Archive | 2010

Turn Successful Broadcasts Into Heat-Seeking Follow-Ups

So you’re building your list. Which means you’re using aweber or get response – or one of those reputable autoresponders. You’ll be sending out Follow-up messages and Broadcasts. The advantage of a Broadcast is you can refer to something totally current, such as Christmas Eve, or New Year’s Eve, or the sudden drop in temperature on Boxing Day… And being current is to be fresh and less like a machine than some of your pre-logged follow-ups.

Every now and then you should go through your Broadcasts and look at the ones that have got the most opens and clicks. Those at over 10% are worth considering as follow-ups for some of your list. You may have to tweak one or two lines, but most probably you can copy and paste at least 90% of a well received Broadcast and just drop it into a follow up message. Add a call to action – always do this, whether that be for a free offer or affiliate offer – and you’re done; one message becomes two.

Nice way to save yourself some work. And the good thing is you know that the Broadcast you saved as a follow up will very likely be received with the same kind of interest. Who knows, you might get a sell off of it.

Try it out.

For more on building your list, get this free report on Squeeze Page marketing –  Power Up Your Squeeze Page (pre-launch guide)

 50 Ways To Grow Your List Faster
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How to Improve Your On-Page SEO

All in One SEO Pack Plugin

The first thing I’d suggest is you work with WordPress. Google likes WordPress. End of story.

With a WordPress site, download plugin All In One SEO Pack. Activate it and then fill in the relevant fields so you optimize each of your pages and posts. Then take a look at your competitors’ websites and pages. Right click on any website and scroll to ‘View source’ and you can check out their keywords. Pick out the ones that look relevant to your site and copy and paste them into the space for keywords in the All in One SEO plugin.

Optimize your pages for your keywords

Do it organically. Which means, write about your topic, then go back over it and if you discover you’re still thin on keywords relevant to your topic, add some – but make sure they make sense in the context and don’t spoil the reader’s enjoyment of your content!

Devise an easy to navigate site

Make your site easily navigable and both your readers and Google will reward you.

Make sure your loading time isn’t slow

On the whole this means not cluttering your site with too many plugins and large image/video files. Images want to be 50-150 k, and definitely not over 1MB!

Keep providing good content regularly

It’s probably just as important to be writing/posting regularly as it is writing good content. Obviously you should aim for both.

Hope the above prove useful ;)

For help with Squeeze Page marketing, check out Power Up Your Squeeze Page.

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High ticket scams – YourNetBiz & Carbon Copy Pro

As the internet marketing niche becomes increasingly saturated with information products, it’s inevitable that many of the high ticket item out there (typically products which are marketed as tuition plus one on one training) will be devalued.  Unless…

Well that’s the question and it’s something that’s been bothering me and some fellow marketers for some time. If the mentoring side of the high ticket item is found to be wanting by the buyer, he or she is only left with the materials, which as anyone knows can be found at prices under £100. Maybe you’d have to buy several of those $67 and $77 products, but you’d probably buy a bunch before you spent the same as you would have done for a high ticket item.

So it’s CRITICAL that the sponsor or mentor who has become an associate of a company like YougNetBiz or Carbon Copy Pro follows through. What I’m hearing is that most don’t follow through.

By applying the philosophy of ‘sink or swim’ to their new ‘students’ or associates, these companies risk ruining the very foundations they are built on, namely providing an education. Once the trust starts to go, these high ticket packages will become dinosaurs. Unless the sponsors or mentors really teach their ‘students’.

So the real value of packages from YNB and CCPro is down to the quality of each sponsor’s tuition. Sadly these companies don’t run any kind of check on their sponsors and students. To me that’s like hiring a teacher for a school and paying no attention as to what he or she teaches, whether he or she is liked by the students or is utterly useless.

But that’s the model they run. They boast fine materials but fail to deliver great tuition.

So if you’re thinking of joining a high ticket opportunity, make sure you get to know your mentor. Of course, it’s unlikely you can do that face to face, but these days we have Skype and, after a couple of calls, you should be able to make a judgment call.

With my students I make myself available as much as I can. Not least because their success adds to my own.

There are some more experienced mentors out there than me. But just bear in mind they have hundreds of students, in most cases. And how much time do you think they devote to ecah of their students?

I keep my groups small and exclusive.

If you want to find out more about what I can do to help you get ahead in online marketing, get in touch through nic.penrake [at} generousentrepreneursonline.com or add me on Skype nic.penrake and tell me why I should add you. And I’ll be happy to discuss what I can do for you.

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Extract from Power Up Your Squeeze Page

Get people to open you emails

Do whatever it takes to get your subs to open those emails. So make those subject lines count by creating:

-           Curiosity

-           Controversy

-           Shock value

-           Humor

-           A sense you care

The trick with subject lines is to interpolate a person’s day with something that is actually generic but feels specific to your subscriber.  Your line should strike the reader as though you are resuming a dialogue he or she had recently. And there are two ways of doing this:

•          Identify with the positive, expectant outlook of your reader, or

•          Identify with your reader’s anxieties

With both approaches you are tapping into something that is going on in your reader’s life, which to him or her feels unique, but which is actually common to nearly all of us most days of the week.

We are nearly all waiting for a parcel or email – Hey, Nic, did you get that? – or some token of appreciation for something we just did – Hey, Nic, thanks for that, I appreciate it. Do you get the idea?

Just as effective is to hint at something they are about to miss out on in the event they fail to take action. For instance, Where are you, did you forget? We all forget stuff, don’t we.

So maybe this is one thing we absolutely shouldn’t have forgotten; here’s our second chance perhaps, so we open the email.

Whichever method you choose, be relevant – and ethical – to your content. If you don’t, your subscriber will feel cheated and your cleverness will backfire – Next time I am NOT falling for that one.

If you struggle to write well, look at the subject lines you’ve found compelling and make a swipe list. Then do a test on them and check to see which ones your subscribers are opening. Vary accordingly.

By writing subject lines that relate to the most common situations in a person’s social, personal and work life, you will double or even treble your open rate.

Get your readers to take action

And once they’re in, tell them specifically what you want them to do:

-           Read this report

-           Check this video, watch it today

-           Please fill out my survey

Let them know you’ve checked out the content, but don’t tell them what it is, keep the intrigue going.

Truth is, many of your subscribers will not only ignore your sales pitches, some of them will unsubscribe even before buying a $7 product. And funnily enough they will leave your list even quicker if you mail the same kind of thing over and over. The whole point of building a list is not simply to get round accusations of being a spammer, you’ve got to start to treat your list like these people are your friends, your team – even if they aren’t and never will be.

You have to undo all that you’ve been taught about selling and pitching and think, in a rewrite of Kennedy’s famous words… ‘Ask not, what can your subscribers do for you – ask, what can you do for them?’

Every single email you write should have a solid, powerful call to action. That doesn’t mean a hard sell directing your reader to a product. But you are doing a hard sell regards the action you want them to take, whether that be grabbing a free gift, reading your post or checking out a mate’s squeeze page.

If people on your list start to believe you are passionate about what you have to say and passionate about what they should do to help themselves, they will start to think of buying your recommendations.

But remember, your readers are short on time and only willing to do so much at your command. So, be brief, make your email quick to grasp, provide value, and always give them a tangible action to complete.

Think of your list as an investment. People investment. And that takes time. And at first you’ll wonder what the hell, my list never buys, never talks to me, never leaves a comment on my blog – hell to them all!

Don’t worry, your reaction is entirely normal;)

To read the full illustrated, step-by-step, no fluff guide this post was taken from check out Power Up Your Squeeze Page now

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Protect Your Thank You/Download Page

So you’ve created your sales page, you’ve got your product up there and it’s launch time!

People are buying your ebook or video course… but some people are getting sneaky and finding your thank you and download page and getting all that hard work of yours for free.

So here’s a tip. Go into the source/html part of your page and put this bit of html at the top:

<meta name=”robots” content=”noindex,nofollow”>

This code will block your download page from the search engines.

All being well Power Up Your Squeeze Page goes live as a Warrior Special Offer (see warriorforum.com if you don’t know it)  tomorrow, December 16, so do look out for it. You won’t find such a comprehensive overview of marketing with a squeeze page in one ebook anywhere else. If you haven’t got the free report (pre-launch) yet, you can find it here http:powerupyoursqueezepage.info/pre-launch.

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Not all mentors mentor equally

I had an interesting conversation with the vice president of a top US SEO company last night. Among other things, we discussed the viability of marketing a high ticket item. And one of the things we both agreed on right off the bat was the lamentable lack of genuine mentors.

One of the big problems high ticket marketing faces is not the price – which is higher than your average Clickbank product or even most courses out there – it’s the not unfounded suspicion that mentors of these high ticket products are only there for the sale and will smartly make themselves unavailable and ‘madly busy’ thereafter, leaving the new ‘team member’ to sink or swim.

As my VP friend said, about 95% sink.

Which is crazy when you think that one of the main reasons you’d market a high ticket item is to take advantage of the residual income. You won’t earn much residual income if all your team members sink, will you.

Besides which, it’s a bad way to do business. If high ticket marketing is all about personal branding, what are you doing for your personal brand by letting your team members drown?

That’s why at Generous Entrepreneurs we do things differently. The people I work with, who help me, believe in being generous. As a way of life and as a way of doing business. It’s not enough to talk it, either, you have to do it. Few actually do. And that’s where the disappointment and disillusionment comes for so many who try their hand at internet marketing – the gap between the promise and the reality.

The best you can do if you’re just starting out is find a mentor. But make sure he or she is generous – and means it. And that means finding someone who is accessible and who will give you his time.

If you want to find out more about how Generous Entrepreneurs  can help you, get in touch through skype (nic.penrake). Meantime, you’re welcome to download my pre-launch report on list building:

http://powerupyoursqueezepage.info/pre-launch

The full guide will be out shortly – when I get my voice back and can shoot the video for it!

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Wrapping Text around images on your blog posts

One thing I found difficult when I came to start blogging was getting text and image to align as I wanted it to. How the hell do you get text to wrap around an image? I would ask myself. Maybe you’ve asked yourself the same. Well here’s the answer.

<p><img src=link to your image here” align=”left” hspace=”5”vspace=”10/>Text</p>

Roughly translated that means: paragraph, followed by image, address of which is here [the url for your uploaded image] with specification for spacing and end paragraph.

If you’re not sure how to find the url of an uploaded image, all you do is this:

Go to Library> Add media

Upload your image

Scroll down and copy and paste the url you’ve been given, commonly ending in pdf or png o r jpg. Paste that url into the space ‘link to your image here’ and your text will wrap around your image. – like this http://powerupyoursqueezepage.info/pre-launch

Here are a few other useful html tips:

Align paragraph to center: <p align=center”>text</p>

Align paragraph to left:  <p align=”left”>left<text</p>

Align Paragraph to right: <p align=”right”>text</p>

Another way of placing image and text on a blog so things don’t slip about is to work on your image and text in another software like paint or Photoshop and create an image of both text and image, then upload that, copy and paste the url into the space you want to fill.

With all these technical tips, I’ve always found the best way to approach them is to learn bit by bit. Don’t get bogged down it – at the end of the day people are more interested in what you have to say that how nice your layout looks.

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How to beat information overload as an internet marketer

What’s the most common complaint among internet marketers in their first couple years in the business?

Information overload.

Every day, thousands of sources of new data and information pour into your inbox and desktop, all intent on providing you with new insights and ideas for how to boost your Internet marketing tactics. Every now and then I have to tell myself, That’s enough…. And so should you.

After all, how much information can we actually absorb from day to day? And how much of that do we even need?

Decide What Information You Need To Move Forward

How much of what you read do you use to take action? A lot of the time this stuff just goes in and washes around your brain to leave you with a residue of panic. So, remove the informational sources that only pile on more options for how to do something you have yet to do.

Give yourself an hour a day to research, the rest use to DO.

What About Information Products?

There’s always a new money making system or product that hits the market promising silly money if you get out your credit card. The thing is, even these smart software systems require reading time, digesting time and troubleshooting time. And by the time you’re nearly ready to take action, you’re out of time. Ever had that? Out of energy, anyway.

Sometimes it’s much more productive to think less ambitiously, follow the tried and tested routes and just knock them out. It can be hard, but at least you’re doing stuff, not just reading it.

The kinds of products I like these days are those that give me ideas for improving my own.

I’m not saying I always sick by it but I certainly aim for it: don’t buy new guru stuff until you’ve mastered the last product you bought. It’s so easy to hop from one program to the next without ever investing the time needed to get anything done with the product in question. Thing is, you’re unlikely to get results that way.

Never mind the new tricks, have you got the basics down pat?

If you could use some guidance with all the information flying around on the net and in your head, check out generous commissions.

For some easily absorbed information, check out Power Up Your Squeeze Page (the pre-launch).

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Make Money Online As A Stay At Home Dad

Thanks to the internet you can now be a stay at home dad and do more with your day than change diapers and mash bananas for little ones. Or revisit your geometry lessons for the older ones.

Statistics seem to vary a lot but according to the Office of National Statistics in the UK there are now 200,000 men staying at home to bring up their children – almost double the number in 1993, when official records began. A not insignificant fraction of those fathers are working part-time and sharing the childcare, or bringing up children by themselves.

As more and more of us can work from home through the internet, being a stay at home dad isn’t the oddity it was even 15 years ago. Because dad can now look after his kids AND pull in some money – through the internet – the emasculating connotations to the phrase ‘stay at home dad’ are no longer what they once were.

How much money can you really make online as a stay at home dad?

The first thing you find yourself doing more of when staying at home is browsing on the internet, chatting on Facebook, Twitter, visiting blogs. Blimey, a whole day can go by and all you do is surf and wipe bums. Let’s face it, you’re not likely to be down at Cafe Nero with your kids and some other fella’s kids talking about schools and waistlines, are you? Men aren’t as comfortable as women are showing off their offspring and chatting about ‘their day’… But that might be about to change.

Because as more and more stay at home dads make money online, they will feel they actually have something that other men would like to talk about over a mid morning coffee – making money! Which money-making opportunity is best for a stay at home dad? The internet is full of ‘make money online’ opportunities, and few of them actually form the basis of a real business. Every next link you click on takes you to a webpage asking for your email or your credit card. In return you will be able to make a silly amount of money in just 7 days. Wow, this looks great! Except, of course, it isn’t. It might not be a scam, but the promises made are very often hypothetical and seldom applicable to your circumstances. So how do you get ahead in online marketing? Answer: get a mentor. Don’t keep spending on ebooks and courses. Chances are you’ll end up spending more than you actually use and getting yourself into a funk. Just as you would with any other serious business pursuit – you have to learn from people who will invest in you and expect you to take action.

I got into internet marketing in a roundabout way. I’d been about to see my first novel published when I heard the publisher had gone bust. After a lot of gnashing of teeth, the only deal I could get after that was an on-demand deal – which is little more than a distribution deal with no marketing push. So I set up a group on Facebook, plus a Page, of course. I emailed friends, family and Facebook friends. I blasted Twitter with links to my book’s page on amazon. And the money rolled in. Yeah, right. So was my book crap? Not according to the people who had reviewed it on amazon – but my marketing was crap. Because, in my ignorance, I was doing it the spammy way.

I investigated further. I could barely see the wood for the trees. Friends and family said the internet marketing world looked like one big scam. Be careful, they said. Six months later, I’d learned plenty but still hadn’t made a dime online. Maybe my friends were right and I should give up. But as a stay at home dad, what were the alternatives? Not so many. So I stuck at it and resolved to make it work.

Get a blog and make a start

I set up a blog on internet marketing – even though I knew very little about the topic. But it’s like most things in life, if you trawl long enough you will pick up food to sustain your fledgling business. And gradually I became – to new people at least – an expert. Just a blog? Well, no, you don’t do one of anything when it comes to internet marketing. It’s all about diversification. And yet – and here’s the tricky part – it’s also about balance; if you diversify too much too soon, you will spread yourself too thin and possibly end up achieving nothing but a chronic wrist condition from using your mouse all day long.

Affiliate marketing is the easiest way in to making money online

Affiliate marketing involves marketing someone else’s product and being paid a commission for each sale. You don’t even have to have a physical product – it can be digital, an information product such as you’d find at Clickbank. The best way to market as an affiliate these days is through review sites. Set up a mini site, keep your page limited to a very narrow niche, aimed at buyers not freebie seekers, and you WILL start to make money online. Unless you’re an experienced marketer and really know your niche, one site won’t do it, you’ll need several. But once they’re up and running, they make money more or less on autopilot. But is this really a business? Not quite, in my opinion. Because unless you’re building a list, you are building an income, not a business. How does a stay at home dad create a business online – from scratch? To build a list you need to set up web pages – known as squeeze pages – that offer a gift in return for a visitor’s email. Once you have a list, you have a potential customer base. Now we’re talking. But in all of these processes, you need help, don’t you? Of course there are plenty of tutorials, videos, etc. on the internet. But how do you piece all these disparate lessons together to form a coherent business strategy when you’ve got Freddy there demanding milk every five minutes, or Naomi with teething problems? Even assuming your kids are out of their tantrum phase, kids don’t know the meaning of closed doors and they interrupt you every moment a question pops into their heads. I have 3, I know. So unless you have a fortified shed at the end of the garden or can afford round-the-clock help, your best plan is to find a mentor. And the way to do that is to do what you’re doing now – reading on the net and checking out the authors of those articles and blogs you read and opening a dialogue with the ones you like the look of.

Find a generous marketing mentor

I can’t emphasize enough the importance of finding a mentor with whom you click – he or she is worth their weight in gold. Not only will you learn a viable internet marketing model, you will find yourself the equivalent of a personal trainer AND, with any luck, a buddy. Through your mentor you will more quickly acquire the opportunity to network with more experienced marketers than you. The learning curve will be less arduous and the money will start to appear in a shorter period of time. Leave the heroics of being a stay at home dad to bringing up your children, just be practical with the task of building an online business – get a generous marketing mentor and you’ll never want to return to the office.

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Wealth From Marketing – And a Wealth of Great Speakers

Halloween, I was up early – again – and hardly in the mood for a conference on Wealth From Marketing. I’d been working the whole week, the week before than and the one before that, 7 days a week and I was kind of needing a lie-in. But if you’re going to be an entrepreneur and a damn good one, you have to get tough with yourself.

Saturday morning and I was about to subject myself to a torrent of can-do messaging about SEO, keywords and lead generation. Well, what a pleasant surprise.

The think BIG Education event held at the Royal Horticultural Hall in Pimlico was much less about internet marketing than marketing in general. And in many ways it was more about learning how to communicate effectively and wit generosity than marketing. I was expecting plenty of rah-rah and pitching, but was amazed at how entertaining the speakers were.

First on was an Australian marketer, Kerwin Rae, a short, stocky guy, with pugilistic features. He came at us with a lot of I can’t hear you say it louder, etc. which could have been totally tiresome but he had enough wit to keep it engaging, most of the time. This is a guy who regularly advises and does business with billionaires – and, by his own admission, he doesn’t have any qualifications to his name. He looked every part the street hustler made good. He was full of entertaining anecdotes that illustrated a specific mindset to the successful marketer and he came across as a man of action, genuine and generous, and I would have worked with him like a shot.

Second on was American radio show host, Joel Roberts. The guy struck me as totally the part – short, middle aged, thinning hair, a slightly rounded posture from so many hours in an interviewer’s chair, which had done nothing to blunt the sharpness of his owlish expression and satirical smile. He possessed a truly awesome – for once the word used in its truest sense – confidence, and a masterful comic timing. His thing was ‘the language of impact’ as he called it and he roused us all to awaken to the reality of having to learn how to become ‘media ease’. He didn’t go so much for the rah rah, say it louder after me kind of approach, his was more directly interactive, asking members of the audience to ‘spar’ with him. There were some really funny moments when he took two women from the audience and invited them to join him on stage – and they couldn’t get up on the high stools. He just made it all seem so funny, even as he was illustrating a serious point. That’s talent.

Both women were invited to talk to him as if on air about their businesses. He’d pop questions, popping holes in their delivery to illustrate how we must learn to be more specific in what we say about ourselves and the benefits of our businesses. He had the genius to be ruthless and kind, charming and mischievous. And by now I really didn’t care if I was here for the marketing content, I was thoroughly entertained by the guy.

After lunch we had marketing legend – and copywriter – Jay Conrad Levinson of Marlboro Country fame. The guy retired at 29, because he wanted to work a 3 day week. He wrote a book called ‘Making a Living Without a Job’. What a cool title. So ahead of its time. This is even before we had the internet. He called himself a guerrilla marketer – and, as it happens, he came on wearing a camouflage T shirt under a black suit jacket, his hair in a long rat tail ponytail – and set about debunking many traditional marketing strategies as far back as the 70 – a real hero of the entrepreneur as creative thinker. He must be getting on and for the first fifteen minutes he seemed to be struggling with a wheezy chest, but the guy had such heart in his delivery you never doubted him for a second. He had some funny anecdotes to tell, too, and left us feeling grateful to have shared 90 minutes with him.

The fourth speaker, Daven Michaels, I didn’t get to see, unfortunately – I had to get home, it was already late. I was also pretty saturated by then. Half way through the event I realised I wasn’t going to pick up any specific strategy I could use to improve my marketing – but in the end that didn’t matter, because the guys were inspirational, and just watching them perform was a lesson in marketing of itself. I might well have gone for Jay’s pitch, even though it was an amount a little outside my budget, just to be within a chance of taking him up on his offer of choosing someone in his class to write an ebook with him, but I was already booked on a copywriting job and also the World Internet Summit, so, sadly, I missed out on that one. I’d love to tell myself, Maybe next time, but we were given to understand Jay and wheezy chest might only be back here in spirit not in person.

In summary, the event was free and it was a lot of fun – and I’m not usually a big fan of marketing seminars, if I’m honest. So, go check out think Big Education for future events. If the next one is anything like the one I attended, you’ll be glad you gave up a weekend day to go.

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