Skip to main content
Skip to content

Duplicate Document

This document appears to be a copy. The original version is:

Internal profit‑loss breakdown for a phone‑sales product and outsourcing model
Case File
kaggle-ho-013925House Oversight

Internal profit‑loss breakdown for a phone‑sales product and outsourcing model

Internal profit‑loss breakdown for a phone‑sales product and outsourcing model The passage provides a detailed cost structure for a small‑scale e‑commerce operation, but it does not reference any high‑profile individuals, government entities, or large financial flows. It offers limited investigative leads beyond generic outsourcing practices. Key insights: Shows profit margins for an $80 product sold via call center.; Outlines expenses including call‑center fees, fulfillment, royalties, and advertising costs.; Mentions a sole‑owner structure with 200‑300 outsourced workers.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-013925
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Internal profit‑loss breakdown for a phone‑sales product and outsourcing model The passage provides a detailed cost structure for a small‑scale e‑commerce operation, but it does not reference any high‑profile individuals, government entities, or large financial flows. It offers limited investigative leads beyond generic outsourcing practices. Key insights: Shows profit margins for an $80 product sold via call center.; Outlines expenses including call‑center fees, fulfillment, royalties, and advertising costs.; Mentions a sole‑owner structure with 200‑300 outsourced workers.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversightfinancialsoutsourcinge‑commerceprofit-marginsbusiness-operations

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit
Review This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Bua outsourcer takes a piece of the revenue pie. Here is what the general profit-loss might look like for a hypothetical $80 product sold via phone and developed with the help of an expert, who is paid a royalty. I recommend calculating profit margins using higher-than-anticipated expenses. This will account for unforeseen costs (read: screwups) and miscellaneous fees such as monthly reports, etc. REVENUE Product cost $80.00 Shipping/Handling $12.95 Total Revenue $92.95 EXPENSES Product manufacturing $10.00 Call center ($0.83 per minute x average call time of 4 minutes) $3.32 Shipping $5.80 Fulfillment ($1.85 per package + $0.50 for boxes/packing) $2.35 Credit card processing (2.75% of $92.95) $2.56 Returns + declined cards (6% of $92.95) $5.58 Royalties (5% of wholesale price of $48 [$80 = .6]) $2.40 Total expenses $32.01 PROFIT (revenue minus expenses) $60.94 How do you factor in advertising cost? If a $1,000 ad or $1,000 in PPC produces 50 sales, my advertising cost per order (CPO) is $20. This makes the actual‘ per-unit profit $40.94. I set a new goal after that experience, and when I was interviewed six months later as a follow-up, one change was more pronounced than all others: silence. I had redesigned the business from the ground up so that I had no phone calls to answer and no e-mail to respond to. I’m often asked how big my company is—how many people I employ full-time. The answer is one. Most people lose interest at that point. If someone were to ask me how many people run Brain- QUICKEN LLC, on the other hand, the answer is different: between 200 and 300. I am the ghost in the machine 22 From advertisements—print in this example—to a cash deposit in my bank account, the diagram is what a simplified version of my architecture looks like, including some sample costs. If you have developed a product based on the guidelines in the last two chapters, it will plug into this structure hand- in-glove. Where am I in the diagram? Nowhere. I am not a tollbooth through which anything needs to pass. I am more like a police officer on the side of the road who can step in if need be, and I use detailed reports from outsourcers to ensure the cogs are moving as intended. I check reports from fulfillment each Monday and monthly reports from the same the first of each month. The latter reports include orders received from the call center, which I can compare to the call center bills to gauge profit. Otherwise, I just check bank accounts online on the first and fifteenth of each month to look for odd deductions. If I find something, one e-mail will fix it, and if not, it’s back to kendo, painting, hiking, or whatever I happen to be doing at the time.

Related Documents (6)

House OversightUnknown

Bill Bonner’s Diary warns of ‘smart money’ fleeing US stocks and decries the ‘Deep State’

Bill Bonner’s Diary warns of ‘smart money’ fleeing US stocks and decries the ‘Deep State’ The passage is a newsletter‑style commentary that repeats generic market pessimism and conspiracy‑theory rhetoric. It mentions well‑known public figures (Carl Icahn, George Soros, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton) but provides no specific transactions, dates, or actionable allegations linking them to wrongdoing. The only concrete data are broad market statistics (share‑buyback decline, gold price moves) that are publicly available and not novel. Consequently, it offers minimal investigative value, low controversy beyond already public political debate, and no new power linkage. Key insights: Claims that US share buybacks have fallen 38% to $244 billion in the last four months.; Alleges the Federal Reserve transferred roughly $8 trillion from savers to borrowers, labeling the Fed as part of a ‘Deep State’.; Mentions Carl Icahn warning of a market drop and George Soros buying a 1.7% stake in Barrick Gold.

1p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Alfredo Rodriguez’s stolen “golden nugget” – a bound book linking Jeffrey Epstein to dozens of world leaders and billionaires

The passage describes a former Epstein employee, Alfredo Rodriguez, who allegedly stole a bound book containing the names, addresses and phone numbers of high‑profile individuals (e.g., Henry Kissinge Rodriguez claims the book lists names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of influential individu He tried to sell the book to an undercover FBI agent for $50,000, indicating awareness of its valu

88p
House OversightFBI ReportNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein Child Sex Trafficking Investigation – FBI Records, Deleted Pages, Non‑Prosecution Deal, High‑Profile Connections

The compiled documents reveal a dense web of FBI case files, internal forms, and communications that reference Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal sexual activities with minors, a secret non‑prosecution agreeme FBI case number 31E‑MM‑108062 repeatedly references ‘Child Locate’ entries and deleted pages (b6, b7 Multiple internal FD‑515 forms list Jeffrey Epstein as a subject (named explicitly on 09/30/2008 e

181p
House OversightUnknown

Fragmentary Text Mentions ‘Cacioppo’, ‘Nusbaum’, and ‘Chicago Social Brain Network’ in Unclear Context

Fragmentary Text Mentions ‘Cacioppo’, ‘Nusbaum’, and ‘Chicago Social Brain Network’ in Unclear Context The passage consists largely of incoherent fragments with no clear factual allegations, dates, transactions, or identifiable misconduct. It only loosely references a few names (Cacioppo, Nusbaum) and an organization (Chicago Social Brain Network) without any substantive connection to wrongdoing or power structures, offering no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Mentions a possible individual named Cacioppo.; Mentions a possible individual named Nusbaum.; References the Chicago Social Brain Network and a publication titled “Invisible Forces and Powerful Beliefs”.

1p
House OversightUnknown

Empty House Oversight Document Lacks Substantive Content

Empty House Oversight Document Lacks Substantive Content The provided file contains only a title and no substantive text, offering no names, transactions, dates, or allegations to pursue. Consequently, it provides no investigative leads, controversy, novelty, or power linkages. Key insights: Document contains only a header and filename.; No mention of individuals, agencies, or actions.

1p
House OversightFeb 26, 2019

Cowen CBD Market Outlook Report – No Evident Investigative Leads

Cowen CBD Market Outlook Report – No Evident Investigative Leads The document is a commercial research note on CBD market size and analyst ratings, containing no references to political figures, financial misconduct, or intelligence activities. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Provides market size estimate for U.S. CBD ($16 bn by 2025).; Cites a proprietary survey showing 7% adult usage.; Mentions analyst ratings for WEED, TLRY, TPB.

1p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Support This ProjectSupported by 1,550+ people worldwide
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.