Click below to read questions of interest to you. |
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A. You may download or listen
to your audio sessions, and download purchased sales products to your computer,
as many times as you desire. Your account will be deactivated after one year
from the point of your last login session. If your account is deactivated, you
may contact info@vendingcarts.com to
coordinate reactivation, additional fees may apply. |
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A. Yes. Rolling
Profits audio sessions may be streamed in Real Player or downloaded directly to
your computer as MP3 files. Downloaded sessions may be copied onto a CD or
transferred to an MP3 player for convenient listening. |
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A. No. The tapes
have all sold out and are no longer offered. Once
you've purchased the program and downloaded the mp3 audio files, you
can burn the files onto a CD and listen to them in your car, at work,
or anywhere away from your computer. If you do not have a CD burner,
we can send you the audio files in a 4-CD set for a small additional
charge. |
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A. First,
make sure that you have an internet connection. Slower connections may
sometimes automatically disconnect if the bandwidth on the line is
insufficient.
Second, make sure that you have Acrobat Reader installed
before attempting to download a PDF file from the site. If you do not have
Acrobat Reader you may visit
Adobe Acrobat Reader to get it.
Third, make sure you
have the most current version of Real Player installed.
If you do not have Real Player you may visit
Real Player to get it.
Fourth, if you still have
difficulties downloading a product, send us an email at
support@vendingcarts.com. |
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A. It's not uncommon
for a single cart to earn its owner $100,000 a year, or more. The average
owner-operated cart earns about $50,000 a year nationally. |
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A.
Yes. Rolling Profits will show you
how to negotiate a lease on private property. |
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A. Yes. Many companies
give out carts as merchandising tools if you agree to sell that company's
products. Rolling Profits maintains
an updated list through its program and monthly e-mail newsletter. |
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A. It
varies, but worrying about how much rent you will pay is the wrong approach.
We'll show you how to calculate a fair and equitable rent for a given location,
but, more importantly, we'll show you how to package your offer to make your
cart business a valuable asset to a landlord.
For example, if your cart
is in a shopping center and also serves as an "information booth" for shoppers,
the rent you pay often becomes less important to the property owner than the
service you provide. In another example, a cart business that offers to donate
part of its proceeds to a local charity (such as the Boy Scouts, Cancer
Society, or a popular school group) is often welcomed by a property owner for
its goodwill and for the people it regularly draws to the location, rather than
for the rent it generates. These and other tips are contained in the
Rolling Profits program. |
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A. Cart technology has advanced to a point that virtually
insures approval by health departments around the country. However, if you had
such a problem, you'd be approved selling food products on a cart that are
wrapped by the manufacturer. Wrapped products routinely approved by health
departments without problem are pre-packaged, single-serve ice cream, cotton
candy and popcorn, peanuts in the shell, and beverages such as soft drinks and
bottled waters. Of course, selling flowers, novelties, or souveniers avoids the
board of health issues altogether! |
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A. Cart manufacturers can be easily found on the internet by
doing a search for "Vending carts" or the specific type of cart you are looking
for. The problem inexperienced buyers face is knowing which manufacturers are
the good ones. There are plenty of cheap carts available that quickly fall
apart, are designed so poorly as to be a constant frustration to operate, or
have such shabily fabricated propane systems that they are downright dangerous.
Buyers are often left with carts that don=t pass health or fire department
inspections or end up worthless and unusable when disreputable manufacturers
refuse to fix the problems or even go out of business.
At
VendingCarts.Com, we deal only with reputable manufacturers who we know build
first-rate, quality carts. Manufacturers we accept must build to National
Sanitation Foundation (NSF) standards to insure health department approval, and
American Gas Association (AGA) standards to insure propane safety.
Manufacturers must have a proven track record of providing reliable service to
their customers to fix problems in the field, as well as have a history of
standing behind their product through years of use.
Only then will we
bring the buying power of hundreds of Rolling
Profits customers to these manufacturers and negotiate "fleet
prices" for you should you decide to purchase. |
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A. There are excellent inventory control systems specific to
each cart business. For example, hot dog carts without cash registers normally
count each item at the cart. At day's end, an employee needs to turn in the
cash or return the product. Popcorn and cotton candy carts count the cups and
cones used to dispense the product.
Rolling
Profits teaches proven control techniques such as having cups,
bags, and cones printed or stamped with a company logo, using hard-to-purchase
products such as sourdough or sesame buns available only from commercial
suppliers, marking inventory items to guarantee their authenticity, and other
effective inventory controls. |
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A. It
varies, but many people are able to open their first cart within 30 days.
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