"Nothing is Secret Anymore!" 
                The Confessions of a Millionaire Information Broker
              By Mathew Lesko 
              Information is the currency of today's world. Those who control 
                information are the most powerful people on the planet -and the 
                ones with the most bulging bank accounts.  
              The timely delivery of vital information is one of the most lucrative 
                businesses you can have in this new millennium. I should know. 
                I started one of the most successful information brokerage businesses 
                in the country. I'm also perhaps the world's most well known information 
                broker, and I've made millions of dollars from doing it, and I'm 
                going to show you how to easily do the same.  
              Let me backtrack a little bit.  
              All my life I wanted to start my own business. I didn't care 
                what it was -- I just wanted to learn how to feed myself and not 
                work for someone else. I even considered selling hot dogs on the 
                mall near the Washington Monument. I just wanted to be my own 
                boss. Sound familiar?  
              I had a string of failed businesses before I hit the big time. 
                It was while working as a computer administrator of a travel company 
                that I learned something that changed my whole life.  
              The hot shots that ran the company fascinated me. They were powerful 
                individuals who discussed, negotiated and executed big deals all 
                the time. In order to get in on some of that wheeling and dealing, 
                I'd hang around late at night when they had their meetings, and 
                volunteer to get coffee and doughnuts, do the Xeroxing -- do anything 
                to try to learn how to be like them.  
              One day, they came into my office and asked me -- not to get 
                coffee -- but to get information on how good or bad the rental 
                car business was. It seems they were considering making a bid 
                to acquire Avis Rent-A-Car, and needed some good market information 
                to go along with the financial statements they were poring over. 
                I, of course, said "Yes, yes, yes!" I was their "yes 
                man," even though I knew nothing about the rental car business 
                and had no idea where I was going to get this 
                information.  
              Well, I wanted to do this so badly I could almost taste it. This 
                was one giant step up from coffee and Xeroxing that lucky people 
                are offered once in a lifetime, and I didn't want to blow it. 
                I saw myself as a young turk on the way up the ladder of success. 
                But I didn't have a clue where to go for the information.  
              I sat in my little office wondering if I could make the grade. 
                I sat there staring at my desk hoping something would pop into 
                my head and give me the magic answer. I stared at the telephone 
                and then picked it up thinking:  
              "Here I am in Washington D.C. needing to know about the 
                rental car business. Who can I call? Why not the government? I 
                pass all those big buildings everyday on the way to work. Maybe 
                someone there can help me."  
              Well, it worked! By starting with the government information 
                operator, I was able to work my way through a dozen more calls 
                and referrals until I finally found an expert in the rental car 
                business. It turned out to be a man who used to be the president 
                of Hertz and was now in Washington -- and bored out of his mind 
                with his government job. He actually invited me to lunch so he 
                could tell me everything he knew.  
              I was shocked!  
              I couldn't believe that in 45 minutes on the telephone, I could 
                locate a real expert who was willing to tell me everything I needed 
                to know about the rental car business. And, he even wanted to 
                take me to lunch!  
              Afterwards, I was so excited about the information I had just 
                received that I burst into a meeting my boss was having with his 
                hotshot merger and acquisition buddies. He was eager to hear everything 
                I learned from my lunch right then and there.  
              They were blown away. They couldn't believe that a young turk 
                like me, who didn't know anyone, could get such information that 
                we had all assumed was privileged and confidential.  
              I got more excited about the information I dug up on the rental 
                car business than with any program I ever wrote for the company. 
                I knew then that information was power. I also knew then that 
                there was immense value in delivering timely information on demand. 
               
              I was hooked. I started a new business obtaining information 
                for people on anything they needed. I became a consultant to people 
                in the merger and acquisition business, and I got all the information 
                they needed to make their business a success -- information they 
                were unable to find themselves.  
              This time, success finally happened. The business grew from just 
                me, a telephone, and a desk in my one-bedroom apartment to over 
                30 employees and a million and a half dollars in sales in a little 
                more than 3 years. Even after a string of failing businesses, 
                I finally realized my first success, and I'll show how you can 
                do it, too.  
              How to Create Money Out of Thin Air  
              What I learned early on is that you can literally take information 
                that is free to obtain, but oftentimes hard for the average person 
                to find -- turn around and sell it for big bucks. All it requires 
                is a little resourcefulness, and the knowledge of where to find 
                the information that is sellable.  
              There's nothing to it. These are the only things you need:  
              
                -  Believe the notion that we live in an information society, 
                  and if you're willing to make a few necessary calls (or e-mails), 
                  you can gather information on almost anything -- and make that 
                  information sellable. 
 
                -  You need to know where to look for the information. Although 
                  there are countless sources of information, if you do nothing 
                  else but tap into the world's largest source of free information, 
                  you can find virtually everything that you need. That source 
                  is the U.S. Government. [I've spent 25 years of my life as an 
                  information broker, and I have yet to find a source of information 
                  more comprehensive than the U.S. Government.] 
 
               
              Do you want to get an idea of just how vast the government's 
                information reserve is?  
              If you took all the major commercial publishers in the United 
                States, they collectively produce 50,000 new titles in all the 
                libraries and bookstores around the country in a single year. 
                In contrast, one single publisher in the government (the National 
                Technical Information Service) publishes over 100,000 titles a 
                year. Multiply that by the number of government agencies that 
                produce information, and the amount of information becomes absolutely 
                staggering!  
              The range of subjects on which you can find information is also 
                mind-boggling: The government not only counts people, the number 
                of jelly beans manufactured in the country, toilets installed, 
                and how many potatoes grown; but also gives investment trends 
                and opportunities likely to show up in the Wall Street Journal 
                in weeks; it also answers any legal question better than the highest 
                paid lawyer. There are 700,000 
                government experts in any field you can imagine, who will give 
                you free information simply because you asked.  
              How to Use the Information You Gather:  
              
                -  Find customers who need, and are willing to pay for, specialized 
                  information. Position yourself as someone who knows how to find 
                  information on practically everything, but do narrow down the 
                  types of information you can get for your customers' specific 
                  needs. That way, you zero in with the precision of a sharpshooter, 
                  instead of just firing a shotgun that goes in all directions. 
                  
 
                  As an information broker, always remember what Willy Sutton 
                  said when asked why he robbed banks. He said, "Because 
                  that's where the money is." You need to live by the same 
                  slogan if you want to stay in business. Choose the path of least 
                  resistance. Choose a customer base that consists of rich people 
                  or big companies that have money to spend on finding out how 
                  they can get richer -- and are willing and able to spend it. 
                   
                 
                -  Gather specialized information that would be of great interest 
                  to a specific business sector (example: Internet marketers). 
                  Position yourself as an expert on a particular subject, then 
                  write in-depth special reports that feature the specialized 
                  information you found, package them in an e-book, and make them 
                  available to Internet marketers for a fee. As an alternative, 
                  you may also create a newsletter that regularly updates the 
                  specialized information -- and make money on the paid subscriptions. 
                
 
               
              More and more businesses are realizing the value of having good 
                information for good decision-making. Whether big or small, a 
                business can't succeed today unless it keeps up on the latest 
                information.  
              What kind of information do businesses need? They need information 
                on their markets, their competition, technology, money sources 
                and regulations, for starters. Develop a sensitivity to the needs 
                of your prospects by asking them directly what they need. From 
                that, you can determine the kind of information that would best 
                satisfy their needs.  
              Here's a useful tip: You'd do well to develop a "hook." 
                A "hook" is a marketing term that makes it easier for 
                people to purchase your services. It's taking the situation I 
                mentioned earlier about "knowing how to find information 
                about practically anything" and refining it down to a specialty. 
                If you specialize is some interesting aspect of the information 
                brokerage industry, it's easier to attract your prospects' attention. 
               
              Define your niche by identifying the customer group that you 
                specialize in helping: small businesses, or non-profit organizations. 
                Or, you can define it by the area of information you want to deal 
                with, such as health information, company information, or international 
                information. Another way you can describe your business is by 
                the medium of the information you want to provide, such as: only 
                database searches, only document retrieval, or only interviewing 
                industry experts.  
              I was fortunate enough to have started in Washington D.C., where 
                I developed the hook of government information. It gave me an 
                instant edge over my competitors, even though I had no more experience 
                gathering information then they did. To make a long story short, 
                the government information I've amassed over the years have earned 
                me a coveted position of being a New York Times syndicated columnist, 
                and I've even authored two New York Times best-sellers featuring 
                information that I've obtained for free. I have also been privileged 
                to be regularly featured as the nation's top expert on government 
                information on TV programs such as Larry King, Oprah, David Letterman, 
                Jay Leno, the Today Show and Good Morning America.  
              The key to becoming a successful information broker is be the 
                first to find the information, and deliver it on a timely basis 
                to those who want it. Then sit back and watch the money appear 
                out of thin air!  
              
               
              Matthew Lesko is a New York times syndicated 
                columnist, and author of 2 New York Times best-sellers. He is 
                regularly featured as the nation’s top expert on 
                government information on TV programs such as Larry King, 
                Oprah, David Letterman, Jay Leno, the Today Show and Good Morning 
                America. His latest book, "Free 
                Money for Entrepreneurs on the Internet" identifies hundreds 
                of little-known sources of free government money for "net-repreneurs" 
                and reveals the secret formula for easily obtaining the money 
                for your business. 
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