Are you aware of all of the utterly delicious, drool-inspiring, I-wanna-remodel-my-home-in-order-to-add-them book shelf photos there are out there?

I’m sorry I just used delicious and book shelf in the same sentence.

Feast your eyes, my fellow bookies:

Lovely.

So fun.

Darling!

This makes my eyes cross a little bit. But I think I like it.

Oh my.

OH MY.

Ok, this is getting painful.

[thump]

That was me hitting the floor. I just died.

See you in book heaven,
AS

All photos pulled from Pinterest.

3 comments