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How I Made A Million In My First Year In Business

Daniel Priestley

CEO & Cofounder, Dent

Many small business owners dream of hitting the elusive seven-figure turnover. It means you need to average £25,000 a week in sales for 40 weeks of the year. Some businesses take many years to achieve this, however at 21 years old I managed to crack through the £1 million barrier in my first 12 months of trade.

When I was 21 I started my first limited company. I had worked for an inspirational mentor for two years and had learned the ropes. The first year I worked for my mentor he had me doing intensive sales meetings. Some days I would do 12 sales meetings back to back for an hour each meeting. I would start at 7:30am and be home by 10:00pm. It was exhausting but it was a fast track for learning how to sell.

The following year I was promoted to running a small marketing division. I did 12 months of non-stop product launches. I wrote advertising copy, I ran events, I collected leads for the salespeople and I made sure I ran my division profitably.

As is often the case with youth, after just two years in the field I felt ready to emulate my mentor and employer so I went out on my own and started my own business.

It took three months to prepare for my business launch. I created ads, brochures and a brand. I did deals, put everything on credit and hoped like crazy it would all work out. I launched my business in September 2002 and by September 2003 I had turned over a million (Australian Dollars)!

I ran the business from my home, I was profitable and I had buckets of fun. I started my business on my credit cards and I had close to $300,000 cash in the bank at the end of year one.

Since that launch I have been involved in several start-ups in Australia, Singapore and the UK. In almost every case, the business has done over a million in sales in its first year of trade.

How does this consistently happen? How do we keep breaking through the seven-figure barrier?

Here are 5 of my quick tips:

  1. Micro-niche You need to hone in on a tiny little segment of your marketplace. You must imagine an exact person and sell to them. When I launched my first business I imagined that I was writing all my copy for my dad. Whenever I had to write an email, an ad or a brochure I wrote it as if I was talking to a man, aged mid-40s, who was frustrated with his current service provider. This shaped all of our copy into a sales conversation that hit the mark with a certain type of reader.

  2. Product strategy You need to have three products, not just one. First you need a free product that communicates your value. Second you need a core product that is more than £1,000 to buy. Third you need an upgrade product that is two to three times more expensive than your core product. If you just have a core product, you will end up charging too little or you will end up having too few clients. Youll want to have all three products to crack that million.

  3. Product launches and promotions I never went out to get one customer at a time. I ran events and promotions that encouraged everyone to come in at once. I wanted people to feel a buzz and see that other people were interested in buying what I had to sell. Sitting with one potential customer at a time will not get you to $1m in sales for the year. You must learn how to get 10-100 people at a time to engage with you.

  4. A great salesperson I was lucky here. My best friend is a masterful sales communicator. He listens at the right time, he talks at the right time, hes passionate and hes driven to hit his targets. If I created leads he would find a way to turn them into sales. This one fact made it possible for me to get my advertising to be profitable. You must get a great salesperson in your business. They need brochures and a script to work with. You need to give them warm leads every week and pay them regularly.

  5. Partnering with people better than you I knew that no one would want to buy something from a boyish 22-year-old so I did a joint venture with one of the most respected elder statesmen in my industry. I had him become the face of the business and deliver our presentations. This added a lot of credibility to the business and brought in a lot of new people. Theres no rule that says you have to wait 10 years until you partner with top people. My deal involved no upfront cash, it was based on a revenue share so you may not need to spend any money to secure a great deal if its structured well.

The first 12 months of business doesnt have to be loss-making. It doesnt need to be stressful and draining. You dont have to throw in all your money in year one hoping for a return in year three. There are many businesses that make great money in year one and everyone has fun growing them.

With a sales and promotions driven approach to business, its not impossible to make your first million in sales within 12 months of launch. Good luck.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.

faq's

Your Questions Answered

You can also find out more detail on our Methodology on our next webinar.

How long does it take to complete KPI?

The programme is built around a 12-month foundation year. This is the time it takes to build your full authority ecosystem. From there, many clients continue to compound their results year on year. Within 24 hours of joining, you'll get full access to the KPI platform. In your first week, you'll attend a group onboarding session where you'll learn how to navigate the platform, access your resources, subscribe to our event calendars, and book into your first Value Canvas Kickoff.

How long has Dent been doing this?

Over 5,500 businesses across 60+ industries in EMEA, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific have gone through our accelerators.

What is your mission?

Our mission is to produce Key People of Influence who stand out, scale up, and make an impact in the world.

What makes this different from programmes?

The biggest difference is that KPI is a production environment, not a course. You don't watch videos and hope something sticks. You build 15-17 real assets of influence — your book, your scorecard, your productised offer, your lead generation system — in structured 10-day sprints with live coaching. Every asset goes to market as you build it. Real feedback, real results, real revenue impact. And you're doing it alongside 5,500+ founders who've been through the same methodology.

Is Daniel Priestley involved in the programme?

Yes! Daniel is our CEO and Cofounder. He is one of the key minds behind every aspect of the KPI Accelerator. He occasionally runs workshops himself.