Wednesday, September 30, 2009

My Article at SelfGrowth.com: Paper Sculpture Vending Machines

Here's an article I just submitted to SelfGrowth.com, where I have two other self-help articles. This one hasn't been published yet:

A lot of people are looking for ways to make extra cash during these tough economic times, and most of them have considered going the usual routes, including borrowing money, working a second or part-time job, selling household items on eBay or through Craigslist, and so on. A few years ago a friend of mine and I discussed investing in vending machines and setting them up around town, but a little research brought that quickly to a halt. The investments were huge, and the competition in our town was fierce. We laid the idea to rest, but for some reason it still nagged at me. There was something to it that I couldn’t quite put my finger on, something that spoke to me--but what was it?

Then, as now, I was building paper castle marble cascades and other paper sculptures. I was doing it mostly as a hobby and giving the castles away as gifts, but people kept telling me I should turn it into a business. For the life of me I couldn’t figure out how to do that, because the castles took time to build, and it wouldn’t really be cost-effective to sell them. I took Robert Kiyosaki’s advice to heart: “Do it once.” In other words, build a kind of “money making machine” product that you only create once, and which automatically generates cash. That’s the principle behind stores, movies, books, etc., as opposed to hand-made items that you sell at arts and crafts stores. I tried to think of a way to turn my castles into “money making machines,” but for years the ideas escaped me.

One day it came to me. A week before, I had finished building a giant five-castle Rube Goldberg chain reaction marble cascade that I showed on YouTube. (A medieval crafting company called StormTheCastle asked if they could embed one of my castle videos on their site.) The chain reaction ends with a little door opening to reveal a trinket or piece of candy inside a box. While sitting on a chair next to this display, I suddenly saw what I’d been missing all along: I could create a compact version of this giant chain reaction machine, complete with marble cascades triggering other marble cascades, and I could add a coin slot, with coin ramps starting off the whole chain reaction. In other words, I could create a vending machine for less than twenty dollars and use it as a cash-genereating sales booth display, for flea markets, yard sales, carnivals, bake sales, lemonade stands, kiosks--any kind of sales venue. It, in and of itself, wouldn't make me rich by any means, but it would definitely bring in extra cash.

The vision didn’t end there. I realized that this was something anyone could do, using their own creative stamp. They wouldn’t have to create castles, but any shape they wanted. All it really takes is paper, recycled materials like cereal boxes and cardboard paper towel tubes, glue and household tools (a polyurethane finish is optional). A cereal box works well as a coin box at the center of the display, and it can also act as part of the candy dispenser. Excited, I went ahead and created two vending machines, and even combined them as a single machine, which I also demonstrated on YouTube. I took one of them to a friend’s business, and was surprised by the attention it received from employees and customers, all of whom came up to me to ask me what it was and how it worked. To my amazement, I made four dollars in quarters in half an hour, which wasn’t even my intention at the time. The castle wasn’t even finished yet.

Because the vending machines are beautiful and unusual, they automatically attract people to your vending booth or table. And because they’re manual (don’t require electricity), you can use the trigger setup time to chat with the customers, who will undoubtedly ask questions about how you built them. That’s the perfect time for getting to know your customers and to up-sell other items that you may have on display. In other words, the vending machines act as both a marketing device and a “money making machine.”

Friday, September 25, 2009

The Paper Castle Vending Machine Tutorial

Just a brief mention that my Paper Castle Vending Machine Tutorial Pack has just been released, and can be found on my website, www.TheEnchantedKiosk.com. See the link above.

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Hidden Lands Updated


For the past few days I've been working out bugs and providing a "cheat sheet" for The Hidden Lands, the free interactive multi-media treasure hunt game on my website. I'm still making changes even now, but they're mostly aesthetic (modeling and texturing), so the game is fully playable at this time. I added the cheat sheet to the PDF Treasure Guide--or I should say "answer sheet"--because I realized the puzzles-within-puzzles concept of the game is pretty complex. I played the game myself after months of having it on my website, and it was as if I were a newcomer to it. I'd forgotten the Puzzle Words, the Key Word, the Steps of the Secret Treasure Path, what some of the cues meant, etc., and I had to figure them out by playing the game in order to create the answer sheet. It's only then that I realized that an answer sheet really was necessary.

There were also a few bugs related to choices taking the player to new web pages. I had some links leading to nowhere (now fixed), and I discovered that some browsers on some computers didn't always make the link connection to new web pages, even though the correct URL would show up in the URL box. Weird. It seems the only solution to that is to have the player click in the URL box and press Return to reload the page. (I saw this problem occurring only on someone's old PC laptop.) Anyway, I've fixed all of the other problems that have been brought to my attention. And if anyone is stumped by a puzzle, a cue, a seeming dead end, they can use the answer sheet in the Treasure Guide to get out of it.

I'm going to add another feature to The Hidden Lands, and I'm still working out the details of it: Throughout the game there are going to be other hidden "secret treasure paths" that can only be revealed by making a small payment in my online store. (The rest of the game will still be free to access and play.) I haven't worked out what these hidden secret treasure paths lead to, but I should come up with something soon. Thanks for reading, have a great day, and have fun playing the game!

Here's where the game starts. Just click the link/image at the bottom of this page:

http://www.theenchantedkiosk.com/Pages/TheEnchantedKiosk/images/Welcome.html

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

A Paper Castle Vending Machine Tutorial

It's been a while since I've written, mostly because I've had too many pokers in too many fires, so to speak.  My latest project has been the development of a do-it-yourself vending machine made out of paper, one that can be used at a vending table or booth in any kind of sales venue.  I've also been writing, illustrating and videotaping a tutorial for people to create their own vending machines, and I just finished it today.  In fact, I'm in the process of uploading 24 tutorial videos to YouTube ("private" for now, until I get them fully annotated).  For public viewing I've uploaded an example of a finished paper castle vending machine, at:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M_aNh_gnAj0.

I'm excited about this new venture, but also nervous, mostly because it's new.  A few weeks ago I brought one of the vending machine castles to a friend's business to show them what I was working on.  It wasn't even close to being finished, but all of the employees and customers there crowded around me, asking me what it was and how it worked.  I was surprised how fascinated they were.  For about half an hour I demonstrated the vending machine repeatedly and realized that if I'd had candy to dispense from it, I could have made a tidy bit of cash.  The experience galvanized me into finishing my work on the machine as well as the tutorial, which I'll be releasing very soon, maybe in a day or two.

I remember reading and hearing several times that one of the keys to building wealth is to help others make money.  I wasn't quite sure how I could ever do that--until I came up with this vending machine tutorial idea.  As soon as the tutorial is ready for sale, I'll post it here.