Rachel Rofe has a catchy new YouTube ad. She’s standing in front of some shelves stocked full of massive rubber duckies (or maybe it’s a green screen).
Either way, it worked. Stopped me in my tracks.
“Wanna know the way to potentially make a big income online?” she begins. “It’s by making lots of small incomes online.”
Find out what she means, what you’d be doing, and whether or not you can trust her.
Read on for my Low-Hanging Ecom review.
“Hi, I’m Rachel Rofe,” she continues, “and I’ve discovered a method to create these little mini income streams that individually aren’t life-changing, but when added up they’ve allowed me to quit my job as a Walmart cashier and live the life of my dreams.”
“I now generate a very healthy income each month, even while I sleep.”
“Now, this amazing system has given me the kind of lifestyle most people dream about. No bosses, no commute, no long drive, and the list goes on,” she pitches.
Now Rachel has time freedom, financial security, and complete peace of mind – even in these turbulent times.
She’s grateful for the flexibility this system has given her.
- She can travel whenever and wherever she wants, for as long as she wants.
- She can live wherever she chooses.
- Spend time with loved ones, like her little nephew Gabriel who she absolutely adores.
- These eensy weensy income streams are completely free to set up and take less than 10 minutes each.
No wonder Rachel has created over 5,000 of ’em so far.
And yes, there’s no reason you can’t follow in her footsteps.
So take your excuses and run ’em down the garbage disposal.
- You don’t need any skills or experience to start.
- You don’t need to create your own product or service to sell.
- You don’t need a huge following on Instagram or half a million subscribers on YouTube.
- You don’t need a fancy website or a slick sales funnel.
- You don’t need to drive web traffic.
- You don’t need to get on the phone and close anybody.
Nope, there’ll be none of that. Scroll down, keep reading.
You can do this in your spare time, around your day job.
It’s so simple that even complete beginners can be up and running in 14 days or less.
“Hey, we’re all super busy,” Rachel says, “but if you have a spare 30 minutes a day, a computer, and an internet connection, join me on my upcoming workshop where I’ll show you step-by-step exactly how I go about setting up these mini income streams.”
And with that, her YouTube ad comes to an end.
If you attend her workshop, she’ll tell you all about her print on demand business model.
- You come up with cute designs and clever sayings.
- Slap ’em on simple items like coffee mugs, T-shirts, and shot glasses.
- List ’em for sale on places like Amazon, Etsy, and eBay.
- And only when someone orders does a third-party company fulfill and ship the item out.
They charge you for this, of course, but it’s less than what you sold it for in your Etsy store, for example. And so you just pocket the difference.
I like Rachel and print on demand is intriguing.
It’s much lower risk than private labeling and doing the whole Amazon FBA thing.
I just have two small concerns.
One is margins. How much could you really make being the middleman on a coffee mug sale?
Two is control. Or lack thereof. If you’re building your entire business on Etsy and Amazon, is there a risk of accidentally violating one of their terms and getting banned?
I’m sure she addresses this in her Low-Hanging System course.
Cost is $2,000.