I have an LLC. How do I pay taxes? Entrepreneur |
- I have an LLC. How do I pay taxes?
- Can anyone explain what the recently passed tax bill will do for those who own an LLC?
- Did You Consider These Three Factors Before Choosing Your Business Name?
- I have an unincorporated small business. How do I pay taxes?
- Are restaurants that use services like "Just Eat" locked into a non-complete clause?
- How do I reach more decision-makers in my niche, EDM festival producers?
- Tips and suggestions for my first online store?
- Anyone had or heard of success with Reddit Self-Serve ads leading to sales/conversions? Only seen positive outcome with branding campaigns
- Mobile app development studio website. Any honest feedback is welcome.
- Website is almost completed, what else do I need to do before launching my business?
- Instagram question for a news website in a nieche
- I want to increase the price for my service. What should I notice?
- I finally got my idea
- 3 Ways virtual Reality Is Changing How We Do Business
- Anyone knows of any cheap virtual office address / mailing address?
- Any benefits of licensing a business before the end of the year?
- Becoming an affiliate for Walmart or even Amazon - help.
- UPDATE: We studied Blue Apron to figure out how to ship Maryland crabs to your home
- Are there any courses online worth getting that would help me with my Shopify store?
- Instagram accounts
- Free resources for entrepreneur on google drive and an idea to build an app on it together
- Should you tailor your content to each platform?
- Looking to get custom hand painted oil portraits done
- Looking for marketing specialist/investor
I have an LLC. How do I pay taxes? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 04:25 AM PST I made $50K since July. Haven't paid anything yet. How do I do this the right way? [link] [comments] |
Can anyone explain what the recently passed tax bill will do for those who own an LLC? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 06:29 AM PST |
Did You Consider These Three Factors Before Choosing Your Business Name? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 12:25 AM PST A business or brand name is the linguistic part of a business: It is spoken, as well as heard and seen. A business name introduces a business; it represents all that the business stands for, and should therefore be strategically formed so as to earn its place in the daily vocabularies of customers/clients. Being professional naming consultants, we have seen several business names that fell below standard as a result of the insensitivity of some business owners to consider few important factors before finally settling for their business names. The following factors are worth considering if you must come up with a business name that would resonate well with your target audience as well as stand the test of time. [1]. Sound Symbolism This basically talks about the visual associations the words that form your business name carry. In other words, a winning business name will have some visual element in it. When you look at your business name, what image does it create in your mind? Does the name even have any visual element at all? For example, a name like CoffeeHour quickly creates the picture of a coffee shop that serves coffee at a particular time of the day. Another example is Fiverr where two words are incorporated into the name ('Five' and 'Dollar') so that when you think of Fiverr, what comes to your mind is a platform where you can buy and sell five-dollar services. This is the visual element! Your brand name should be able to create some awesome images about your brand in the minds of your clients. Your potential clients should see your uniqueness, understand your brand personality and be willing to be identified with your unique business story through your name. Your customers should be able to visualize your brand image and get connected to you through your brand name. [2]. Memorability A quality business name should be memorable and be made easy for people to say and spell. Yes, having a catchy name is good but if your brand name is constantly misspelled and not pronounced correctly, you are indirectly raising a red flag about your business! Examples that readily come to mind are Twitter and Google. These brand names are catchy as well as memorable. Since your goal is to attract customers to your business and your product, making it difficult for them to spell or pronounce your name gives them an impression that they are not needed and this might make you lose them to your competitors. And you know this could be costly. To them (customers) it means you are simply telling them to "look" or "go elsewhere." You will make your business or brand very attractive to your potential clients when you make them feel comfortable when spelling and pronouncing your brand name. However, this does not mean you should ignore the choice of having a catchy name; you just have to make sure it is also memorable and easy to pronounce. Remember, you want to win as many customers as possible. [3]. Positive Connotation A connotative meaning is either positive, neutral or negative. However, you would love to present your business in a positive way (not the other way round). And one of the best ways to do this is through your name! What kind of meaning does your business name have? Or may be you did not even think this is crucial to the way your potential clients would perceive your business. The CocaCola's Sprite and the Verizon, an American telecommunications company, are two good examples. Sprite (a name developed by Lippincott) was to be marketed as something refreshing, lively and energetic, while Verizon (also created by Lippincott) suggested a reliable and forward-thinking company. These names carry with them some positive meaning. The word mom or dad tends to connote closeness, friendship sense of care and openness that flow from a mother or father to their children; whereas the word mother or father tends to present a neutral, generic meaning. A good business name should not have neither neutral nor generic meaning. Rather, the meaning should be positive and emotional. As emotional beings, we are easily connected to something that speaks to our emotions. We are often favourably disposed to whatever it is that appeals to our emotions, quickly. A good business name should be able to do this. What kind of meaning does your brand name portray? How do people feel when they see or come across your brand name? This factor may influence the action they would take concerning your business or product: deciding to transact with you or choosing to go elsewhere. Your brand name should create some positive feeling about your brand and should resonate with your target audience's emotional needs. Considering these three factors before choosing a brand name will definitely work to your business' favour, now or later. Do you have any questions for us as regards this topic? We'll be glad to answer them. Thanks for reading. [link] [comments] |
I have an unincorporated small business. How do I pay taxes? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 12:29 PM PST Hi all. Following up on the LLC's question. I'm nervous that I'm going to get destroyed in tax season and need to act now to avoid getting destroyed in tax season. I figure there must be a lot of us out there who conduct business without technically being one. I'm co-owner of a business that isn't incorporated and that's taken in roughly 35k rev since it was founded about a year ago. Of this revenue apprx 80% has been profit. I'm a student, so a lot of my personal income has gone to tuition and other living expenses. What do I need to do today to not get schlocked tomorrow? Sorry for the somewhat redundant post to the currently hot LLC one; I evaluated the thread juice over there as running low and thought I'd start me own. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Are restaurants that use services like "Just Eat" locked into a non-complete clause? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 10:11 AM PST Just wondering if businesses that partner with services like Just Eat, Uber Eats, etc, are locked into a non-compete clause? Aka no other service based businesses like Just Eat could come and offer a similar service. [link] [comments] |
How do I reach more decision-makers in my niche, EDM festival producers? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 08:39 AM PST Hey guys, quick background: I cofounded a startup called Gymsurfing that was acquired by ClassPass a couple years ago. Decided I hate tech and will never make an iPhone app again :) Now I am the cofounder of a touring stage called Heavy Meta. We are a 30 foot-long fire-breathing dragon stage with a beefy soundsystem, two flame effects, and a team of vikings that travel with us to events. You can see photos and videos on our Instagram. We have done about 15 events since June, including some bigger festivals like Elements NYC, and played host to Diplo at Burning Man. However, we haven't had much luck with events like EDC, Mad Decent Block Party, Bonnaroo, Electric Forest etc. I am pretty much in charge of sales for the dragon, but I feel like this might a job for an agent of some kind. How do we get an agent? Or does anybody have any ideas for how we can get in front of more festival promoters? Maybe EDM trade shows? Related, how can I get in front of EDM festival production managers in a way that has them coming to me, instead of cold contacting all of these festivals? [link] [comments] |
Tips and suggestions for my first online store? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 08:29 AM PST Good afternoon everyone, 2 days ago I launched my first online store: www.hothattrends.com where I'm selling dad hats. It started as a school project that grew into something a little bigger. I've made 2 sales so far (not including myself). It's been about half a semesters worth of theorizing and planning, and about 2/3 weeks of actual work. In 6 months I'd like to see the site with an unbeatable selection of hats and if I'm not making a profit I'd like to at least break even. What does the website say to you when you visit? any suggestions [link] [comments] |
Posted: 02 Dec 2017 10:23 AM PST |
Mobile app development studio website. Any honest feedback is welcome. Posted: 02 Dec 2017 07:37 AM PST A few months ago, me and a colleague of mine decided to start our own mobile app development company. I specialize in iOS & Backend development and he is specializing more in Android development but we both have knowledge of the other platforms, so we kind of complement each other. We also have a partner for mobile app designs, wireframes etc, plus we cooperate with other colleagues if the workload demands for more developers. I will try in another post explain how we started and our first results. However, before that, we would really appreciate any honest feedback on our site. Please take into consideration the following:
Our website is https://www.pulsify.io Thank you in advance :) [link] [comments] |
Website is almost completed, what else do I need to do before launching my business? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:44 AM PST Trigger finger is getting itchy, but I'm also nervous. What am I forgetting? Feel free to evaluate my website. -LLC, EIN, Operating Agreement, and all tax stuff is set up and ready to go, as well as waivers and contracts. -Client testimonial is filmed and premiered on front page
-Facebook page is set up and flushed with some pre-made videos but not yet published ( waiting to launch to release to our current social networks) -Instagram is set up with a few basic posts to start -Blog is flushed with a few posts to provide content -Mailchimp is set up with basic newsletter campaign. -Stripe is set up, and I THINK ready to accept payments. I haven't done any post- transaction HTML or MailChimp letters yet -Setmore account is ready for booking Free Consultations. -AD CAMPAIGNS - I've researched my target market (mostly females, educated, younger self-improving individuals that value a good price and quality connection) but have not yet set up any Google, FB, or IG ads. Do I have these ready to go AT launch or wait until I get Social Validation from my current network? Or before? [link] [comments] |
Instagram question for a news website in a nieche Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:33 AM PST I have been posting arcticle images with a summary + link to my 500 followers(growing slow and steady, been running the website for a month now) every hour 24/7 however does that seem too much content? Post only the best articles? Also should i do like other news website that post videos of their news stories? Start up a youtube channel to cover more of the nieche? Make it interesting like top stories for today / for the week? How would you grow a news website? I don't run any ads for now. [link] [comments] |
I want to increase the price for my service. What should I notice? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:28 AM PST So, I used to do business at my home. Later I want to expand it so I have to rent some place, and then I increase the price to make up the rent. What I noticed, is that pretty much all of the customer are okay with the higher price, even if some of them already use the service at the lower price. That kinda struck me, if I increase the price for the service I provide at my home, I'll make an even bigger profit. So Im thinking about doing this, but I kinda worry about losing customers. Since my rate rightnow are already pretty profitable actually. But I think a little more money wouldnt hurt. So what do you guy think? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:02 AM PST I want to make a website that connects you to random people and you can video chat with them (There's more detail but I just don't want to throw my idea out there). My question is: how do I get somebody to code the website for me? Or is it better if I learn how to code myself? [link] [comments] |
3 Ways virtual Reality Is Changing How We Do Business Posted: 02 Dec 2017 11:37 AM PST This post: 3 Ways virtual Reality Is Changing How We Do Business just highlights a few of the many ways on how VR is impacting our business and our lives. What are some other ways you've either already seen or know will be coming our way soon? [link] [comments] |
Anyone knows of any cheap virtual office address / mailing address? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 06:29 AM PST Hi all, I'm currently subscribing to iPostal1.com for to buy a mailing address in the US, and I just realized that in order to discard mail items, I need to fill in some notary forms and it costs US$79 per signature and I need two, so it's US$79 * 2! This is madness. And if I don't submit the forms, I can't discard the mail items and they're charging me an additional month of storage fee in addition to the monthly fee I'm paying! I'm looking for good alternatives. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Any benefits of licensing a business before the end of the year? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 10:05 AM PST I am currently working on laying out the plans for a business but was wondering if there would be any benefits to going ahead and licensing the business before the end of the year. As I am in the early stages There will not be any revenue this year and the license is renewed every 2 years. [link] [comments] |
Becoming an affiliate for Walmart or even Amazon - help. Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:42 AM PST So my idea was to sign up for some sort of affiliate program and then start to advertise a ceratin product for one of these companies. My struggle is HOW and HOW I can achieve this idea. I think it would be a great opportunity to help them out and also make some cash money. I would be advertising technology products, something very popular around Christmas time. Please fill me in on anything prier knowledge I should have. [link] [comments] |
UPDATE: We studied Blue Apron to figure out how to ship Maryland crabs to your home Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:38 AM PST We have come a long way since our first post (6 months ago), here! I plan to continue updating our progress every 6 months, highlighting our mistakes and our hits in hopes your can utilize some ideas to help your ecommerce and the difficult business that is fresh (24 hours) perishable shipping. Who we are: https://www.cameronsseafood.com/in 1985 my Dad and Uncle started the Maryland Seafood business and today it does $20 million in gross revenue each year. We sell raw and cooked seafood, and prepared dishes at 14 locations — 11 storefronts and three trucks — We have over 1,000,000 customers in the Baltimore-Washington-Philadelphia market. On June 24th 2017 my cousin and I started the nationwide home shipping business as a separate entity. The operation is run by me, my wife, dad, uncle, brother, cousin and 60 employees. I have no ownership in the stores, food trucks, and franchises. My uncle owns and handles all that. My Background: the business was named after me in 1985 as I am the oldest son of 6 children. My main business is apartment brokerage and investing. I have been a MD, DC, and VA broker for 17 years www.idealrealty.com. I sell 100+ unit complexes to institutions and high net-worth individuals. Coolest Online Customers: Gilbert Arenas and Mia Khalifa What seafood do we sell online: Virtually everything but, 85% of sales are Maryland crabs, Maryland crab cakes, Maryland crab soups, and Free shipping samplers. What we do: we ship freshly cooked Maryland Blue Crabs, Crab cakes and seafood to your door in 24 hours after being caught in the Chesapeake Bay, Maryland. We send you seafood that is 3 days fresher than the grocery store. Btw, we accept bitcoin! Where do we get our Seafood? Chesapeake Bay, Maryland for Maryland products, using our own crabbers and contracted crabbers over the past 32 years. Although our COGS is 30%, shipping with 1-2 day delivery is very expensive, with the packaging materials outweighing the FedEx fees. We ship it fresh with Snow/King crab legs, soft shells (in off-season) and lobster tails being the items we ship frozen. Some items we receive frozen like Bee Gee shrimp from Louisiana. We are True Blue Certified, meaning In order to be True Blue certified, participating food service establishments commit that at least 75% of their annual crab usage will be from Maryland harvested or processed crabs. Startup Leverage: We do have some amazing advantages and you should tab into yours: 1) We don't pay rent because we operate out of my uncles seafood headquarters. 2) We don't need employees to handle extra orders (my partners handles up to 50 orders a day by himself) because we can use our existing employees. 4) We don't have "employees" we contract existing employees meaning you don't have to pay 15% tax 3) We don't have food spoilage because we buy only what we need from our the stores each morning. Online Profit Margins: We aim for 35% gross margins with our cost of goods sold at 30%. However, packaging and shipping costs wipe out most of it while paid-advertisement has wiped out the rest leaving us with 10% gross for the first 6 months. 1) We eliminated AdWords since our ROI/customer acquisition costs were too high. 2) We reduced all packaging costs through trial and error. We eliminated anything not necessary then negotiated each material with three vendors. You need to create a bidding war. 3) We negotiated shipping rates by switching vendors 3x. We formed a strategic partnership to tab into their FedEx account. With a growing customer base we are on track to hit 30% gross next year but it's possible to hit 40% and 10% net. Free Shipping Model: We offer free shipping to 29 states (1-2 day zones through FedEx ground network) when a customer spends over $200. Since our average order is $160 we think that's a solid minimum order. We offer flat-rate air shipping everywhere else. National shipping is $94.99 or $79.99 when they spend $200+. We offer many free shipping sampler combos to local and regional customers. It's too expensive to ship nationally without ridiculous pricing. That's ok, if we can capitalize on the 29 ground states we will hit our $20,000,000 number. We don't make any money on shipping, and I wish we could. Shipping page. Chargeback Fraud: people are creative and fraud has cost us thousands We cannot require signatures on shipments without incurring a $4.50 fee and what if the person isn't home? FedEx will return the box to their hub subjecting it to transit issues and spoilage. A lot of our customers order our food as gifts so the billing and shipping don't match. We learned you can get expensive software that charges a per transaction fee. It's only worth if at higher volume but you can do your own fraud detection. For example, look up the shipping address in google maps. Google the person and look for articles about them to show they live in the state. Modify your payment processor's security features so you can monitor the results. We noted most fraudsters order our frozen items (to store or resell them) so we carefully review each frozen order with wide eyes. Losses: We have made many errors totaling $15,000. Shipping wrong items, missing items, item arrives late or spoiled, gel packs melt, things happen. The important thing is to address the root cause, which helped us lower our losses rate from 15% down to 5% with a 3% goal in mind for 2018. Shipping – pin FedEx vs UPS and save money. Make sure the "rates" include a residential fee and fuel fees. Also know like new credit cards they will give you introductory rates that eventually run out and use your monthly sales volume to adjust up/down. Negotiate longer into rate periods if you can! UPS offers insurance on the entire sale and will grant 25% off next day air on any bad deliveries and charge $1.80 per $100 but there is a catch. Your customers need to provide you photo proofs, and UPS has to be at fault to receive a claim (late delivery which occurs less than 1%) or a forgetting to deliver. However, UPS has abysmal Saturday ground delivery networks as it's new as of August 2017 when FedEx has the entire network open. UPS has a smaller ground delivery range that FedEx too. No brainer for us, we chose FedEx. We don't take insurance because it's a loss. This will depend on your line of business. Packaging Perishables – we reverse engineered Blue Apron and competitors to figure out how to ship fresh (and live) seafood. It also teaches you where to find suppliers (use manufacturers not resellers as they have a markup). Call them and form relationships. Gel Packs: It takes 5 weeks to properly freeze a gel pack! I thought our business was doomed when I learned this because how can I store that many gel packs and replenish them within my walk-in freezer? Solution: we pay for pre-frozen ones and have pallets stored at -10. We learned this from ordering from Blue Apron and calling the gel pack manufacturer. Boxes: to ship perishable seafood you probably need an insulated cooler and corrugated box kit. Since we started, we reduced costs by 30% by searching for a manufacturer (not a distributor) that can cut costs and store surplus for us. Costs include freight so find someone local within 1-2 hours of your HQ. Customer Service: We sell seafood but we are in the customer service business. We are open 7 days per week and either I or my brother will answer your phone calls (888-404-7454 x1). Our competitors are only open 5-days per week. We offer cash refunds and reshipments on any customer complaint. Our competitors may give you a credit on your next order…The customer is always right and we ensure 100% satisfaction guaranteed. This has converted customers to repeat customers. We treat each customer as we want to be treated. Give a little, get a lot. Website: I know you think I am biased because my wife created our site from scratch but she did an amazing job for her first ecommerce site! We modify content daily and advertise to our email list once per week with discount codes. This would have cost me $10,000 to $30,000 with all the changes we have made. It's constantly evolving and the project never ends. Find a good partner that will grow with you. No 3rd party will put in the passion a strategic partner could offer. Try offering a lower hourly rate but give them a piece of the action for the difference. Advertising: The best advertisement for us has been word-of-mouth. We carry 5-star reviews on Facebook but getting satisfied customers to review is hard (after a sale they receive an email asking them to rate their experience). We thought about offering a coupon but it feels like a bribe. We do offer a coupon once someone abandons their cart to remarket. We send out weekly coupons via mailing list and we offer weekly storewide specials (the real savings happen when you sign up). Social media is free, get good at it. Learn which outlets suit your business. For us, Facebook and Instagram work whereas Twitter has no traction. I learned ads on social media don't convert. Nobody wants to be spammed ads. They want to discuss a topic and engage on pictures, videos, and education about your field. They will find a way to buy from you. Instead of offering a coupon teach them a recipe, explain why a Maryland Crab is the world's best crab (in the Chesapeake Bay, due to the specific climate, the Blue Crabs lie dormant for 6 months and form a layer of fat on their meat which gives them a their sweat buttery flavor!). You see, that's interesting! When you post ask yourself how will this engage an audience? You want to advertise? Then try doing giveaways using www.gleam.io, which has amazing social networking tools to spread the word. Facebook is another animal where most of our success has been through remarketing. Currently, we are brainstorming both organic and paid Facebook ideas…I'm open to any suggestions. Getting customers to your homepage is the hardest part. Once they get there, your site has to convert them. When we started, we used Adwords to bring attention to our product pages but we had no other supportive information to convert them. We recrafted each page to stand on its own (assuming they never leave that page) and doubled our conversion rates! We outsource our SEO/AdWords to a company that we learned about through our first Reddit Post. SEO can take at least 6+ months to build up your keywords on the rankings list. You need to be on the 1st page or you won't convert traffic. We started with most organic keyword rankings on the 64th page and are have almost all of our keywords now on the 3rd page. By February most of our keywords should be on the 1st page! Many things went into this including getting quality backlinks, blogging 6 times per month with SEO rich content, carefully titling each page, section, and product; and Keyword/URL optimization. Adwords: We foolishly spent $42,000 on AdWords and ended our campaign with $37 cost per conversion and 186.29% ROI, which doesn't allow us to make profit during the off-season (crabs are seasonal from April to November) so we will try again in Q2, 2018. Influencers: overall this hasn't been profitable. We have social media influencers with 100k+ dedicated seafood/food followers whereby we grant them a vanity link and discount but it hasn't worked. We belong to several influencer networks were they receive 8% for posting banner adds, this has only brought in $10,000… Mia Khalifa: We reached out to Mia as she has the strongest influences (4m+ followers) for a Maryland native that loves our seafood. We sent her food and she spent a week hyping the brand including social media posts, PMs and featured a Twitch episode about Cameron's. Definitely drove tremendous traffic although we can only ship to the USA due the transit time lag of customs. We look forward to working more with her. Gilbert Arenas: I'm a huge Gilbert and Wizards fan! He replied to Mia's post and a PM worked to get his interest. He is a real character and orders a lot of our seafood each month. He love the high-protein variety that (Maryland) seafood provides. Chicken and vegetables does get boring. Washington Post: We were featured in the Washington Post on Dec 1st, see here. They did a good job summarizing our business so far. We have also been featured in Forbes, New York Times, Huffington Post and more. How? I googled the food reviewer from each of the above and figured out their contact info. Sent them a 2-line email asking them to review our food and boom! Videos We started sharing videos of the entire process so you can see the experience before you risk order fresh seafood online. We plan to continue posting new videos in 2018 and I'd love feedback on what you would like to see? Resteam Maryland Crabs (gif recipe style) 2018 Goals
Please provide us any feedback or ideas. We want to get better and need your help. Discount code "holiday" will save you 10% on all order and we accept Bitcoin! [link] [comments] |
Are there any courses online worth getting that would help me with my Shopify store? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 01:52 AM PST Preferably ones that aren't to expensive. Are they worth getting and if so why? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 02 Dec 2017 09:14 AM PST I have about 25 Instagram accounts with followers ranging from 3k-12k in various niches. I wanted to see if any of you guys know where I could sell them? [link] [comments] |
Free resources for entrepreneur on google drive and an idea to build an app on it together Posted: 02 Dec 2017 08:37 AM PST Hi all, First, here is what is promised in the title. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1GeVeGDrVV4SrB5zLjM_mjWsQ-NPmcFHgu7qdNc2rMqQ/edit#gid=1895242373 Next, I am building an app rating and reviewing site from that openly available data on a google spreadsheet, which I am adding on every hour. Now, I need your input on the idea itself, the way I am building it and on how to proceed.
With that, I hope to hear from you in either this forum or on the spreadsheet. Thanks, all. oh here is the link to the project. http://tolothere.com [link] [comments] |
Should you tailor your content to each platform? Posted: 02 Dec 2017 08:25 AM PST Sure you run a photography brand. You wouldn't post the same content on your facebook as you would on Instagram. For one, Instagram is wayyyy more widely adopted by youth (15-25) year olds & therefore the content should be optimized to entice THOSE people to your business. Similarly, if your brand is heavily catering to Instagram audience with youth relevant posts, your facebook should cater to the more mature audience on facebook (25-45) Do you guys agree with this theory? What has it been like for you and what's been most effective in your experience? Would love to hear your opinions [link] [comments] |
Looking to get custom hand painted oil portraits done Posted: 02 Dec 2017 08:16 AM PST Yes, I know it's a saturated space but I am having trouble finding places that can do custom hand painted oil portraits for a good price. Current prices I am seeing is around $65 for a 30 x 40 cm (one figure) custom oil painting. I know a lot of people outsource to Dafen village but if anyone knows any businesses in Dafen village with good prices, let me know. [link] [comments] |
Looking for marketing specialist/investor Posted: 02 Dec 2017 07:17 AM PST I'm looking for a business man, specialist in marketing, for a partnership in an online gambling business, very easy to work with. Essentially i need help with mentoring and how to advertise my product correctly. [link] [comments] |
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