Travel

383: 10X Travel Hacks: Travel at a Discount (or For Free) Using Manufactured Spending, Churning, Credit Card Rewards, and Travel Points with Bryce Conway

August 24, 2017

Bryce Conway is the founding editor of 10xTravel and the Author of Takeoff: How to Travel the World for Next to Nothing. He writes about travel, personal finance, and entrepreneurship. If you'd like to hear about travel hacks (how to travel at a massive discount) then listen in to today's stories and strategies.

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Traveling with a Laptop?

December 9, 2015

I know for a fact that you don't stay at home all day, every day. I have hit the wall again and again with a product launch problem, a product creation problem, a programming problem or I just couldn't solve some problem. 10 minute break, 15 minute walk, 30 minute drive, or a 45 minute nap, I come back and I know exactly how to solve my problem.

The next time you leave town, or even better, attend an offline event or a mastermind, even for just a few days, you'll make new connections, get a brand new perspective and solve most of your problems.

But here's the question... what do you bring to these events? And how much of your business do you take with you?

Laptop? iPad? Pen and paper? Second monitor?

I've literally been to events where 100% of all attendees were on their laptops. Not taking notes, not learning, using wifi (and mifi), surfing the web, checking Facebook, wasting time – when they could be wasting time at home!

Do You Really Need That Laptop?

My first question to you is, do you REALLY need to be that connected that you bring your smartphone, tablet, laptop, and notepad in your backpack when you attend these events? The answer is probably not. I've been to events where I tripped over power cords from plugged in laptops. I hosted an event once where one of the attendees plugged in a power strip, two laptops, and a router.

What would happen if you attended a conference and you were 100% focused on what was right in front of you?

Just think about how differently you'd think if your attention didn't have to be "split" all the time. Or if, for a few hours at a time, you were unreachable, no interruptions, just focusing on where you are and what you're hearing and seeing?

Business Building Tasks Only

One of the weirdest experiences I went through was being confined on a train for 48 hours from Sacramento, California to Mount Pleasant, Iowa. I got a heck of a lot accomplished, and part of it was writing 52 articles. I used some as membership content, some were blog posts for my sites, guest blog posts, articles for a print magazine.

This was before Amtrak provided wifi service. It was also before mobile 3G and 4G hotspots existed. Even so, the cellular reception was so terrible that even my GPS device couldn't always get a signal.

I guarantee that if train wifi had existed back then, I wouldn't have written 52 articles. I probably would have used Facebook and Skype, checked my email, read articles, forum posts and blog posts, however.

Think about it. What if YOU were trapped on a train for 2 days and had no internet service? And you had no movies and TV shows left to watch? No books left to read?

You'd probably build your business. Write articles and blog posts, create videos, membership site content, sales letters, you would CREATE instead of wasting time.

Here's what I do at events. I bring in just ONE device into the room. That means it's either JUST my phone, JUST my iPad, or JUST my laptop. I don't have it out 100% of the time, and when I do, I'm not on Facebook, I'm not browsing, surfing, consuming, I'm creating. Once I've finished that article, I shut the laptop down and I'm done.

Internet Security

Here's something that might save your entire business. Never use public wifi to login to most sites. Skype, Evernote, Gmail, Facebook, and most remote desktop software (my favorite is LogMeIn) are all okay to use on public wifi because they use SSL to encrypt those communications.

Let's say you login to your favorite message board, your WordPress blog, or membership site. If the web address doesn't have a "https" at the beginning (instead of "http") or shows a "lock" symbol, then you've just broadcasted your password to everyone within 1000 feet of you. If you login to your cPanel without typing the https or you FTP without checking the box to use FTPS or SFTP, you've just broadcasted your password to everyone within 1000 feet.

Scary stuff. So other than being careful about what sites you visit, what do you do?

Remote Desktop

I have a program called "LogMeIn" installed on my computer. I also have the "LogMeIn" app installed on my iPad. Using this app, I can connect to my computer at home from anywhere. This means I view my screen over there, I can click on anything and type anything. Edit video, record video, access files, login to sites.

Remote desktop is actually GREAT when you want to login, get your computer running (like processing a video), then logout and let it crank away at home.

I've installed the app on my iPhone and on my laptop, so it doesn't matter where I am, if I need to use my computer at home, it's one "tap" away.

Here's another thing. My home computer has RoboForm installed, my laptop doesn't. This means if I lose my laptop (which is itself password protected), my passwords aren't lost. They're on my home computer.

If I need to check my PayPal balance or pay someone and I'm not home, I can just remote desktop and do it -- without setting off alarms with PayPal. If I need to login to a non-SSL forum or website, I remote desktop and do it.

Should you travel? Yes. Do you need to bring your laptop along? Probably not if you have a tablet. Even so, here's what you need to do:

  • Only have one device "on" you at a time (phone, tablet, laptop)
  • Use your device for content creation tasks instead of browsing and surfing
  • Avoid logging into non-SSL sites and use Remote Desktop (LogMeIn) whenever possible

I hope that helps when traveling and building/maintaining/growing your online business.

I Missed My Flight (3 Ways You’ll Make Money As a Result)

October 17, 201250 Comments

I'm supposed to be on a plane right now over the Pacific Ocean, but I'm not.

Why? What other reason is there? I was late to the airport! I'm "used" to arriving at an airport for a domestic flight two hours early -- 90 minutes if there's traffic. Never had a problem before.

But this time... I didn't realize that I had to arrive three hours early for international flights (this is only my third time leaving the country). The airport is a two hour drive away. I planned on leaving the house four hours before my flight. I was a little late getting going... a train crossed the tracks adding a delay, there was construction and traffic all up the freeway to the airport. I didn't factor the 15 minute shuttle ride from parking to the terminal since this isn't the airport I usually fly out of.

I was at that ticket counter 90 minutes before the flight. I was the last passenger to check in. By the time the ticket agent created a visa for me to travel, looked up my information, tried to figure out the computer to add me to the flight, I had an hour till takeoff. Too late.

No available flights to Australia tomorrow. I'd have to wait two days. That means my trip had been cut from four days in Australia into two days. I'm going to spend the same amount of time on the plane and at the airport, as I will be on the ground in Australia!

No way to cancel the flight and rebook with a different airline, no easy way to extend my trip either, especially since I have lots of things scheduled for when I get back.

I'm sure you've been in a similar situation at one point, so what can we learn from this?

Habit #1: "Paranoid" Scheduling

First of all, you better believe that I'm showing up at the airport very very early from now on. As in, even earlier than 2 hours for a domestic flight, even earlier than 3 hours for international.

Think about it... how many times have you stressed out about being late, how many times have you showed up somewhere 5 minutes late and felt bad... how many times have you missed out on something special just because you missed a different deadline?

Imagine how different your life would be if you rolled out of bed one hour earlier and jogged on the treadmill at the gym, or took a walk around your neighborhood, took a drive around town or went for a swim just to wake yourself up.

How different would things be if you had everything ready to go for your next product launch long before you needed it, before you even announced it, in fact?

Habit #2: Launch Scarcity

Speaking of product launches, Lance and I recently relaunched "Membership Cube 2.0." Here's what we did:

  • We presented a "VIP webinar" to students who had completed the 1.0 course (some of them several years ago), already owned the membership license, and probably had a membership site, and sold many many people $197 for this updated training, until 11:59pm Eastern time that night
  • For the next 24 hours, the price to upgrade for alumni students only was $297
  • Then $397 for the next 24 hours
  • Then $497 for the next 24 hours
  • The following week, we opened up the brand new course to the public to join at $697, once again, only until 11:59pm Eastern time
  • The next day, the price was $997 to join
  • The day after that, we offered a 5-payment plan so people could choose to join either by paying the $997 in full, or subscribing to 5 payments of $225 (one every 30 days for 5 total payments)
  • The day after that, we offered a choice between paying $997 upfront or choosing a 3-payment option (3 payments of $375)
  • On the final day the price was simply $997, and can I tell you a secret?

We sold seats into Membership Cube 2.0 every single day of that launch, at every single price point above. What's also interesting is that the majority of our sales occurred within 1 hour of every deadline. In other words, if we announced the price was increasing from $697 to $997 at 11:59pm Eastern that night, a bulk of our sales came in between 11:00pm and 11:59pm Eastern.

But it makes sense, after all... how many times did you wait until the very very last minute in high school and college? When you had a boss? In your business now?

It's just human nature to wait until the pain is so great (I'm about to miss my flight or the product is about to become more expensive) to actually take some kind of action (something you take for granted like being able to travel to the opposite end of the world in a day or creating a website that takes payments).

Habit #3: Training Your List

I'm not saying that having scarcity will make or break your product launch, but if you have something good to sell, it's an easy tool to pull out of your arsenal to give you a nice little boost in your sales.

We used to cap the number of seats in a class. Only 30 available! What's the problem there? If we say 30 are available, 25 are remaining, it looks like no one wants the product. No social proof. If we sell all 30 seats in a day, we think... maybe we should have opened 50 or 60 slots?

The price increase strategy works great because the potential income is unlimited but it really pays off when we TRAIN OUR LIST.

Here's what I mean. Many, many people contacted us -- sometimes an hour after the price increased -- saying that the price was $997 but can I join at $497 or even $197?

Our response was "no" and the reason was usually because someone had already bought at $697 or $997 at that point. Why should we let someone else pay full price when you contacted us and asked for a favor?

I'm sorry if that sounds harsh. But in the same way I'll be sure not to miss another flight, I don't want you to miss another launch or a price increase!

At the end of the day, there's no point in getting angry or upset about paying more today simply because you don't have to buy. You missed a sale, and that's it.

Normally (what you see in the retail world) is something like this: this computer normally costs $1000, today only it's $500. If someone bought that computer for $1000 yesterday, they're screwed. If you miss today's sale at $500, you have to pay $1000 tomorrow.

It might feel weird for you to turn away customers, or be strict about your deadlines, but the way I see it, you have two choices:

Either train your list that your sales, deadlines, and scarcity means nothing, and that anyone can get around it with a quick email...

Or that you're serious about your business and your customers should be too. 11:59pm means 11:59pm and $997 means $997.

You can train your subscribers to have a sense of entitlement (they should get everything under the sun for 10 bucks) or that buying is a choice and that the price they pay is STILL much lower than the value they get.

And, whether you're a buyer or a seller, or both, the best thing to do is to make the best out of any situation.

  • I missed my flight, is there anything I can do to change that? No, it's done.
  • Did this event possibly prevent me from being late or making other mistakes in the future? Probably!
  • Am I going to be a victim, feel sorry for myself, and mope around until my flight in two days? I think you know the answer to that question... time to get some coding done and get to the airport early tomorrow so I'm not in a rush

That's how you can profit from my mistake: change your habits to that you're early to everything. Product launches. Webinars. Meetings. Personal life events. Freelance jobs. Underpromise and overdeliver.

The next time you're launching a product or getting paid to provide a done-for-you service, think about what kind of scarcity you can add in to improve an already great offer and make that event "special."

And finally, keep in mind that you're always training your list. You're training your list to get used to how often you send emails, what price you charge (they get accustomed to high or low for sure), what kind of offers, whether you send out videos or perform live webinars... so what kind of subscribers do you want? It's up to you.

Go ahead in the comment box below and tell me what you think.

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