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March 19, 2025 30 mins
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In this episode, we dive into how you can launch your own Meditation & Mindfulness Coach App for under $500 using no-code platforms like Bolt.new and Buzzy.ai. We break down the growing market for meditation apps, potential revenue streams, and a step-by-step guide to building and monetizing your app—without any coding experience! Whether you're a coach, entrepreneur, or wellness enthusiast, this episode will show you how to tap into the booming mindfulness industry and start generating income with your own app. Tune in and start your journey toward building a profitable meditation business today! 🧘‍♀️✨

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The #1 hyperlocal podcast in Georgia, produced by Noise Media Network. Covering daily local news, business blueprints, global politics, money matters, and the latest in tech. Produced & Published by Audrey Bell-Kearney.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're listening to the Business Blueprint on Good Morning Gwinette,
where host Audrey Bell Curny shares practical business ideas for
aspiring entrepreneurs. Streaming Monday through Thursday at ten am. This
show is all about helping people start businesses. For five
hundred dollars or less. Audrey breaks down simple, affordable ways
to turn ideas into income. Because success starts with smart

(00:23):
strategic moves, Get ready to take action and build something great.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Good morning, good morning, Good morning, all my Gwanetians out
there in Gwenette Land and all of my friends around
the world. It is a beautiful day here in Gwenett County.
Fifty degrees going up to hire seventy eight. Starting to
feel a lot like spring, baby, starting to feel a
lot like spring. Listen, today is hump day. You have
made it to the m iddl the middle. The weekend
is right around the corner. I know you can't wait

(00:51):
for it. Glad to be with you guys today. Today,
I'm gonna be talking about something that's pretty cool, and
it's how to start a meditation app. Now, the reason
I could talk about this is because I've been creating
apps for the last four months for people. And there
is an app that I'm gonna be working on starting
today that has meditation built in with a bunch of
other stuff. But what what's interesting about this process is

(01:14):
that if you are, if you're, if you don't even
have any techy, let me start right there. You don't
have to be techy. You don't have to pay people
a lot of money anymore, because if you hire somebody,
you gonna pay them for their time and expertise. Which
is fine because people have hired me, which is why
I'm doing all these apps that I'm doing. Not that
I'm not trying to sell apps. I'm just not. But
people around me who know about apps, who know that

(01:36):
I know how to do techy, I need a app,
so they come to me and I was like, look,
don't tell nobody I do ass because that's not what
my thing is. I don't want to be doing apps
all day. But I'm working on my fourth app right
now for someone, and it's crazy because that's not what
I do. I mean, can I do it? Yes? Do
I like doing it? No? Not really, but I will

(01:57):
do it for people that know me. But anyway, well,
here's the thing. You don't really need me anymore. But
the people who are non techy, like really like tech
draws were crazy. They need me and people like me.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
Right.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
But if you can sit down and spend about a
week learning something, you can make things happen. Everything that
I've learned. So the first time I went to school
for something in the space of tech was probably nineteen ninety.
It was nineteen ninety four. My daughter was three and
I went to school to learn how to build websites.
So I went to this program, I learned how to

(02:30):
be websit. So I did a bunch of things. I
went to college, got kicked out. Now I'm the smart
girl to get kicked out of college because nobody told
me I could do something else. They was like, this
is what you need to do. No, Like, I hate
all of these things. So I did nothing. And then
I went back to college to become a nurse, went
all the way through that process, did two years of
nurse and went through my first day of clinicals and
I quit because I was like, oh my god, my

(02:50):
mother told me not to do that. It's like, do
not go to school for nursing. You know you're not
gonna like that. I was like, Nah, I'm gonna do it.
All I was looking at was the money. I've been
chasing money a long time, which I need to stop
doing that because it hasn't paid off. But anyway, I
went to school for nursing. That then work, then I
went to school to become a paralegal, went through the
whole process of seen Hall University to become a paralegal.
Started talking to paralleeguals after the fact, and I was like, yeah,

(03:13):
I want to do that, And so in nineteen ninety four,
I went to school to become a I went to learn.
I went to like a like a probably like a
six month program on how to learn how to do websites.
And that's why I've been ever since, been creating things
since nineteen ninety four. Didn't really understand what I was doing,
just creating stuff, right, newsletters, websites, you know, my own websites,

(03:35):
but never for people until like later on did I
start to do this. And back then people were paying
fifteen hundred dollars, ten thousand dollars, twenty five thousand dollars
for a website. Had I understood the business side of
that thing, oh my god, that would have been a
different ballgame, but I didn't fast forward to today, I understand,
And the reason that I'm sharing this with you is

(03:57):
because you don't have to pay even mean like for
what I do. Right, I create simple apps for people
they want to app in the app Store. They got
very specific things they want and they're simple. They're not
like these mega apps that you got to go out here.
They're not like that. So I charge people thirty five
hundred dollars for that, and that's not a lot of
money because I remember when I looked at doing my
very first app, it was like twenty five thirty thousand dollars.

(04:20):
So you talk about ten percent of what it used
to be. And if you sit down and learn how
to do it yourself, you might spend five hundred. I'm
just saying, if you hire people like me and people
that's better than me, thirty five hundred. Enough I charged
thirty five hundred. But your app is pretty simple, powerful
but simple, pretty simple, like the one that I'm gonna
work on now. I can't wait to launch it because

(04:41):
it's such a great concept and every time I mention
it to somebody, everybody gets so excited, like, oh my god,
that app is gonna blow up. I can't wait to
create that one because it's such a simple concept, but
it's so powerful, and so it's a thirty five hundred
dollars app. Had the people who wanted the app learn
how to sit down and do these things, and it's technical,

(05:02):
I'm not gonna even front. But if you sit down
and you learn, but you got to spend some time learning,
you can create it yourself. So I'm gonna talk about
how to create an app today because we have no
cold now it is no code, but you have to
understand how to maneuver around the app space. I have
been doing all of this stuff for a very long time.

(05:23):
I have been maneuvering around COLD and I've never went
to school of coding. Everything I've learned I've learned on
by myself, on my own, you know, looking at videos
on YouTube, which is why I look at videos on
YouTube so much. Right, and then once I find a product,
a product that I want to use, I'll go dive
deep into what that product is. One of the products
I did that with was a product called bolt dot

(05:45):
New Bolt Dot New and it is a great product.
I did reple It. I checked out reple It I
checked out Bolt and there was another one. These are
all no cold platforms that let you create applications without
knowing how to code. Now that being said, hey, you
still need to know how to navigate. So you're gonna
have to go on there and take all of the

(06:05):
trainings that they put out. They put out a lot
of trainings. You have to take them off because you
can get for Boat. Let me just talk about Boat
for a second, and I'm gonna tell you some more stuff,
but I'm gonna talk about Boat first. So I went
on to Bolt to create an app for a client
they wanted an app. I said, okay, I'm gonna use
Bolt dot New. I went into Bolt dot new right,

(06:27):
and I said, this is the type of app I want.
It created the app like in thirty seconds. However, however,
it only created the front end, so then I had
to go on and integrate it with the back end.
I did. That was something called super Base. Now had
I not known how to do these things, it would
have made me pull my hair out because I had
to learn how to use superbas Superbase was harder to

(06:51):
figure out than Boat was. Boat was pretty simple. You
go in there, like the chat GPT. You tell it
what you wanted to do, you give it a color scheme,
you give it all these you know, instructions. I wanted
to do this, do that, and need to look like this,
so like that. I had to do all of that right,
and I did, but it took me a month. What
it normally takes me a few days to do a

(07:11):
few like seven days for most things. That took me
a month. And I still didn't get it right because
I didn't feel like sitting down. And I'm just being
straight honest. I did not feel like sitting in and
learning all of the stuff that make because super Base
was the hardest part. It was the hardest part. And
then I was trying to create a directory inside the app.
Now I'm not sharing this with you to scare you.
I'm sharing this with you because I need you to

(07:33):
understand that you can do it. But it's gonna it's
a learning curve. But if you sit down and say, Okay,
I got this idea for this app, I'm gonna give
myself two months to learn this platform, I'm gonna save
myself thirty five hundred to ten fifteen thousand dollars because
I'm gonna learn how to do it myself. But I'm
gonna give myself two months to learn the platform. That's all.

(07:53):
It's gonna take you two months. It may not even
take you that long, depending on how involved you're gonna
be with your learning. Right, If you do that, you
can build it yourself. But you gotta sit down and
do it. And you're gonna have to learn more than
just bolt or more than just Buzzy, or more than
just a dollar. You're gonna have to learn some back
end stuff. So for bolt dot new, it's gonna give

(08:13):
you all the beautiful front end, right. But I kept
running into so many glitches and I would have to
leave the glitch, go over to Twitter because there's a
bolt dot new group on Twitter and figure out, Okay,
hey this is a problem that I'm having. Somebody would
answer me. I come back, I fix it. That's what
you're gonna have to do if you do it yourself.
Can you do it yourself? Absolutely? Is it gonna take
you time and energy and to learn the process. Yes,

(08:36):
can you get it done? Can you get your app
off the ground in three months? Absolutely? Can you do
it for under five hundred dollars? Absolutely? You could do it,
and that's what this is about. So let's talk about
some more.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
So.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
I did bot dot new and I liked it, but
for what I was trying to do, the project was
too It was too complex for me, and I didn't
feel like trying to go over there and learn how
to do it. So I had to do a whole
bunch of workarounds. It took me two months to get
it done, which normally doesn't take me that long, but
I was like, you know what, I had to start
over twice, but I got it done in two months. Right.

(09:11):
I was like, I'm gonna get this done no matter what.
So I had to do some wrap rounds I had
and I made it work and it's fine and you
could do it too. So one of the things that
you might want to look at is boat dot New.
I paid twenty dollars for both. Both gives you like
ten million credits or something. Now, let me say this,
if you're not clear about what you're trying to create,
and I will say, getting very very very clear, you

(09:33):
go to you. I want you to go to chat TBT.
I want you to be so clear about what that
app does, because when you put all of that inside
of both. It's gonna make exactly what you want. What
happened is if you don't, if you're not very clear,
And Boat's good, it's asking you questions as you go.
I love it. I think it's a great platform and
I still subscribe to it today for twenty dollars a month,

(09:55):
which is great, right, But what's gonna happen? Because I
want to create simple things with Boat, Like I want
to create simple businesses in a box that I'm gonna,
you know, sell a white label to and just give
them away, not give them away, but sell them because
I want people to get in I'm in tech. I'm
in I got a website, I got a podcast, I
got apps, I got I got chat box. I'm in

(10:16):
tech already. I want other people to get in tech.
So I'm gonna create businesses in a box using Bolt
that's easily people can brand and just sell and wherever
they live. I'm not selling them on the market. I'm
gonna let other folks sell them on the market. So
that's another story. I talked about that later, but Boat
would let you. So it needs you to be very
clear about what you want to create, because what's gonna

(10:37):
happen is if you let's say you use bolt dot new, Right,
if you use bolt dot new, you're gonna go in there.
You're gonna drop in your your prompt. Just call a
prompt that you got from chat GPT and boat is
gonna run that prompt. Now it's gonna ask you questions.
It's gonna ask you questions. But the more questions you
ask it keep it keeps rewriting the cold, and every
time it rewrites the cold, it eats up your your

(10:58):
your your tokens. Right, so you get ten million tokens
or something like this. I think it's a million. It's
a lot of them. Whatever it is, I ate up
all my I ate all mine up. I was like,
oh my god, I'm running out of tokens. So then
I had to go buy, go back and buy two more.
So the most that I spent on that project was
forty tokens because then I figured it out. That was
a headache, but I did it and I got it

(11:19):
done in two months. But it was a headache, and
super Base probably was the worst part. And then trying
to put the directory inside of the app was it
was the other tough part. And then trying to figure
out how to fix the freaking images. So I had
some issues, but I learned what I needed to learn
and I got it done. Now bolt dot knew is
you can buy. I bought a twenty dollars plum. I said, well,

(11:41):
I can probably do it at twenty dollars. I actually
spent forty dollars to create what I wanted to create.
What I've learned by about that is that if you
create something super simple, twenty dollars a month is enough, right,
So if you make it really interesting, like what I
was trying to do for the client was something complex.
It was it had directories and payment skin, all kinds
of stuff that I had to integrate back over with

(12:04):
super bass and some other stuff. It was. It was
a lot, but I didn't I had to come out
and do some other stuff to make it all work.
You can do it too, but you have to sit
down and you have to learn it. Now, there's there's
another one that I use called a dollar now. Dollar
is built specifically for mobile apps. It's a no cold
mobile app platform. Here's the thing. Still not simple, but

(12:26):
doable and very inexpensive. So if you want to create
your own Apple's and I said meditation, because meditation. A
lot of people love to meditate. Now that you got
some competition out there, but a lot of people love
to meditate. They love the music and all that good stuff.
As a matter of fact, I'm working on a playlist
now for someone or just meditation music. That's it. It's

(12:46):
just meditation music. I'm using Sono to create all the music. Again,
I'm using AI to create all the music so they
can put it into a playlist. That's what I'm doing.
And the funny thing is, Souno is so easy. But
they I thought, you know, I think of AI like
the devil. I'm like, why they think it's evil so

(13:06):
they won't sign into it. So listen, I'm telling you
the tr u t is the truth. The person said
they felt like a I was a devil, so because
they could have easily gone to sooner and did exactly
what they paid me to do. But they say they
felt like it was a devil. They wasn't gonna do it.
I said, okay, but listen, pay me. I'll do it
now that right there, making music all day long. I'll
do because I love it that I love like I

(13:29):
love this podcast. Sitting there creating songs. Oh my god,
I have about one hundred and fifty of them of
my own right now. They ordered fifty songs and I
was like, okay, well listen. If you don't want to
do it, then okay, I'm not gonna force you to
do it. But anyway, the tools are there. Now. A
dollar is a pretty cool platform. It's a no cold platform.

(13:52):
You build mobile apps. You can go in there and
it's probably a meditation app already built into the system
because they have temples already ready. That's a good platform too. However,
there's a learning curve. You have to spend some time
learning the product, because if you don't spend time learning
the product, you're not gonna get the app done. Right, So,

(14:13):
if you're trying to stay under you're trying to stay
within your budget of five hundred dollars, you could do it.
You can absolutely do it because just just what just
with just with a dollar, Alan, you can start out
for thirty six dollars and get your app done and
publish to the app stores. That's the crazy part, Like,
that's the part that's absolutely bananas, Like you can start

(14:36):
with such a small amount of money and publish to
the app stores, right, thirty six dollars a month to
run your app. Here's the thing. You have got to You
have a got to got to You have got to
do the do the work so you can understand what
you're doing. There's no way around it. I know you

(14:57):
want it. You want it to be some kind of
where there is no way around that. You have got
to do it and so and but you can do
it and it's not spend two months learning this thing. Now,
if you do that, you have an app. If you
do that, you've been in the app business. You do that,

(15:17):
you become a founder. Yeah, a tech founder, because apps
are tech all right. So now there's a new one
that I just saw last night called Buzzy b u
zz why dot Ai. It looks pretty promising. It's it
seemed like it's a little bit simpler to use. I
haven't tried it. I want to try it, but I
looked it up. I'm like, Okay, you go in there
and you prompt it just like Boat, but it seems

(15:39):
it builds the back end and the front end for you.
So Boat does not build out your back end. You
have to connect your back in to like super base,
a Firebase. Firebase is owned by Google. You have to
connect those two together, so if you collect the information
from people, it has to go somewhere. So Superbase is
a data a data program that collects the data for
you and hold it for you. So it's Firebase. A

(15:59):
lot of platform built Firebase. When I do my I
created an app for a client. Oh god, she's been
my client now for three years. She has an app
for her for her podcast. I created a podcast app
and I did a progressive web podcast. She didn't she
didn't need to go in the books. She didn't want
to go in the store. So she has a progressive
pot Web app, which also gives you the opportunity to

(16:21):
put the app on your phone. It's just not in
the app stores. So she wanted to be able to
share the app with all her people so they can
put the app on her phone. So when she does things,
she can not push notifications. So I did that for her,
but I had to connect her app to super Base,
so that not super based. So Firebase and Google so
she can collect information and it's pretty simple. Now Firebase
is a little bit more simpler to connect to. But

(16:43):
I'm saying all that to say With Buzzy, you don't
have to do that. Everything is in one place, which
is pretty cool. Same thing with Dollo. I don't think
you have to. I don't think you and I started
working on a dollar and I might go back and
look at it again. But with Buzzy, it's all one thing.
So when you put your code in there, it builds
out everything, right. But you have your front end, which
is what you see when you go to somebody's website

(17:05):
or when you go to somebody's app. That's called a
front end. The back end is all the things that
make the front end look good and work. It has
all of those things built in. Now Buzzy again thirty
dollars a month. When I'm telling you can do it,
you can do it. You just have to spend some
time learning. I have not used Buzzy. I feel like
it's gonna be very promising in the mobile app space.

(17:25):
But here's the thing. If somebody can go in there
and spend some time and learn how to do that,
you're gonna have a ton of I was gonna say
something else, but I'm a lot of competition, right, So
let's go through the startup calls. I've told you some
products that you can use that I talked about Buzzy,
I talked about a Dollar, and I talked about Boat.
All great products, some with some learning curves. Right, you're

(17:48):
gonna have those, some maybe not. I don't know. Buzzy
I haven't used it, but I've used Boat, I've used Replet,
I've used a Dollar. I've used those three and they
have a learning curve. However, if you spend two months
learning them, you can create whatever you want, not just
for yourself, but you might want to become an app
development for other people. Now that being said, sometimes folks

(18:09):
have no idea what they want. They tell you one
thing and by the time you start building it is
something else. And it's a headache if you don't have
that kind of patience, which I don't. So I know myself,
know thyself. I know I don't have that type of patient.
This is why I don't promote that I can create websites,
which I do, and I can promote apps, which I do.
The only thing that I will promote that I could

(18:30):
do with AI is podcasting. Know why, because that's really simple, Like, hey,
what you do? I'm a taxpayer. Okay, I'm gonna go
to your site. I'm a scrape these, I'm a created
these episode. That's really easy. But when it comes to
website and apps, no, no, because people don't know what
they want. And then it stresses me out because you
give me one thing. I'm creating these flyers. I've been

(18:52):
doing graphic designs forever. I don't like it all right,
So you can learn how to do it. You can
do it for yourself, or you can turn into a
business and do it for other people because now you're
gonna know how to do it. It is a skill
set that you now know how to do it. And
here's the thing. Apps are making a comeback like for
some strange reason, it's circling the block and coming back
like maybe it never died. But I don't think peoples

(19:13):
out there I'm gonn build app im building. I don't
think people were ever doing it. But I think because
the tools are so so wonderful right now and it's
allowed anybody to sit down and spend some time to learn.
That's why apps are making a comeback and people are
making a killing. Like the app that I'm about to
start developing to day, I'm expecting it to make us
all millionaires. I really am. I really am. So every

(19:35):
time I tell somebody about it, like, oh my gosh,
and then the ideas that I have that I'm gonna
put inside of Oh, I'm expecting us to be millionaires
after this. Okay, so let's talk about the meditation app
now you're gonna have. It's a huge industry, right The
global meditation market is valued right now at five point
two six billion dollars, and that was in twenty twenty two.

(19:56):
Right now they're saying by twenty thirty, which is five
years away, the meta meditation market, Yeah, it's gonna be
twenty billion dollars. You can get your share that. It's
enough for everybody that's in the game.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
Hi.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
You gotta be in the game, though, you gotta be
in the meditation app games right now. This is your competition.
I just want to put it out there. Right now,
they're over twenty five hundred meditation apps available. I know
y'all seen. I know y'all seen. The commercial will come
because it's on TV. Like I've never seen Headspace anywhere,
but they're leading the industry. Come and Headspace or leading

(20:30):
the industry and the meditation apps. I see com commercials,
com commercials on television. So that's your competition. Estimated two
hundred million people worldwide participate in meditation. They practice meditation.
I try to meditate sometimes. I do listen to apps. Now,
this is a good thing. Listen to this inside of

(20:52):
my I want to say it's my, it's either my,
it's one of my health apps. Right, they have their
own meditation built in. So even though you are thinking
about a meditation app, you may want it to be
a part of something bigger that you're doing. It may
not just be the app. It may be you may
say I'm gonna do I'm gonna do this type of app,
but meditation is gonna be a part of that. All

(21:12):
you can just say, I just want to do a
meditation app. You can do guided meditation when you record
your boys or somebody else's boys. You can do all
of those things in your app. But you're gonna have
to compete with twenty five hundred people. So your app
is gonna have to be different in some type of way.
So think about that. Can you get it done? Absolutely?
Can you probably make money with it, yep. But you
gotta find your own space in that space, right, You

(21:33):
gotta create your own little niche. Now, how can you
make money? Well, all subscriptions nine ninety nine, that's like
a going rate over in the in the app space,
nine ninety nine ninety nine dollars a year. You can
do one time purchases, you can sell ebooks inside of
your app. You can do guided meditations, you can do
a meditation courses. This is how you make money. Those

(21:53):
may be one time purchases, but that's that's the adds
to your bottom line. Right. You can add in affiliate
marketing programs you want. If you know that you are
doing a meditation app and that comes with yoga and
all that, become an affiliate for Amazon. I'm an affiliate
for Amazon. I put affiliate links in some of my articles.
Become affiliate for Amazon, and inside of your app you
drop your affiliate links. So when people go to click

(22:15):
on a highlighted something inside the app, yeah, they go
right to an Amazon store. They buy the meditation thing.
But guess what else they buy? They buy flat screen TV,
they buy a new Mac computer. You get credit for
all of that as an Amazon affiliate. Let me say
that again. I probably say that too fast. If you
want to if you want to add affiliate marketing as
a strength income inside of an app. You can promote that,

(22:36):
you can promote other people's product or services inside the app.
I always say Amazon because I use Amazon a lot.
But you got stuff like vault vaulked offer, that's vau
l t offer. You gotta have that. They have affiliate programs.
You have DIGEI Store twenty four they have they have
affiliate programs. And the big daddy and the and the
oldest grandfather of them all is click bank. But then

(22:56):
you got something to call partner Stack, and you got
impact impact dot com. These are all places where you
can get affiliate, become affiliate, and then sell and then
promote things that are in there. So you can put
those affiliate links inside of the app to create a
a stream of income inside app. Now here's another one.

(23:17):
This is a good one. You just got to get
out there and meet people. Corporate wellness partnerships. A lot
of companies want their corporate their employees to be as
well as possible, so they may subscribe for everybody in
the company. You may have to come up with a
plan where they can subscribe for the entire company to
give their employees free access to the app because they
want you to be as well as possible so you
can stay at work and do your job right. They

(23:39):
don't want you calling out sick on Monday, calling not sick.
And so this is this is a pattern. It's called
not sick on Monday, going sick on Friday. Right, that's
a pattern that you know that is it's like the
weekend anyway. But they will pay for that. But you
got to get out there. You gotta create the app.
You gotta go out, you gotta knock on doors, you
gotta share presentations, got to do demos, you gotta say why.
It's going to be important for the employees. Employees want

(24:00):
their people to be Employers want their people to be well,
so they may pay you for that. You know, in
your local town, start there, Start at the local hospital.
You know that's the most stressed out place in the world, probably, yes,
the hospital. Why because you gotta figure their people in
there that are seek all day, every day twenty four seven,
three sixty five. So some of the employees may be

(24:21):
just stressed out right. And then you've got the corporate
bs that go on all over the world. So you
got an opportunity to be able to sell, but you
got to sell against your competitors, so you got to
make it different. And then you can do live coaching
inside your app. There's a way for you to put
in live coaching streams like Integrate, Zoom and all that
kind of stuff and meet up with your folks and
build a community inside to add all of that good stuff. Yeah,

(24:43):
so that's what you can do, all right, So let's
talk about this this this this revenue stream. So five,
let's say you charged nine to ninety nine and let's
say you got one hundred user. Your monthly revenue is
nine hundred and ninety nine dollars a month just from
subscription services. Right, but let's say you add in like
the one time courses, like the courses of forty nine dollars.
Let's say you do twenty sales a month because you

(25:04):
got one hundred users, and you bring it on new
users every month. But the new users that the first
one hundred you got there there, they like it. They're
going to stay their penning nine ninety nine. That's recurrent income.
We call that monthly recurrent income. So when you see
a revenue, when you see MR, that stands for monthly
recurring revenue, recurring revenue. Right, So you got that nine
ninety nine, but then you got this one time course

(25:25):
by you got twenty people that made by that, that's
like nine eighty, right, And then you talk about a month.
You got about nine eighty a month on that. Then
you got an affiliate market. And average Phillish commission is
about ten dollars. Amazon is cheap, so it's really pennies.
But you may find a product at you know, click
Bank or off ball or dig you store twenty four

(25:47):
Impact or partner Stack. You may find something in there
that has that pays a way higher commission. You can
make more money, but just say the average commission is
ten dollars. You do fifty versions of conversions a month
for that, that's another five undred dollars. You got corporate subscriptions.
They may say, you know, everybody else is paying nine
ninety nine, but if we want a corporate subscription, and
that's like five hundred dollars a month, so that's another

(26:09):
thousand dollars. You got live coaching sessions. Let's say you
charge fifty dollars session. I don't know, some people charge
way more. And let's say you get ten people to
sign up for the session. That's another five hundred a month. Now,
your total, the total monthly revenue is about four thousand dollars,
which brings you up to about forty eight thousand dollars
for a year from an app. And you're not doing
a whole lot of work. I'm just saying, and how

(26:32):
much is it costing you to run that? Roughly costing
you to run that, it's gonna cost you roughly one
hundred dollars a month. And I'm saying real rough one
hundred dollars a month, one hundred dollars a month. So listen,
I gotta go. But the whole entire blueprint is on
good morning when that dot com you can check out

(26:53):
the entire blueprint there. It is there for you to
check out, go through it, do your research. You got
your competition. You got twenty five hundred people. That's your competition, right.
But that's okay, that's all right, because you're going to
figure out how to make yours different. You You being
a part of is one thing, but what else can
set you as apart from calm? Now you may want
to go check Calm out and say, because I've never

(27:16):
listened to. I've never purchased a subscription to a meditation
app because it's built into one of my my wellness
apps already, like it's just built into their right. You
may say, you know what, I want to do a
meditation app for babies. I don't know if this might
do that already, probably, But what makes yours different? It's
a hip hop meditation rap. I don't know people meditate.

(27:37):
They all kinds of music. It ain't always that very
calm music. It's just me, I'm just zoning out because
I'm listening to my favorite hip hop song. I'm just
zoned out. That happens all the time. That's a form
of meditation. I know the meditation gurus may disagree, but
for me, when I'm listening to something that's got me
zoned out, that's a form of meditation for me. So anyway,

(27:58):
go to the website, look at the the full blown
article is there for you. I would like to know
if you start this app. I'm working on a few,
so I want to know if you're in the game
as well. It's a great game to be in right now.
Things have changed so much. It's not the way it
used to be, which is kind of crazy because I
remember when it was a big it was a big thing,

(28:18):
and everybody was getting an app done. It was costing. You know,
some apps cost hundreds and thousands of dollars, if not millions,
you know they do. But now five hundred dollars. You
gotta app as long as you spend the time. You
got to spend time, though, that's the thing, and that's
what people don't want to do. They don't want to
spend the time, they don't want to spend the time

(28:40):
to figure out how to make it work. But you
got to that's what you gotta do. All right, I
gotta go. I'll be back again tomorrow at ten am.
God will and do me a favor of y'all. Subscribe
to the show so you never miss an episode. Also
share the show with your friends at least two. It's free.
You don't have to don't cost your done. Don't cost
you nothing. Yeah, don't cost you anything. And share with

(29:00):
your friends. And also be sure to subscribe to my
YouTube channel. I got interview coming up on Friday, live interview,
in person video. Yeah, I'm breaking out, I'm trying to
make it work, trying to grow the brand, trying to
grow to the Good Morning, not trying. I am growing
got your words made if words are powerful, I am
growing the Good Morning with that brand, and I will

(29:21):
be interviewing people who will talk about their blueprint of
how they got started, doing what they're doing, and what
they're doing to make it successful. All right, So be
sure to subscribe to the YouTube channel because that's where
the live stream is going to be on Friday at
ten o'clock. If you don't subscribe, you're gonna miss it,
all right, all right, all right, thank you so much.
It could have been anywhere in the world to spend
the last thirty minutes for me, and I love and

(29:41):
appreciate you. With that, I'll be back again to my
at ten am, God willing you guys. Stay safe out there,
and until next time, my friends, Until next time, make
it a great day by everybody.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
That's a wrap for today's episode of The Business Blueprint
on Good Morning whenet. Thank you for tuning in and
spending time with us. If you found value in today's show,
consider supporting us for just five dollars and ninety nine
cents a month. Every contribution helps keep this content coming
your way. Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast and
hit that subscribe button on YouTube at good Morning Gwenette

(30:12):
for even more great content. And if you know someone
who could use this information, share the show with at
least two friends. Let's grow this community together. Until next time,
stay inspired and keep building your blueprint for success.
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