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The Marsupial Method for Launching a Profitable Business In 24 Hours or Less If you are producing enough value to have a job, you could be producing that value for your own company and keep what your employer is banking now.

By Daniel DiPiazza Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Tom Brakefield | Getty Images

A few years ago, when I first started brainstorming different ways to make money, or possible businesses to start, I felt like taking a can of bright red spray paint, drawing an X on a concrete wall and smashing my head straight through it. Hopefully, I would just hit a beam and put myself out of my misery.

I kept doing the mental marathon. You know the drill: Coming up with dozens of ideas every day and rejecting all of them.

Many things I wanted to do seemed too far out of my reach. I didn't have hardcore "techie" skills, and I didn't have a business degree. I didn't feel like a "natural" entrepreneur. Most of all, I didn't feel like I had any relevant experience that was worth money.

But then, it hit me.

I remembered that somehow, some way, I'd managed to stay employed. A miracle, I know. This meant that I actually DID have at least a few skills that were valuable to someone else. Otherwise, people would never bother hiring me.

One of those skills was as an SAT/ACT test prep coach working for Kaplan Test Prep in college (and shortly after).

I'd never really taken the time to step back and think about how much a skill like this was worth to the people I was providing the service for -- both Kaplan and the families I was helping. I only thought about how much I was getting paid. I was solely focused on my hourly rate. How many of us do this? Almost all of us.

How many of us are so concerned with what we're getting paid, that we never stop to think about what we're WORTH?

This is the WRONG way to think about your skills.

Related: 10 Essentials for Launching a Business While Juggling Your Day Job

Your salary is not equivalent to what your skills are actually worth to the company that employs you. Think about it: if you were getting paid exactly what your skills were worth, the company hiring you wouldn't make a profit off of you. After the onboarding and training process, many businesses have already spent $5,000-$10,000 just to acquire you. Yes, little you. Then, once you start working, you still have to make them money. They have to pay you way less than what your skills are worth in order to make a profit from your work.

In fact, most companies usually make 2x-5x more than what you bring in for every hour you work that you do. Yes, that's correct.

Case in point.

When I looked at my work for Kaplan, I realized this was happening right in front of his eyes.

My hourly rate was $18, which at the time I thought was fantastic. Then I found out that Kaplan was charging the families I was helping over $100/hour for me to come to the house and teach little Timmy quadratic equations.

They weren't doing ANYTHING except connecting me with the student. I was coordinating with the families, teaching the material, developing most of the curriculum and following up. In short, I was doing $100/hour worth of work for Kaplan, and they were taking $82 out of my pocket every damn time.

YIKES.

At that point, I realized that I had a viable skill that people had proven that they would pay a lot of money for -- but I was missing the connecting piece. Even if I branched out on my own, how would I find the clients? I had no website, no storefront, no testimonials, no anything. I just had myself. Creating a resume doesn't do much good when you're working for yourself! This piece of the equation caused me a ton of anxiety -- and it caused me to stall.

This is the place where many of us quit and turn around back towards the safety of our jobs.

We think to ourselves, "Well, I may have a skill, but my company is the one giving me all the work. I need them."

I mean, let's get real here -- it's hard to find clients. What was I supposed to do? Post ads on Craigslist? Pin flyers on the bulletin board at his apartment complex?

Umm, nahhh. These just didn't seem like the best solutions. He wasn't trying to open a lemonade stand here.

I needed something that worked really well -- and fast.

Related: Should You Quit Your Day Job and Jump Into Entrepreneurship?

Then, EUREKA.

I had an idea that changed his business, and career, forever.

"If I'm looking for a very specific type of customer, why not just go to where existing customers already are?"

"I should look where my ideal customers are already in the buying mood…It'll be easier to get their attention and I'll have an endless sea of leads and paying customers instantly."

Eureka, indeed. That idea is something worth running naked in the streets about. It's gold.

That's when I developed The Marsupial Method -- and set up my first business in less than 24 hours.

The Marsupial Method.

The idea of "staying in the pocket." Finding where your customers are and collecting them -- without going out and having to market to them very hard.

Step 1: Find out who your REAL customers are. "Real customer" = who is actually buying your service?

I realized that my real customers were the parents of my students. So I had to figure out where they were located. I got very specific about how to narrow his search: He wanted parents in affluent neighborhoods, with a good amount of disposable income who are willing to pay more for extra tutoring for their kids to get into great schools.

Step 2: Identify who your real customers are ALREADY doing business with.

In my case, I came to discover the existence of private admissions companies, which help families get their kids get into the colleges they want by "packaging" them really well (i.e. working on essays, how to position themselves, what extra-curriculars to take and highlight, etc etc etc).

Keep in mind that the other half of "packaging" is the actual test prep itself -- that is, getting tutored on the SAT.

Step 3: Offer that person/company MASSIVE value.

I researched private admissions companies that didn't have in-house test counselors -- they only handled the packaging side; these companies would send their clients (the families) to Kaplan for the test prep portion.

Related: 10 Steps to Finding the Right Co-Founder

I saw an immediate opportunity and POUNCED. "Hey, private admissions company," I said, "I see that you're already doing business with people who want to get into great colleges. I notice you don't actually teach test prep -- you just package students. Wouldn't it be great if I become your go-to test prep provider?"

Then I laid out my credentials (worked for Kaplan before, college educated, etc.) -- and made it clear to the private admission counselors that by sending their customers to me, it was the same thing as sending to Kaplan. The idea of having an "in-house" test prep counselor would be hugely valuable for the company AND would make it seem more attractive in the eyes of interested families ("leads"). One less thing to think about, coordinate, and pay for.

Then I added MORE value to my proposal. I said, "If you were to send me some of your clients, I'd love to give you a small portion of my profits (as opposed to you sending families to Kaplan and Kaplan keeping all the profits.) PLUS, this arrangement would make it easier for you, because I know you often have to schedule and coordinate classes with Kaplan on behalf of the families, AND make sure that the kids are doing well in their test preparation. Instead," I said, "now everything could be "in house" and I'll give you detailed updates on all the students and their progress."

I laid it on even FURTHER, clarifying everything to fully drive the point home (see the subtleties of my "assuming the sale" and assuming a position of power—great sales people only communicate their solutions in terms of the customer's needs): "That means, students get better scores, they get into better schools, the families are incredibly happy, you look better, I get clients, AND you get money from it. It's a Win-Win-Win. A home run."

The Private Admissions Company – BIG WIN: They get a go-to guy who they know will impress and deliver; plus they no longer have to do any coordinating, scheduling, or checking-up. This saves the company time and energy to invest in doing what it does best: packaging students and selling families.

Me -- BIG WIN: I get a ton of new clients sent directly to me. Plus, now he's only giving a small percentage of his profits (15 percent) to the private admissions company—leaving me with A LOT more money than when working for Kaplan. That's what happens when you don't have a middleman between you and the services you're providing. You ARE the service provider. And it's your business, so you collect practically ALL the money. Cha-ching.

Parents -- BIGGEST WIN: The courses for Kaplan usually costs around $1000 for a typical eight week classroom course. That's no small investment. I offered my course for $500 instead (since I didn't have any overhead to pay). That might seem like a lot less, but if I'm hosting a class of 25 students…that's $12,500. That's the volume effect at play.

That's me cashing out, while the parents enjoy what they've saved, while the admissions company smiles prettily and collects 15 percent while working on other, more lucrative things.

Step 4: Stay in the "pocket."

Continue to build your relationship with that service provider or organization, so as to continue creating more value and more channels of revenue for everyone.

For me, that meant doing great work for the private admissions company, which kept sending me clients. I made sure my reporting on all students' progress was spotless, and I even offered to help them with some online marketing stuff, which I was just getting into at the time.

Daniel DiPiazza is the founder of Alpha Mentorship and the director of the Profit Paradigm accelerator for agency owners.

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