The Entrepreneur Forum | Financial Freedom | Starting a Business | Motivation | Money | Success

Welcome to the only entrepreneur forum dedicated to building life-changing wealth.

Build a Fastlane business. Earn real financial freedom. Join free.

Join over 80,000 entrepreneurs who have rejected the paradigm of mediocrity and said "NO!" to underpaid jobs, ascetic frugality, and suffocating savings rituals— learn how to build a Fastlane business that pays both freedom and lifestyle affluence.

Free registration at the forum removes this block.

Ask me anything about eCommerce (Ongoing)

biophase

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
474%
Jul 25, 2007
9,121
43,261
Scottsdale, AZ
Yep, I do now. I get the math, so let me rephrase: What resources do you recommend to efficiently learn the ins and outs of FBA selling; resources that might shorten one's learning curve, prevent needless mistakes, heading down blind pathways and wasting time and money?

It's really all about picking the right product. The other stuff is pretty straight forward.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Oztrepreneur

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
122%
Aug 9, 2013
218
267
All I can tell you is that it will take you a lot longer than 90 days to launch a product.

I can attest to this, especially if you are trying to add value and not just importing direct from Alibaba etc. Back and forth with multiple manufacturers, periods of delay due to time-zones, mis-understandings of requirements, waiting for samples, tweaking and more tweaking, waiting for more samples. Start doing this and you will see it is not a quick path and is a process.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Denim Chicken

Silver Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
222%
Jun 5, 2010
425
942
California
I can attest to this, especially if you are trying to add value and not just importing direct from Alibaba etc. Back and forth with multiple manufacturers, periods of delay due to time-zones, mis-understandings of requirements, waiting for samples, tweaking and more tweaking, waiting for more samples. Start doing this and you will see it is not a quick path and is a process.

My product has multiples parts to it and it is taking forever. I'm efficient with my time but can't help the shipping and production times as well as Chinese holidays
 

pds

Bronze Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
132%
Apr 28, 2014
188
248
35
NYC
Already doing it, thanks.

Read this blog (not associated with it, but most thorough guide I've come across):
(GUIDE) How to Find the Best products to Sell on Amazon FBA

As others have said on here, the hardest part is finding the right product to improve upon, add value for the customer and create a brand around. If you want a sustainable, long-term business, that is the only way. It will take the longest time, but the most important. I've gone through this before with a supplement and ultimately ended the business. Now back to square one trying to find a product / category that will work long term. Good luck.
 

Walter Hay

Legendary Contributor
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
401%
Sep 13, 2014
3,318
13,305
World citizen
Read this blog (not associated with it, but most thorough guide I've come across):
(GUIDE) How to Find the Best products to Sell on Amazon FBA

As others have said on here, the hardest part is finding the right product to improve upon, add value for the customer and create a brand around. If you want a sustainable, long-term business, that is the only way. It will take the longest time, but the most important. I've gone through this before with a supplement and ultimately ended the business. Now back to square one trying to find a product / category that will work long term. Good luck.
That guide is clearly written by an excited newbie. He has put a lot of work into it, but still treads the well-worn path that can lead other newbies into trouble. Like most such guides it contains a small amount of useful information but a lot of misleading stuff.

He even provides a link to a blog entry by an importing guru on the subject "How to avoid being scammed or ripped off", but he attributed the article to the wrong author. I doubt that he read the whole article, and certainly not the masses of complaints by people who responded. Those complaints show that the advice in that blog article would not solve their problems in dealing with suppliers on Alibaba.

It would take me too long to quote and correct all the misleading advice in the guide linked, and in the blog article, but you can learn a lot by reading through my AMA: GOLD Sharing my lifetime experience in export/import. Product sourcing specialist.

Walter
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Denim Chicken

Silver Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
222%
Jun 5, 2010
425
942
California
That guide is clearly written by an excited newbie. He has put a lot of work into it, but still treads the well-worn path that can lead other newbies into trouble. Like most such guides it contains a small amount of useful information but a lot of misleading stuff.

He even provides a link to a blog entry by an importing guru on the subject "How to avoid being scammed or ripped off", but he attributed the article to the wrong author. I doubt that he read the whole article, and certainly not the masses of complaints by people who responded. Those complaints show that the advice in that blog article would not solve their problems in dealing with suppliers on Alibaba.

It would take me too long to quote and correct all the misleading advice in the guide linked, and in the blog article, but you can learn a lot by reading through my AMA: GOLD Sharing my lifetime experience in export/import. Product sourcing specialist.

Walter

I think he was like a 16 or 17 year old when he wrote that. I happened to scroll past to his most recent update in 2016 and his conclusion was that the competition got fierce and next time he will fully revamp and launch a product that can benefit a solution not make minor tweaks.
 

pds

Bronze Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
132%
Apr 28, 2014
188
248
35
NYC
That guide is clearly written by an excited newbie. He has put a lot of work into it, but still treads the well-worn path that can lead other newbies into trouble. Like most such guides it contains a small amount of useful information but a lot of misleading stuff.

He even provides a link to a blog entry by an importing guru on the subject "How to avoid being scammed or ripped off", but he attributed the article to the wrong author. I doubt that he read the whole article, and certainly not the masses of complaints by people who responded. Those complaints show that the advice in that blog article would not solve their problems in dealing with suppliers on Alibaba.

It would take me too long to quote and correct all the misleading advice in the guide linked, and in the blog article, but you can learn a lot by reading through my AMA: GOLD Sharing my lifetime experience in export/import. Product sourcing specialist.

Walter

@Walter Hay - Thanks for pointing those out Walter. I was specifically referencing his guide on how to come up with product ideas since that is the hardest part IMO. When it comes to importing and dealing with suppliers, your thread and book are the go-to resource.
 

biophase

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
474%
Jul 25, 2007
9,121
43,261
Scottsdale, AZ
@Walter Hay - Thanks for pointing those out Walter. I was specifically referencing his guide on how to come up with product ideas since that is the hardest part IMO. When it comes to importing and dealing with suppliers, your thread and book are the go-to resource.

Actually that checklist for product selection is exactly the opposite of how I choose products.

You should use that checklist and the how not to choose your product because if you use that checklist then you end up with the same product as everyone else.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

undertheradar

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
161%
Jan 6, 2017
36
58
California
2) You can add an insert card, or a warranty card, or do anything that would compel the buyer to give you their email address. I'm not going to go through the specifics as there are so many. Just be creative, find a way to make them want to come to your website and sign up.


Hi Bio, I have not launched yet but after some thought, I believe my insert card is way too aggressive and the simple fact that it includes my website URL and email is unacceptable to Amazon.

Here's are the questionable lines I have:

"Have any questions or concerns, please shoot us an email at myemail@email.com" (Pretty sure this is not OK. Should I instead say "Contact us on Amazon"?)

"Stoked on our products and service? Leave an Amazon product review!" (I think this is ok?)

"For promotions and future discounts, join our e-mail community at www.mywebsite.com" (Pretty sure this is not OK, I'm just confused on how to gather emails without explicitly listing my email address)

"Facebook name, Instagram name, Pinterest name" (are social media links allowed?)

At the end of the day, I am trying to generate reviews, build an email list, promote my own website, and increase social media following. There are a lot of grey areas, and I know a large part making these decisions is risk tolerance. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts.
 

Denim Chicken

Silver Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
222%
Jun 5, 2010
425
942
California
I'd also be interested in hearing if you can put your website URL on an insert or a hang tag for things like warranty registration or free info or videos, etc.
 

Walter Hay

Legendary Contributor
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
401%
Sep 13, 2014
3,318
13,305
World citizen
I'd also be interested in hearing if you can put your website URL on an insert or a hang tag for things like warranty registration or free info or videos, etc.
Incorporating you URL or phone number as part of your label shouldn't worry Amazon.

Walter
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

amp0193

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
444%
May 27, 2013
3,639
16,159
United States
Hi Bio, I have not launched yet but after some thought, I believe my insert card is way too aggressive and the simple fact that it includes my website URL and email is unacceptable to Amazon.

Selling on Amazon with our own products, we are wearing two different hats.

For example:

Amp0193 the manufacturer

and

Amp0193 the 3rd-party merchant


Amp0193 the 3rd-party merchant is not allowed to communicate to the customer, to attempt to lead them off Amazon to another website. He is only supposed to communicate to customers through the Amazon message system about matters relating to their order, or requesting feedback/reviews.

On the other hand,

Amp0193 the manufacturer can put whatever the F*ck he wants in or on the box of the product. Website, warranty, insert cards, hang tags, product samples, catalogs, etc. Amp0193 the 3rd-party merchant had nothing to do with what Amp0193 the manufacturer put in his box. He's just selling the product that Amp0193 the manufacturer gave to him.


Would Amazon care if you sold a new iphone, and there was an Apple warranty card with links to apple.com, and an Apple instruction manual with links to apple.com? There's literally no difference between that scenario, and selling your own product.


Don't believe everything you read on Facebook.
 

Ronak

Gold Contributor
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
317%
Sep 13, 2013
573
1,814
I just got back from China after visiting my supplier. They all know you sell on Amazon. It's pointless to hide that fact. In fact if I was trying to hide that fact, my trip would've been much more difficult since we spent a lot of time looking at Amazon listings together.

Our meetings literally went like this, I would go to Amazon and type in the search term and some listings of pop up. I would scroll through the pictures and ask the factory if they could make this. They would click on the pictures and say yes we could make it. I would ask them how much they would quote me a price.

Then I would show them the FBA seller calculation page to show them how much commission and shipping Amazon charged.

One product they quoted me $24 I told them I would sell on Amazon for $70. We punched a similar product into the FBA calculator Amazon took $37 of commission and shipping. This is because the product is very large, over 3 feet. Because it is very large, shipping to my warehouse would cost a lot also and then shipping it to Amazon's warehouse would cost a lot. When I finished the calculation I ended up with a $1 profit. So I told them I can't import this product because there's no profit margin.

I explained to them the Amazon 18 inch oversize category and how amazon calculates shipping fees. They explained to me why the cost was $24 and a lot of it was due to wasted material due to the product dimensions.

So we came up with a plan to shorten my dimensions by 2 inches which greatly decreased the wasted material. This lowered the price of the product by five dollars bringing it down to $19. Still not the best but at least it's profitable now.

This is just an example of how being honest and transparent you can work with your factory and come up with solutions that will help you both.


I just got back from visiting one of my suppliers from China to find out that, yes, they have been selling the same item direct on Amazon for a few bucks less! They even copied my box design.

Needless to say, we will be switching suppliers, which may end up being a blessing in disguise. I ended up finding another supplier that will be doing a custom mold for us, and their quality will be better, but at a lower price.

I can't say I blame the guy for going direct, ultimately if your product can be knocked off, it's just a matter of time until someone does.

I still think this is rare, but as time goes on, more and more factories are finding out about the Amazon opportunity, and Amazon will continue to make it easier for factories to go direct. The long term solution is to have something protectable, whether through a patent, trademark, or something else.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

anthonyseoul

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
149%
Apr 16, 2017
45
67
38
London
This thread is absolutely golden! I've learned more valuable and actionable information on here than I ever did at university. I downloaded the whole thread onto my Kindle and just read and read. Thank you biophase for your insights, your wisdom and your precious time.

A quick question about selling on Amazon in the UK. Is it possible to focus solely on Amazon FBA UK and make this a viable business, or would it be better to (eventually) reach the much larger US market? Or perhaps the UK market is a little less saturated than the US and is more favourable in some ways.

I'd like to get biophase's take on this, as well as anyone else who has experience in both markets.

Thank you!
 

amp0193

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Fastlane!
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
444%
May 27, 2013
3,639
16,159
United States
A quick question about selling on Amazon in the UK. Is it possible to focus solely on Amazon FBA UK and make this a viable business, or would it be better to (eventually) reach the much larger US market? Or perhaps the UK market is a little less saturated than the US and is more favourable in some ways.

From friend's experiences with U.K. - It's really grown a lot and I think you could have a viable business only being on Amazon U.K. And yes, like you said, less saturated and more opportunity.

Plus, you can also easily sell in Germany/France, and fulfill from the same U.K. inventory.
 
Last edited:

hatzil

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
84%
Nov 29, 2015
80
67
Israel
Do I have an unrealistic demand from my supplier?

I want to drop ship from a Chinese supplier. I own a Shopify store, and I want to do the following:
Whenever a customer makes a purchase, I want to deliver that order to the supplier. Now only when there's a purchase, the supplier print my brand label & custom design and then ship it to the consumer. ( to cut down manufacturing unnecessary products )

How is expected to pay extra for this kind of service?
For example, a hat that usually cost 0.5$ to manufacture- if it will cost 1.5$ to manufacture and drop-ship it only after an order is received, is it sound fair?
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

chabs

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
233%
May 4, 2017
12
28
31
Sydney, Australia
Hi Biophase, really nice to see this thread and learn from all your knowledge!

If you had a cashflow+ bricks and mortar retail store with stable turn over/profit, that has been operating for quite some time, but you really need to grow its online presence to boost both sales and attention online: ie. selling online & bringing people in-store, how would you best get online and really get in front of people? A little info that might be relevant:

Things that are mixed challenges/potential upside
  • Based in Syd: Australia, so no Amazon yet, though Amazon is coming very soon (they are shopping for warehouse space now)
  • High price items are sold, items that people usually want to see in person (Bathroom fittings & fixtures, tiles for floors, etc), so for example, a $900 vanity will not likely have someone commit to purchase online unless they are already familiar with how it looks, its quality and trust the online brand.
  • Competition online is quite frustrating as a retail store, there are discount places that specialise in online & already getting lots of online traffic and sales.. This makes it hard to both compete online with high overheads - with a nice showroom & staff members -
  • Putting up cheap prices online can often mean shooting oneself in the foot: a lot of our customers come from trade referrals and having discounted prices online erodes instore margins for our builder's customer selections if they checked out our website first.
  • Our industry very frequently has people who buy once, and rarely again: this means little brand knowledge, probably a lot of learning online, very likely to get shopped, need to get face to face for big sales, etc.
  • I absolutely suck with selling/marketing online, the industry is quite unique in that you are unlikely to have people shopping for your stuff often, unless they are a builder/trade/architect/designer/etc.. I know how to approach these potential regular customers offline, but am unsure how to work with what they are online!

Advantages we have:

  • We are building a new "brand" through private labelling some popular products.
  • We are able to purchase private labelled goods in containers through suppliers - and have already begun with a container of toilets & a container of baths; scope to purchase a lot more private labelled containers.
  • We have a lot of warehouse space to commit to a few more containers
  • There is scope to sell more of the private branded stuff through offline channels, ie. builders/trade/large purchase customers.
  • We have access to some excellent rates with some brands, including some high end brands that allows us to still make margin with some online items sold, although if we were to consistently do that I would have to consider a sub-brand to prevent cannibalism of sales
  • Our showroom is very unique and has a wide competitive advantage in our geographical area, however because we are not a "household name" in the area, we lose potential customers because a lot of people simply don't know of us! We have heard many times the words "wish i had known of you sooner!"

Hope my description of our situation isn' long! I am lost for how to boost online presence.. so far what has worked is simply increasing the amount of products on our online store, and this is very marginal. I feel like the "big dogs" online in our niche are not really that big! I feel like there is a lot of scope to get to the level they are at with the right actions in only about 1-2 years, however I have no idea how or who to ask.. E.g. one competitor who is doing a substantial amount of online sales is getting approx 10 000 uniques per month, we are up to about 1 000 uniques per month, his website isn't even that nice nor is his strategy, he is just more entrenched in google's SEO, googles "shop" and has discount prices on everything!
 

Millenial_Kid5K1

Bronze Contributor
Read Unscripted!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
261%
Feb 14, 2017
155
404
35
Atlanta
I was on Amazon looking at my future competitors in the space I'm about to enter, and I noticed that the main manufacturer I'm looking at is one of the Amazon sellers. I'm currently in the process of approving final samples prior to a test order of 1000 pcs, but should I run the other way? They already have my CAD drawings and everything necessary to create the product. My gut says that the first to market with this particular design will have a huge advantage, though the manufacturer is unlikely to know this since they're in the space and don't seem to have a good comprehension of what the target demographic is looking for.

Tell me if this plan sounds reasonable: I go ahead with launch, kill them in branding, and look for a new manufacturer to source it as fast as I can.
 

Jimmy Holster

New Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
63%
May 4, 2017
8
5
Melbourne, Australia
I just saw this company giveaway at least 200 products because they went from zero to reviews to 70 to 150 to 220 in the span of 4 days.?
Sorry I am new to Amazon, how do you give away stock on Amazon
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.
Last edited:

biophase

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
474%
Jul 25, 2007
9,121
43,261
Scottsdale, AZ
Do I have an unrealistic demand from my supplier?

I want to drop ship from a Chinese supplier. I own a Shopify store, and I want to do the following:
Whenever a customer makes a purchase, I want to deliver that order to the supplier. Now only when there's a purchase, the supplier print my brand label & custom design and then ship it to the consumer. ( to cut down manufacturing unnecessary products )

How is expected to pay extra for this kind of service?
For example, a hat that usually cost 0.5$ to manufacture- if it will cost 1.5$ to manufacture and drop-ship it only after an order is received, is it sound fair?

Yes this would be annoying. They don't have 100 hats laying around in their factory. They make 1000 hats and ship them out.

They arent going to grab a hat off of a shelf and then running through the stitching machine to put your brand on it and then charge you the same cost as running 1000 hats in a assembly line.

That's why you pay more money for lower quantities. In your case a quantity of 1 with custom work would be a pain.
 

secondhanddog

Contributor
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
176%
Oct 12, 2015
45
79
Australia
Love the thread, so much gold.

After trying to get product samples of out of an italian factory, I went straight to alibaba where I had a couple different gold level manufacturers do design of my bad drawings with the materials I wanted. Just having the samples made now.

MOQ is a pain at over 300, would like to get 10-20 items per colour for the first order to test the market. Would you recommend offering higher per item cost for a lower MOQ after the samples arrive?
 

Mark_A

New Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
50%
Oct 26, 2016
2
1
32
Hi @biophase ,

First, I would like to thank you for all the great information.

I am thinking a bit ahead but want to make sure I make the right decision.

If I create an LLC for a niche, lets say in the kitchen category and few months later come up with a great idea for a cell phone case. Would you create a new LLC for cell phone accessories? I read the posts on being able to open a second account on Amazon but what if I find a third, fourth, etc product in different areas.

Would creating a general corp name lets say PRODUCTS INC and having your different branded categories all under that name be a bad idea?

Thank you in advance
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Pershing

Bronze Contributor
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
424%
Jan 25, 2012
34
144
42
Love the thread, so much gold.

After trying to get product samples of out of an italian factory, I went straight to alibaba where I had a couple different gold level manufacturers do design of my bad drawings with the materials I wanted. Just having the samples made now.

MOQ is a pain at over 300, would like to get 10-20 items per colour for the first order to test the market. Would you recommend offering higher per item cost for a lower MOQ after the samples arrive?
I suppose you're looking for clothing.

You can try Romania and other countries from eastern Europe. I'm from Italy and a lot of italian companies buy from factories based in those countries
 

Alex89

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
57%
Oct 30, 2012
35
20
34
Hi @biophase thanks for the AMA.

Can you sell on Amazon with FBA and then somehow still bring the customer back to your shop through a discount code in the box or something else?

I think it's not allowed, but if we can't get the customer for life, then Amazon can't be the long-term plan, right?

Thanks in advance.
 

Millenial_Kid5K1

Bronze Contributor
Read Unscripted!
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
261%
Feb 14, 2017
155
404
35
Atlanta
I'm 80% through this thread and I just wanted to say a massive THANK YOU to @biophase for providing a TREMENDOUS amount of value on this forum. I'm sure there are probably tens or hundreds of successful entrepreneurs who wouldn't exist without the major value add you bring to the forum. Big Rep++, I hope I can thank you in person if we're ever at a summit together or you do the mentorship program again.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

biophase

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
474%
Jul 25, 2007
9,121
43,261
Scottsdale, AZ
Love the thread, so much gold.

After trying to get product samples of out of an italian factory, I went straight to alibaba where I had a couple different gold level manufacturers do design of my bad drawings with the materials I wanted. Just having the samples made now.

MOQ is a pain at over 300, would like to get 10-20 items per colour for the first order to test the market. Would you recommend offering higher per item cost for a lower MOQ after the samples arrive?

I don't think the issue is cost. Depending on the product, it's just not cost effective to run a small batch. I would go 3-4 colors at most. But getting from 300 down to 20 is probably not going to happen. Also 20 is probably too low a number for you to really test anything and gather any info. Why don't you do 50 of each color?
 

biophase

Legendary Contributor
FASTLANE INSIDER
EPIC CONTRIBUTOR
Read Unscripted!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
474%
Jul 25, 2007
9,121
43,261
Scottsdale, AZ
Hi @biophase ,

First, I would like to thank you for all the great information.

I am thinking a bit ahead but want to make sure I make the right decision.

If I create an LLC for a niche, lets say in the kitchen category and few months later come up with a great idea for a cell phone case. Would you create a new LLC for cell phone accessories? I read the posts on being able to open a second account on Amazon but what if I find a third, fourth, etc product in different areas.

Would creating a general corp name lets say PRODUCTS INC and having your different branded categories all under that name be a bad idea?

Thank you in advance

I would create a different LLC and open a second Amazon account.

However, for you, since you are asking a question like this. I would recommend you stay in the first category and expand it rather than chasing a new shiny cell phone case in a few months. Concentrate on one thing.
 

Post New Topic

Please SEARCH before posting.
Please select the BEST category.

Post new topic

Guest post submissions offered HERE.

Latest Posts

New Topics

Fastlane Insiders

View the forum AD FREE.
Private, unindexed content
Detailed process/execution threads
Ideas needing execution, more!

Join Fastlane Insiders.

Top