The 111 Rule: How to Make Your First $1 Million Selling One Thing

by Moume 6 min read 0 comments
✅ Last verified & updated: April 3, 2026
Entrepreneur focused on a single business goal with laptop and notepad
The path to $1 million is not about doing more — it is about doing one thing exceptionally well.

Most people who want to make their first million make the same mistake: they try to sell everything to everyone through every channel. They launch three products, target five audiences, post on seven platforms, and run ten types of ads — all at once.

The result? Scattered effort, diluted focus, and zero traction.

The 111 Rule flips this approach entirely: One product. One audience. One channel. That is how you build your first million.

This is not theory. It is the exact strategy used by countless seven-figure businesses — from SaaS companies to e-commerce brands to coaching businesses. And in this article, you will learn exactly how to apply it, step by step.

The 111 Rule Explained

The 111 Rule is built on a simple principle: depth beats breadth at every stage of business growth, especially the first million.

One Product

Sell one product or service. Not five, not three, not two — ONE. This forces you to:

  • Make that product genuinely exceptional
  • Understand your customer’s needs at a deep, intimate level
  • Iterate and improve faster because all feedback relates to one offering
  • Simplify operations, fulfillment, and customer support

One Audience

Serve one specific market segment. Not “everyone who needs marketing” — instead, “local restaurants with 1-5 locations who need more online orders.” The narrower your audience:

  • The easier it is to find them
  • The more precisely you can tailor your messaging
  • The faster word-of-mouth spreads within their community
  • The less competition you face (because broad-market players ignore niches)

One Channel

Acquire customers through one primary channel. Not social media AND paid ads AND SEO AND email AND partnerships — one channel, mastered completely, before adding another.

  • One channel mastered = predictable, repeatable customer acquisition
  • Five channels done poorly = sporadic, unreliable results
  • Your one channel should be wherever your one audience already gathers

The Math: How One Product Reaches $1 Million

People overcomplicate the math. Here is how simple it actually is:

Close-up of focused entrepreneur working on a business strategy
The multiplication is simple — pick the combination that matches your skill and audience.
Price PointCustomers Needed for $1MMonthly (Over 3 Years)
$10/month subscription2,778 subscribers~77 new subscribers/month
$50 product20,000 customers~556 sales/month
$200 product5,000 customers~139 sales/month
$1,000 service1,000 clients~28 clients/month
$5,000 service200 clients~6 clients/month
$10,000 service100 clients~3 clients/month

Notice: higher price points require dramatically fewer customers. Selling a $10,000 coaching package to 3 clients per month gets you to $1 million in under 3 years. That is very achievable with one product, one audience, and one channel.

Step-by-Step: Building Your 111 Business

Step 1: Choose Your One Audience

Start with the audience, not the product. Ask yourself:

  • Which audience do I already understand deeply?
  • Which audience has money and willingness to spend it?
  • Which audience has problems I can credibly solve?
  • Where does this audience already gather online?

Good examples: freelance designers, real estate agents, Etsy sellers, SaaS founders, local gym owners, online course creators, wedding photographers. The more specific, the better.

Step 2: Identify Their #1 Pain Point

Every audience has one dominant pain point that keeps them up at night. Find it by:

  • Reading Reddit threads, Facebook groups, and forums where they complain
  • Searching Quora and Twitter for their most common questions
  • Talking to 10-20 people in the audience directly (send DMs, offer free calls)
  • Reading 1-star reviews of competing products to find what is missing

Your one product must solve this one pain point better than anything else on the market.

Step 3: Build Your One Product

Your product does not need to be complex. It needs to deliver one clear outcome for one specific audience. Product types that work well for the 111 Rule:

  • Digital product: Course, template, toolkit, or software solving the pain point ($50-$500)
  • Service: Done-for-you service solving the pain point with guaranteed results ($1,000-$10,000)
  • SaaS: Software that automates the solution to the pain point ($30-$300/month)
  • Coaching/consulting: One-on-one or group guidance to solve the pain point ($2,000-$25,000)

Step 4: Master Your One Channel

Choose the channel where your audience already spends time and money:

If Your Audience Is On…Your One Channel Should Be
Google (searching for solutions)SEO + Content Marketing
YouTube (watching tutorials)YouTube Content
LinkedIn (professional networking)LinkedIn Outreach + Content
Instagram/TikTok (visual platforms)Short-Form Video Content
Facebook Groups (community discussions)Community Engagement + Facebook Ads
Industry events/conferencesStrategic Partnerships + Speaking

Master one channel for 6-12 months before even thinking about adding a second one. Most businesses that hit $1M use only one or two acquisition channels.

Dashboard showing business growth metrics and scaling analytics
Focus creates clarity, clarity creates speed, and speed creates momentum toward $1M.

Step 5: Iterate Until Product-Market Fit

Your first version will not be perfect. That is fine. Launch at 80% quality and let customer feedback guide the remaining 20%. The iteration cycle:

  1. Sell to your first 10 customers
  2. Collect detailed feedback from each one
  3. Improve the product based on the most common feedback
  4. Raise the price 10-20%
  5. Sell to the next 20 customers
  6. Repeat until the product virtually sells itself through referrals and testimonials

Why Adding More Products Too Early Kills Growth

The #1 temptation for entrepreneurs earning $10,000-$30,000/month is to launch a second product. Resist this until your first product is truly maximized.

Adding a second product before the first is optimized:

  • Splits your attention and creative energy
  • Doubles your operational complexity
  • Confuses your audience about what you do
  • Reduces the quality of both products

Most million-dollar businesses have one flagship product that generates 80%+ of revenue. The product line expands AFTER the first million, not before.

The Bottom Line

A million dollars sounds massive until you break it down:

  1. Pick one audience you deeply understand and can credibly serve
  2. Find their #1 pain point through research and direct conversation
  3. Build one product that solves that pain point better than the alternatives
  4. Master one channel to reach that audience consistently and predictably
  5. Iterate relentlessly until your product sells itself through word of mouth

One product. One audience. One channel. That is the 111 Rule — and it is the simplest, most proven path to your first $1 million.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What if my one product does not sell?

A: Validate before building. Pre-sell the product or do low-cost tests. If nobody buys after 100 targeted pitches, the problem is either the product, the audience, or the messaging — iterate on one variable at a time.

Q: When do I add a second product?

A: Only after your first product is consistently generating predictable revenue and you have systems in place to maintain it without your daily involvement. For most people, this is at $300,000-$500,000/year.

Q: Does this work for physical products?

A: Yes. Many seven-figure e-commerce brands started with a single SKU sold to a specific niche through one platform (Amazon, Shopify + Facebook Ads, etc.). Physical product businesses benefit from the 111 Rule just as much as digital ones.


Moume
Written by

Moume

Expert reviewer and digital marketing specialist at Enara Desk. Passionate about helping readers make informed decisions about online products and services.

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