December 12, 2008

Put your info product on a CD for added profits

If you sell an info product, you probably deliver it via instant download online.  Did you know that you can put your info product on a physical CD and get it delivered?

Check out www.kunaki.com for more details, but they will burn a CD on demand (one at a time) for only $1.75 and mail them out (dropship) for $5 extra.

Why would you do this?

Well, that is easy.  People have a perception that something delivered via download is only worth so much money.  Once you take that same product and send it to them on a physical CD that they can touch and actually put in their computer, you increase the perceived value in the minds of your customers.

I have a site where I offer physical delivery of the product (a $37 ebook) for an additional $12.99.

40% of my sales take the upsell

The info on the CD is exactly the same as what they download.  I just offer delivery.  This adds $6.24 to my bottom line, per sale of the delivery.  Not much, but it adds to it.

Next, see if you can find other products or ideas to put on a CD in order to add value to the products you are selling.  You might be able to turn your $37 ebook into a $67 or $97 product - delivered.

Keep adding value and increasing the price.

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November 15, 2008

Nice Website, No Sales

I recently got a call from a good buddy of mine.  It went something like this:

"hey, can you check out my new website and tell me what you think"

"Ok, yup here it is, um, great, well, it looks nice but it won't sell anything"

"Well, what do you mean, we just had it professionally designed"
"Well for starters, there is no headline, no call to action and no sales copy"

See, my buddy is a computer network specialist.  He has a company that operates locally in his city and provides networking solutions to other companies.  They will go in and maintain a network, set up security, set up software and so on in their clients place of business.  He has a buddy who is an advertising guy - builds websites and the likes.  So here he is with his new website all set up.

The website looks very corporate, tells a litle bit about what they do - describes some of their services.

I said, OK, right now your website looks like all the other websites out there in your field.  Why should a client do business with you above any and all other options available to them?

He couldn't answer.  See, this is the USP - the Unique Selling Proposition.  What is it that sets you apart - what makes you different, why should anyone do business here?  He never defined what he does or what he sells.

Next question, where is your call to action?

"my what?"

What is it you want people to do once they come to your site?

"Oh, well, I don't know, I thought I just had to put up a nice site"

(oh, please)

See, my buddy doesn't even have a clear, defined sales process.  I said, OK, let's work backwards here.  How do you get new business?

"Well, all I know is that if I can meet with a prospect, there is a pretty good chance I can close them"

OK, now we are getting somewhere.

"OK, so if that is the case, then your website needs to sell a meeting.  You need to irritate a problem that your client would have and then offer to solve the problem by coming in to their business and having a free consultation.  Your website needs to sell the free meeting.  Then you can close them"

Now he was starting to see the light.

See, BEFORE you get started on all of this, you need to take a minute and clearly define your sales process.  What steps do you want your prospect to take?  Make them easy steps to take, tell them what to do, hold their hand as they do it.  Guide them along.  If your business works when you have a meeting with a prospect, then any marketing you do needs to be focussed on getting that meeting.  Print advertising, website, all need to be targeted towards getting that meeting.  The first thing that the prospect should see when they come to your website should be a good headline - one that draws them in and irritates the problem.  The solution to their problem needs to be for them to invite you to a meeting, and then make it very easy for them to set up the meeting right there.

If you can sell face to face, then your website needs to set that up.

It is too bad my buddy didn't ask me for help BEFORE he set up his site.  What a waste of a website :(

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November 13, 2008

Beware the trial offers…

OK, so I understand the point of offering your visitors a trial - you make them an offer to your membership site at a discounted rate.  Maybe they try you out when they would not have.  You get them to try your service, load them with value in hopes of keeping them on at the full rate afterwards.

BUT, be carefull in how you run your show…

A couple of months ago, I got an offer from Derek Gehl at The Internet Marketing Center.  The offer was for a $2.95, 21 day trial to his new Search Marketing Lab.  OK, let's try it out.  So I sign up. It was new, I check it out, didn't feel there was much value.  I forget about it.  Now, i just realized that my credit card has been billed $27 for a monthly subscription.  I contact them to get it figured out (I never logged in again).  In the meantime, since that first charge, there has already been another.  I ask for a refund.

Well, they were fine to cancel my subscription and so on but when it came to the refund, here is what they wrote:

Jonathan,

 You were charged for 2 months – and no there were no refunds as you were outside the refund guarantee.

 Thank you and have a great day.

That's it, sorry, too bad, see you later.

Now, it would have been nice to get a note from them at the end of my trial to let me know my card was to be charged (but, no).  They should have sent me a receipt for payments made (but nothing).  At the very least, they could have forwarded me my login details and offered to refund me the last payment.  But a little note saying, "sorry, it sucks to be you" is no way to run a business.

I actually was going to join a more expensive program of theirs but have lost all respect for the way they run their operation and am no longer considering doing anything with them.

Remember that even though you are online, it doesn't mean you have to be more impersonal.  Your clients are still people and should be treated as such.  Run your business with dignity and respect, build relationships that are real - not just you emailing out to your list.  It is worth it.

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November 7, 2008

Vacuum Cleaner Ads That Don't Suck!

I just love watching ads on tv for vacuum cleaners made by Dyson.  It is not so much that I enjoy vacuums, it is that the ads always impress me for their simplicity.  Here is one that is currently running:

http://www.dyson.com/about/ads/?movie=ball_principals_us

What impresses me about these ads is that they speak directly to the consumer, they irritate a problem and then offer a solution.  In this ad, the inventor is going on about how inconvinient it is to have a vacuum cleaner that can't turn around corners.  He spends a great deal of time talking about this issue.  He explains the problem in depth and then offers his solution.  By the time he is done talking, you are thinking "well of course, why didn't anyone else think of that before".  His solution is so simple that it is the only obvious choice.

He has run great ads before and they all seem to follow the same format.  Speak directly to the consumer, irritate the problem and then offer a simple solution.  Simple wisdom that any marketer can use.
Great job, Dyson.

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October 26, 2008

Google Adsense - Customer Service?

As an online marketer, I have many websites and some of them operate under various business models.  One, in particular, sells scripts to webmasters that they can use to build or enhance their sites.  It is located at easy-scripts.net.

The site is basically a shopping style site.  You go there, find what you want and add it to your cart.  Check out when you are done.  It is fairly simple - not too fancy.  I was running some Google Adsense on the side of it.

Site has been running along with very little change for the past few months.  The other day I get this email:

"While reviewing your account, we noticed that you are currently displaying Google ads in a manner that is not compliant with our policies. For instance, we found violations of AdSense policies on pages such as easy-scripts.net.


Publishers may not place Google ads on pages that violate Google’s webmaster quality guidelines (http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=35769#quality). While we've included the following excerpts from these guidelines, we recommend that you take the time to review them in their entirety.


    *  Make pages for users, not for search engines.
    *  Don't employ cloaking or sneaky redirects.
    *  Don't load pages with irrelevant words.
    *  Don't create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content.
    *  Don't participate in link schemes designed to increase your site's ranking or PageRank.
    *  Avoid "doorway" pages created just for search engines, or other "cookie cutter" approaches such as affiliate programs with little or no original content.
    *  Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you'd feel comfortable explaining what you've done to a website that competes with you. Another useful  test is to ask, "Does this help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn't exist?"
    *  If your site participates in an affiliate program, make sure that your site adds value. Provide unique and relevant content that gives users a reason to visit your site first.


As a result, we have disabled ad serving to the site.


Your AdSense account remains active. However, we strongly suggest that you take the time to review our program policies (https://www.google.com/adsense/policies ) to ensure that all of your remaining pages are in compliance.


Please note that we may disable your account if further violations are found in the future.


Sincerely,


The Google AdSense Team"
What?  There is nothing funny going on here, just a simple shopping site.  OK, let's see what the problem is.  So I review the links they directed me to which basically summed up says, if you try to cheat the system, we will close your account.  SO I send this email back to "The Adsense Team"…
Hi Diane, thanks for your reply.  I guess I am kind of stumped because I have been through that link you sent and I don't see anyhow that my site violates your terms.  Everything we do is above-board and there is nothing sneaky or tricky going on at our site.  I would really like someone to tell me exactly what the problem is so I can fix it, otherwise all I have is a general email pointing to a link that contains a bunch of conditions I have not violated yet my site is banned from Adsense.  You can't just say, "we don't like your site, let us know when it is fixed" because that doesn't tell me what I have to fix.  I read the link a couple of times but see nothing there that is causing this problem.

Jonathan

Fair enough.  Tell me what is the problem, I'll fix it and we can all live happily ever after.  This is where it gets weird.  Here is the reply I get:
Hello Jonathan,


As previously mentioned, I'm unable provide you with any specific guidance
about your site. For further information, we recommend that you visit the
Webmaster Help Center (http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/) and the
Webmaster Help Group


We appreciate your understanding.


Sincerely,


Diane
The Google AdSense Team
OK, let me get this straight.  They came to my site and apparently found a violation of their terms - enough to suspend the ad serving.  I ask them what the problem is so I can fix it.  And they are unable to give me specifics?  They can't actually tell me what I violated?  They expect me to go out and scour the forums and read through their site and try to discover what I did wrong?  Are you serious?  I got no problem fixing an issue but for Pete's sake, tell me what the problem is!  That is absolutely ridiculous.
I think I'll just find another ad network to run.  Forget this nonsense, I don't have time to play their games.

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September 21, 2008

Is Your USP Relevant?

Your USP is your Unique Selling Proposition.

This is the identity that you create that sets you apart from your competitors in your marketplace.  This is the answer to the question in your customer's minds "why should I do business here?".

One thing that you have to remember though, as you develop your USP, is that you need to make sure that your USP addresses a concern that actually exists in your marketplace.

If your USP boasts something about your business that you think is important to you but none of your customers find important, then you have missed the mark.  If you have a Pizza shop and you are bragging about how fast you can deliver the pizzas but most of your customers are walk-in customers and they actually come there because of the taste of your pizza, then you have missed the mark.  You are promoting a feature of your business that is not relevant to your customers.

As you set up your USP, make sure that you not only identify and address important features or benefits, make sure that they are the features and benefits that your marketplace is actually looking for.

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