Hey GirdleyWorld!
Today I want to talk about a business model that fascinates me. We’re talking…
Negative customer acquisition cost (CAC)
I think you’ll be fascinated too.
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How to get paid to acquire customers
I love counterintuitive business models.
And this is one of my favorites.
It seems totally backwards. How do you get paid for getting customers?
I’ll show you. It all comes down to a particular twist on niche media.
A little background
Until recently, niche media wasn’t much of an industry.
If you want to cover something niche, you could write a newsletter and mail it to people.
But it took a lot of work for people to find your newsletter. So there wasn’t a huge market for it.
The internet completely changed that landscape.
Social media made it easier for niche stuff to be discovered.
Same for advertising on Google or in niche communities.
Suddenly people all over the world could visit the same place to read about finance, stocks, trucking, or aviation.
Over the last 15 years, niche media has proliferated.
There are tons of media businesses online that serve specific audiences.
Think MarketBeat for stocks, or Morning Brew for tech (which has niched down even further to stuff like HR Brew, CFO Brew, Retail Brew, etc.).
These businesses make money by:
Selling ads
Getting sponsorships
Putting on events
Great businesses, but you need a sizeable market for them to be viable.
But then there’s a guy named Craig Fuller…
The FreightWaves model
Craig Fuller was born to a trucking family.
He saw that all the players in the freight industry want to stay informed.
And they want to buy data to make decisions.
So he founded FreightWaves.
At first, it just looks like a trucker news site. But Craig built out a B2B data company attached to it.
Scroll past the trucker news, and you see a whole section of “SONAR High-Frequency Supply Chain Data”.
Customers pay for the data…
And the media biz gets paid to get customers. Negative CAC.
Suddenly that niche market is viable for this approach.
Rinse and repeat
Craig has decided to repeat himself in aviation.
He’s started buying up media properties there, and adding businesses — financing, services, insurance, brokerage — on the back end.
There’s no reason the same play won’t work again.
If this sounds familiar, it’s because I’m doing it too. (Though maybe with less intention than Craig.)
On X and with this newsletter, I’m putting out content helpful to business operations and ownership all the time.
And the last two businesses I’ve incubated fill a need with my audience:
Near solves for overseas staffing
Scalepath offers SMB peer groups
You can do it too. The innovation is out there.
Just find a niche hungry to be informed and start writing.
You’ll figure out what they need.
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