HOW TO MAKE BIG MONEY WITH YOUR OWN NEWSPAPER CLIPPING SERVICE
This is a very lucrative business, and it's growing in demand and
popularity. There are thousands of people in all parts of the world
who are making hundreds of dollars each week, just reading and clipping
news items in the privacy of their own homes!
The press-clipping business is very much misunderstood by most people,
and therefore there are a lot of people who are very skeptical about
it as a way for ordinary people to make extra money at home. If you
explain to friends or neighbors that you
operate a press clipping business, most of them will think you pore
through the obituaries, funeral notices, and wedding announcements.
Clipping these out and sending them to the people or relatives of the
people being written about.
In reality, this is but a very small part of the home-based newspaper
clipping service. The really successful press clipping services have
contracts with companies and organizations that want to keep current
on any number of matter reported in the papers.
Some companies hire clipping services in order to keep track of what
their competitors are doing. Other companies, including businesses
of all kinds, use clipping services as a means of locating sales leads
and new customers. National magazines and
newspapers are always in need of different or interesting material,
and frequently employ home-based clipping services.
To set yourself up in this kind of business, you'll need only a pair
of scissors and as many different newspapers and magazines as you can
subscribe to. A visit to your local library should be most informative
relative to newspapers and magazines available to subscribers.
You should also visit your local wholesale paper house, or make a
deal with your local stationery store to buy labels at a discount price.
You'll want to attach these labels to the top of each clipping you
send to your clients. On these labels, you'll want to print the name
of the publication the clipping came from, and the date it appeared,
as well as your own name and address.
The next step is simply to start clipping articles that mention or
talk about specific companies or people. File your clippings in envelopes
or boxes according to industries or types of businesses, by company
name, and according to the names of the people mentioned.
Once you have ten or more clippings that talk about a particular company
or person, put them in an envelope and send them to that company's
owner or public relations director. You should include a short note
with the clippings, explaining your service and your fee.
You should try to get your clients to agree to pay you a monthly "reader's
fee," for which you agree to look for anything in the newspaper about
him or his company or industry. Every time you spot such an article,
you of course clip it and send it to him. A minimum monthly "reader's
fee" is usually about $25, but it can vary according to the number
of publications you read, and the number of clipping found.
Generally, a clipping service that scans statewide publications will
charge about $50 per client, or $100 per client for those wanting clippings
from national publications. These fees, of course, are monthly fees,
and you can easily see how you could make some very good money with
just 20 to 25 clients.
To promote and build your business, you can scan your local business
services directory and send out a solicitation letter to each of those
listed. A couple of days after you've posted your sales letter, you
should follow up with a phone call.
A short, to-the-point ad under "Business Personals" in your daily
newspaper will also bring in new clients for you. And as soon as you
can afford it, go with at least a small display ad in the yellow pages
of your telephone directory.
You should definitely contact the public relations firms, advertising
agencies, and civic organizations in your area. Explain your services
and ask them if they have any special clients or needs you can help
them with. You'll find many of your local political and "cause" groups
very interested in receiving clippings about their opponents.
Clipping services in one form or another have been around since the
advent of the printing press, and as stated earlier, they're becoming
more in demand. It's definitely the kind of business anyone who knows
how to read can set up and operate with an absolute minimum investment.