I just finished reading Chapter 8 of Conspiracy Of The Rich by Robert Kiyosaki. We all know that governments all over the world are printing money to buy themselves out of the current fiancial mess.
But what you can print your own money instead? And you can do it at home armed with the right financial knowledge.
Using derivatives, you can actually create money yourself at home. To explain derivative - orange juice is a derivative of orange.
I konw of someone who have a large collection of vintage toys from the early 50s and 60s. He could have sold them off for a one time income. Instead he created a derivative from those toys by operating a toy museum. Now he enjoys regular passive income from his toys collection.
Read Chapter 8 of the Conspiracy Of the Rich to understand how derivatives can be use to print your own money.
For the Singaporean work at home, taking a break to shop online is now made easier. Singapore Post overseas shipping service called vPost allows you to shop from over 350,000 USA, UK and Japanese online stores and have your purchases deliver to your doorsteps.
Unlike some foreign based shipping services, vPost is created with security in mind. Typically foreign based shipping services charges a annual fee and also require a valid credit card on standby for deduction of shipping charges.
vPost is free and is secure in 3 ways:
1. You need to email your merchant order invoice to vPost in order
to activate the shipping process.
2. After that vPost will email you with a shipping cost invoice.
3 Then you have to login to your vPost account to pay for your
shipping charges.
These procedures take away incidents of fraudulent shipping of unwanted or unpurchased items and also possibility of credit card fraud.
It takes about 5-8 working days to receive your purchases after payment.
With vPost working at home need never be boring again, you do virtual window shopping and buy around the world with secure shipping to your doorstep.
Engaging Asia’s youth in your next home business may be a profitable proposition.
A survey conducted by Synovate over 12 countries across Asia, including Vietname and Japan, shows that Asia’s youth, aged between 8 and 24 years, spend an average 10 hours a day watching TV or on the Internet reading magazines and listening to the radio.
For a third of them, life revolves around their favourite TV program. A quarter live by the Internet, and almost 2-thirds listen to music daily.
The most TV and Internet active youths are from Korea,Hong Kong and Singapore.
More importantly, these youths have say over purchases like snacks, clothes, the family holiday and even the family car.
People planning work from home business could do well to engage these young audience. The task is made that much simpler with the proliferation of online social sites like Facebook, Twitter, Tagged, through with a loyal consumer base can be build.