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Experiencing The Royal Treatment

During a trip to Thailand a few years ago, I had the pleasure of meeting Norman Jones, his wife, Premchit and their son Matthew, now 8, who made my stay in Bangkok far more enjoyable than it might have otherwise been. Norman, an incentive/loyalty marketing expert met Premchit in 1998 and they have been together for 14 years. I went on to visit Chaing Mai and then spent several weeks visiting Phuket’s beautiful beaches by motor bike, had fun, and enjoyed many delicious meals.

Norman, Premchit and Matthew moved to Phuket, Premchit’s ancestral home from Bangkok this month and now live in a new home within 15 minutes of four of Phuket’s best beaches. Together, they have established a base for her extraordinarily high quality Natural Wellness Retreats through EXPERIENCE | PREMCHIT.

As an Aromatic Alchemist, Aromatherapist, and gifted healer, Premchit’s once in a lifetime, 3-9 day healing retreats include juices, ambrosias, and body and facial elixers, as well as breath, movement, music, and scent therapies in luxury accommodations like Phuket’s Paresa.

Her therapies and exquisite products are grounded in a royal family history that dates back to the late 1500′s and is steeped in the intimate knowledge and wisdom of the rainforest and its treasures of herbs and foods.

In addition to offering her EXPERIENCE | PREMCHIT Natural Wellness Retreats, Premchit also offers Ancestral Siamese Cuisine through her “secret” restaurant NA THALANG where guests enjoy delicious Siamese gourmet meals in secret locations around Phuket. Each lunch and dinner is designed, prepared and presented by Premchit Prateap Na Thalang, using secret recipes inherited from her ancestors and fresh seasonal ingredients from her farm and the tropical rainforests, village markets, sandy beaches and blue seas of Phang-Nga and Phuket Provinces in southern Thailand.

In addition to offering her healing retreats and gourmet cuisine, Norman and Premchit provide free daily postcards on life in Phuket. You can receive these by sending Norman an e-mail (norman@experiencepremchit.com) with YES in the subject matter.

I have been purposely brief in this post because anything I could attempt to write about Premchit and her delicious offerings for the mind, body and soul would take away from the beauty and depth of a visit to her two websites. If you don’t get the opportunity to visit Thailand to experience Premchit’s wonderful offerings,  I know you will enjoy your journey through her amazing world.

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The Co-op Business Model: Share Whatever You’ve Got

Derek Sivers is a highly successful entrepreneur, coach and music industry pro whose inspirational blog posts are excelent reminders about the art of humanistic business and actionable advice for musicians. I particularly like his most recent post.


I feel like I know almost nothing about business, because the only business I’ve ever done is the co-op / sharing model.

It goes like this:

1. You already have something that people want.

It might be something you own, something you’ve learned how to do, or access to valuable resources, space, or people.

2. Find a way to share it with everyone who needs it.

Share because it’s what you do for friends, because it’s the right thing to do, because it makes the world a better place, and because it’ll make you deeply happy.

Share as your contribution in return for all the things and ideas that people have shared with you.

(If you’re having a bad day, or someone has recently wronged you, you may not feel the world has shared much with you, but here’s a reminder.)

3. If it takes some effort for you to share it, you can charge a little something for your effort, to ensure that this giving can continue.

My examples:
In 1994, the U.S. Copyright office still didn’t have their copyright forms online. You still had to mail a letter to Washington DC to ask them to mail you some blank forms, if you wanted to copyright your songs. I scanned all the forms, and put them on my website for free as printable downloads, for any musician who needed them. For the next year or two, until the government started putting the forms online, my site was the only place to get them. This was my first effort to contribute back to this great invention of the internet.

In 1995, I learned how to trademark my band name. It took many hours of work to figure out the legalese, but I did it.
I wrote out the step-by-step instructions and put them on my band’s website for free. For years it was the go-to resource for musicians who wanted to trademark their name.

In 1996, I had a little record label, so I got a UPC barcode account, so I could put unique UPC barcodes on my CDs. I had to pay $750 to the Universal Code Council to get a company account, but that meant I was allowed to create 100,000 products under my account. Musician friends asked how, so I showed them how, but also said they could use one of my product IDs. At first, I did this for free, as a favor, until friends started sending strangers my way. Because it took a little work to generate the number, create their EPS/TIFF graphic barcode, and keep track of their unique IDs forever, I charged $20. Over the next 12 years, this made me almost $2 million.

In 1997, I got a credit card merchant account to sell my own CD at live shows. It cost $1000 in set-up fees and took three months of red-tape paperwork. Then I built a little online shopping cart, which also took months of work, just to sell my own CD. Musician friends asked if they could use mine instead of having to go through all of that work, so I said OK. At first, I did this for free, as a favor, until it was taking up all of my time. Because it took me 45 minutes of work to digitize, stock, set up a new album in my system, I charged $35 per new album. Because it took 10 minutes of work to pick, pack, and ship a purchased CD, I charged $4 per CD sold. Over the next 12 years, this made me about $20 million.

In 1999, I had learned a lot about hosting websites. Linux, Apache, PHP, SQL, FTP, DNS, Qmail, SpamAssassin, etc. I had done it for myself for my band’s website, then for CD Baby, and bought my own servers. So when friends would complain about their existing web-hosting company, I’d host them on my servers instead. At first, I did this for free, as a favor, until it was filling up my server. Because each server cost me $300/month, and I had to hire a full-time person to manage this, I charged $20 per month. (In 1999, this was way cheap.)
Over the next 9 years, this made me about $5 million.

Since 2000, I’ve been sharing everything I’ve learned for free. I’m not the smartest guy, probably below average, but it costs nothing to share, and it’s the right thing to do, so I do. Over the last 11 years, this made me incredibly happy and lucky, because of all the interesting people I’ve met by doing it.

Point being:

None of these things looked like a business venture.

All of them were just sharing something I already had.

People often ask me if I have any suggestions for what kind of business they should get into.

I tell them the only thing I know how to recommend: “Start by sharing whatever you’ve got.”

© 2011 Derek Sivers

Derek Sivers
Entrepreneur, programmer, avid student of life. I make useful things, and share what I learn.

Me in 10 seconds

I’m an entrepreneur. I treat work as play.
I live by “whatever scares you, go do it”.
I’m a minimalist. The less I own, the happier I am.
I’m a learning addict.
I’m very comfortable being the leader and being on stage.
This is my favorite fable.

Official Bragging Bio

 

Originally a professional musician and circus clown, Derek Sivers created CD Baby in 1998. It became the largest seller of independent music online, with $100M in sales for 150,000 musicians. In 2008, Derek sold CD Baby for $22M, giving the proceeds to a charitable trust for music education.

He is a frequent speaker at the TED Conference, with over 5 million views of his talks.

In 2011, he published a book which shot to #1 on all of its Amazon categories.

Derek Sivers lives in Singapore, where he is creating his next company.

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Higher Ground

Another great multicultural track from playingforchange.com

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Amazing Story of Overcoming Overwhelming Challenges

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Every LIttle Thing is Going to Be All Right through One Love

This could be the theme song of the new paradigm world unfolding. Part of the Playing for Change series, this happy antidote to fear and negativity features Baba Maal and Keb Mo. Let the music enter you and feel the joy…sing along, dance and smile…

Here’s one more great feel good song that contains a message for our time.

To hear more and learn more about Playing for Change, click here.

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