Thursday, October 25, 2007

Internet Marketing: Confessions of a 'White Paper' Junkie

Internet Marketing: Confessions of a 'White Paper' Junkie

Writen by Brandon Cornett

I'm a sucker for a good white paper.

When I'm researching something online, and I see a link or menu item marked "White Papers," I undergo a predictable Pavlovian response: "White paper? Yes please! Where do I sign up?"

So What's a White Paper?

White papers used to be exclusive to scientific and engineering fields. When a new finding was discovered, it was often published in a white paper. But now white papers have entered the marketing mainstream. Today, many companies (especially in the high-tech B2B sector) use white papers to educate prospects about topics pertaining to their products or services.

I download white papers about Internet marketing, search engine optimization, new software … you name it. I download white papers about white papers, but don't think too hard about that one or your head will explode. I even have a special Hotmail account set up for my white-paper-harvesting habits.

White Papers and Internet Marketing

Why do I download so many white papers? I'll tell you. And if you're a savvy Internet marketer, you'll immediately see the opportunity in this.

When it comes to improving my business, I'm an information junkie. There isn’t a twelve-step program in the world that can cure me of that. I read three or four articles every day and spend about two hours online -- researching, reading, and, of course, hunting for relevant white papers.

And here's what it means to you as an Internet marketer. If you're selling a product or service related to my areas of interest, you could capitalize on my desire to learn about those areas. With a little effort, you could have me (and thousands like me) reading your message with rapt attention.

What Makes a White Paper Worth Reading?

Don't just throw together a bunch of old news and call it a white paper, in hopes of capturing leads. Don't repurpose the company brochure and call it a white paper. Instead, focus on putting new and helpful information into the piece.

I may leave your website, and I may ignore the emails you send to my alternate email address, but there's a magic moment in every white paper experience where the author has my undivided attention...

What happens from there depends on the white paper's content:

  • If it's an outright sales pitch, I'll probably delete it.
  • If it's helpful information, I'll probably read it and save it.
  • If it's relevant, helpful information -- with clearly described value and an effective call-to-action -- I'll probably read it, save it, and act on it in some way.

In the latter case, I might return to the site to learn more about the subject. Or who knows, maybe I'll even call or email directly … with my real email address. The point is that white papers, when expertly prepared, can educate readers into the company's favor.

Qualities of a good white paper:

  • It educates before trying to sell anything.
  • It offers more than one side to the discussion.
  • It's objective during the educational stage.
  • It's well developed and thorough.
  • It provides information that can help the reader in some way.

I'm a white paper junkie. So are a lot of "information shoppers." Use this to your advantage by offering white papers full of helpful content. Educate first, and sell second.

* Copyright 2006, Brandon Cornett. You may republish this article in its entirety, provided you leave the byline, author's note and website hyperlink intact.

About the Author

Brandon is a writer, marketer and founder of ArmingYourFarming.com, a website offering information products to real estate agents. Learn more at: http://www.armingyourfarming.com Visit Brandon's article marketing blog at: http://www.articlemarketing101.blogspot.com

Internet Marketing - Competitive Research Tips

Internet Marketing - Competitive Research Tips

Writen by Scott Clark

Ever feel like there is too much information to deal with? Well, it stands to reason. Extrapolate a 2003 study from UC Berkeley and you get a total of 6,917,529,027,641,081,856 bytes of data produced annually in all forms on Earth. That’s almost 7 exabytes – or around a gigabyte for each person on earth every year!

When you look at it this way, it’s not whoever has the most data who wins in this information economy, but whoever can make sense out of their own domain of knowledge in time to move through windows of opportunity or avoid disruptive surprises.

If it were possible to get your arms around just the World Wide Web (800 terabytes or 80 times the size of all print collections in the US Library of Congress,) you might be able to find key indicators that can have powerful positive influence on your day-to-day operations. There are industry events, legal decisions, and regulatory changes dispersed through the web like needles in a gigantic moving haystack. The bookmarks of today are the page-not-founds of tomorrow.

If you spent all day on the web you might get what you need – for today. If you are planning on gathering intellegence about your competitors for Internet Marketing, you may be able to use a little help! Tomorrow morning, your answers may be obsolete, and you’re back to square one. But there is hope, thanks to strategic use of Internet agents.

I define web agents as saved and scheduled queries which compile, sort and send results to you without intervention. They must only be set up once and are consistent in the information they send. They can be your eyes and ears on the web and blogging community, and they work for free.

The most basic type of agent is an email alert. These are old-school in that their delivery depends on it making it to your in-box and through your SPAM filters. Email alerts are available from many sources, such as Reuters and CNN, or even eBay. They are incredibly easy to set up, but can be tricky to stop or change. I find them of limited use, but Google News Alerts does the best job of any I’ve tried.

If you know in advance the URL of information you want, you may want to use a “page monitor.” These “visit” a site on your behalf and send you an email when the contents change. This is very useful for watching your competitions’ websites or press releases. For less predictably-located information you can use an “inverted search engine” such as googlealerts.com or feedster.com. Still, these make their way to you in the mass of other email you read, making them less useful.

Email notification methods are rapidly being overtaken by RSS, which stands for either “Really Simple Syndication” or “Rich Site Summary.” It offers many advantages over email alerts such as privacy and subscription control. To find RSS feeds (sources) you can use a search engine like feedster.com, which has indexed over 150 million RSS items, or look for the orange RSS icons found on many web pages. Feedster.com, in particular, will send alerts of new posts by author, subject, and more, and it will even combine your feed search results into a new “feed-feed” to scan quickly.

Feeds are usually viewed using software called an aggregator. These come in all flavors, including plug-ins for Microsoft Outlook and Eudora, as well as “live bookmarks” in the Firefox browser. Microsoft announced last month that RSS support would be built into the next version of Windows and Macintosh users have enjoyed it for a while.

Subscribing is done via simple click or cut and paste. You can assign expirations to keep your screen clear of old news. In some ways, it’s like a Tivo for business intelligence.

My current favorite combined system is Klipfolio by Serence, a free tool for assembling feeds to meet your own needs. There is a page monitor, feed monitor, and automated Google query system for web or news searches. You can browse an incredible “Klip farm” with thousands of data sources of all types. I have around forty precision feeds, page monitors and news searches, and find it quite manageable for a morning scan, and have never been so well informed.

A warning: Once you start using RSS or Klipfolio you will not be able to live without them. The first time you are able to make a competitive move based on a feed summary sent to your cell phone, you’ll be hooked. You’ll want to install it on your entire staff’s computers, and design queries for each person’s roles. “How’d you know that?” is something I love to hear, especially from a potential customer. “I try stay up to date” is my polite answer. Of course it’s possible to react too quickly or too often, so sometimes you can use multiple feeds to triangulate on the truth and see what’s really going on.

Albert Einstein once said “If I have seen farther than others, it is because I was standing on the shoulders of giants.” I hope that some of these ideas will help you see a little farther ahead for your own business.

Scott Clark is an Internet Marketing Consultant and Search Engine Optimization expert since 1996. He specializes in critiques of existing sites and strategic marketing plans. Scott Clark can be reached at 888-668-4393 or online at http://www.sitecreations.com

Internet Marketing Basics: What Worked Years Ago Still Works Today!

Internet Marketing Basics: What Worked Years Ago Still Works Today!

Writen by Jack Humphrey

Internet marketing can seem mystifying not only for beginners, but for moderately skilled internet marketers. With all the courses, forums, blogs, reports, seminars and teleconferences available to help people learn how to get traffic to their sites, it is one of the most overwhelmingly dense subjects on the internet.

Unfortunately, and this is perfectly true, most of the advice or "expert" tips are outdated or completely false. Since anyone can publish on the internet, you have a mixed bag of good information followed with much more bad information.

The mysticism of internet marketing is created largely by this glut of some good and mostly bad information. It makes the whole topic SEEM like rocket science when, in fact, much of what was true about internet marketing years ago is true today.

Most people think that since search engine marketing changes every five minutes, that ALL internet marketing tactics must have changed as much in the same amount of time. Not true.

The basics, like trading links, article syndication, testimonials, forum signatures, joint ventures, affiliate programs - most work as well today as they did years ago. That is, if you know how to value the work above for what it will truly do for your website traffic.

Funny thing is, no one places much value on the above tactics anymore because there is always some "new" tactic around the corner that claims the death of everything that came before it. And most people blindly follow that advice as if it were true.

Most of the time, this is to the detriment of their internet marketing efforts. The basics are what work all the time and what have always worked on the internet.

You can always experiment with new things, as long as you have not forgotten to do the basics. The basics proven to drive traffic, page rank, link popularity, and branding to your business.

Conservative, relevant reciprocal linking

Article syndication

Participation in your field and among your market (forums)

Blogging

Offline advertising

Non-reciprocal linking tactics

Press releases

...and many other proven methods.

Everything else is just a big experiment until proven to work over time. "Over time" being the operative words. Lots of flash in the pan crack pot schemes work for awhile. But most never stand the test of time.

Links from a widely syndicated article will never fade away, yet I see people chasing down fly-by-night linking pyramid schemes as if they truly believe something like that is a smart thing to base their internet business on!

Tens of thousands have walked away from their dreams, gone back to their depressing, predictable, slave-labor jobs never knowing how close they were to actually succeeding.

Good people have left this business proclaiming it an utter lie that any average person can make it with an internet business and an internet marketing plan.

I guess there is truth in that statement. Average people do in fact quit this business before they ever get started because average people fall for tricks and schemes that above average people avoid on their way to success.

If you have read this far, you are probably in the above average category. Why? Because average people would have take one look at the list of things I mentioned that are the bread and butter of internet marketing and saw nothing but hard work. And they'd be right!

Above average people don't shy away from work though. I don't know a single soul (and my rolodex has some of the biggest names in internet marketing in it) who got where they are today without a lot of hard work.

You can succeed in internet marketing if you are not afraid to work, and not constantly tempted by those who say you can succeed without it!

Focus on the basics of internet marketing and stay with them as you try new strategies. We all experiment. But successful internet marketers never leave their bread and butter tactics behind unless they cease to be effective.

Copyright 2005 Jack Humphrey

To learn bread and butter internet marketing tactics along with cutting-edge new internet marketing tactics, check out Jack Humphrey's all new Power Linking 2005.
http://www.power-linking-profits.com

Internet Marketing Audio Secret Lets You Avoid Deal-Killing Contracts

Internet Marketing Audio Secret Lets You Avoid Deal-Killing Contracts

Writen by Michael Senoff

Whenever I teach people how to create instant Internet audio products simply by calling and interviewing an expert, recording it and then uploading it online, people always ask about the legal aspects of this.

They want to know what kind of contract I use, what kind of lawyer to consult, and how to make sure the expert is okay with me recording and using the information.

But the truth is, I don't get anything in writing. And certainly not a contract.

I'm not saying you shouldn't get a contract, but I personally never do.

Some people would say you should get a contract that says you can record and sell their information, but I find if you ask someone to sign this contract it’s hard to get it. And I just do it over the phone where I have the person's verbal consent.
That way it is in a real relaxed format.

You simply say, “We have to take care of some details, and just so you know, I’m recording the call and I have your permission to record it, and I may use it on my website. I may sell it down the road. So, I’m also going to give you a copy and you will also have the rights to promote your product or yourself with it when it’s done. Is that alright with you?”

See what I mean? I have to have any refuse that offer.

Bottom line:

You certainly can use a contract and all that -- it's your choice -- but all I do is get their agreement, and their consent right over the phone. It's a verbal contract. And I’ve never had any kind of problem in all these years.

Michael Senoff is a sought-after Internet marketer, interviewer and business coach with more than 50,000 students on four continents. He is also an expert on showing people how to create their own high ticket information products from scratch using just your telephone. For a 100% FREE REPORT that reveals how you can take your own ordinary book, e-book or even a concept and turn it into a information product you can sell for up to $3,900 or more go to:
http://hardtofindseminars.com/Audio_Marketing_Service.htm

Internet Marketing - Article Announcer

Internet Marketing - Article Announcer

Writen by Stephanie Ross

Who said marketing on the internet was easy. All the successful marketers have worked long hours plugged into their computers. Total commitment has been give to the internet for the glory of being called a 'Guru'. Of course, the financial successes aren't bad either. Or so I hear.

There is no easy way. Work is involved. Time evaporates so much faster in front of a computer. I have given many hours to the school of internet marketing. I think I have bought every new piece of softway and ebook created by these 'Gurus'.

I know I am not alone. I was a 'newbie' last year, starting July 2004. I managed to spend every penny I had and got into debt trying to make a go of it. Meaning, there is a price to pay - time and money. No guarantees either.

Just when you think you have this whole internet marketing business figured out, the rules change.

Creative methods by and for all the established marketers is always in demand. How to beat Google at their own business; get ranked high on the search engines. It looks to me that the weak will get fizzled out and the hard core marketers will always give it another go.

I like to think I have graduated into being an intermediate internet marketer. The dues have been paid. I am definately an internet junkie - just can't seem to get enough of it.

Concerns I have about this marketing business, it is hard to build up residual income. Unlike 'network marketing' (especially the firmly established MLMs/MLMers), income can be generated for years to come. This business seems rather fly-by-night. Of course, if you create a website much like Ebay or Clickbank you should be pretty comfortable in the income area. There is more to being an internet marketer though then the financial rewards.... always looking for the next best program, software, ebook... they are out there and coming our way.

Speaking of which, Jason Potash, is releasing his latest product this week. The release date is June 28, 2005. He calls it the ArticleAnnouncer. All the excitment of its release has been strategically created, all the correct steps to the newest and greatest internet marketing procedures have been met.

I hope it turns out to be all it says it will be. I know I will be there to pick it up on June 28, 2005.

Stephanie Ross, BizOppPro
from a Newbie to an Intermediate Marketer. For more information about the ArticleAnnouncer email to: bizopppro@gmail.com Place 'more info' in the subject line and I will provide you with more information.

Internet Marketing: Are You Penny Wise And Dollar Foolish?

Internet Marketing: Are You Penny Wise And Dollar Foolish?

Writen by Dean Phillips

It never ceases to amaze me how many people set-up a web site, without any type of plan or clue about how to promote it--how to write a sales letter--how to write an ad--nothing! Fact is, nowadays, anyone can have a web site. But once you get one, then what? How are you going to make money with it?

If you don't know what you're doing, then do the smart thing and consult with an Internet marketing expert.

What? You say you can't afford an Internet marketing expert? Well, believe it or not, there are other ways you can obtain the services of an Internet marketing expert, besides paying an expensive flat rate or hourly fee.

Did it ever occur to you that you can obtain the services of an Internet marketing expert by simply buying his products? So, why should you buy his products?

Because Internet marketing experts are masters at marketing. They've already arrived at the place you want to get to. They also derive great pleasure from sharing their incredible knowledge. They have the answers to every single one of your questions. All you have to do is ask them.

However, you shouldn't expect any Internet marketing expert to spend their valuable time mentoring you for free. Like I mentioned earlier, at the very least, you have to buy their products. I mean, let's get real. You wouldn't walk into a doctor's or lawyer's office and expect to get free help and advice, now would you?

I can't even begin to count the number of e-mails I receive from people asking me for free advice. I always turn them down. Why? Three reasons: (1) It shows a total lack of respect for me as a professional. (2) Because it wouldn't be fair to my paying clients. (3) I already dispense plenty of free advice via my articles.

It just totally blows my mind that people will spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars promoting a product the wrong way, yet won't spend a few dollars to learn how to do it the right way.

If you aren't making any money, it's obvious you need professional help. Not to seek help is just being "penny wise and dollar foolish!"

And by the way, if you don't even have a couple of hundred dollars to work with, quite frankly, you shouldn't even be in business to begin with!

About The Author

Dean Phillips is an Internet marketing expert, writer, publisher and entrepreneur. Questions? Comments? Dean can be reached at mailto: dean@lets-make-money.net.

Visit his web site at: http://www.lets-make-money.net

Internet Marketing: Are You Leaving Money on the Table?

Internet Marketing: Are You Leaving Money on the Table?

Writen by Bonnie Lowe

Many internet marketing entrepreneurs are struggling to earn a decent living with their online businesses. They work hard to develop quality products and services, design effective websites, attract traffic to their sites through targeted advertising, and convert those visitors to customers. Does this sound like you?

If you are like most of these people engaged in internet marketing, you are overlooking a simple activity that would dramatically expand your business and substantially increase your profits!

Imagine an activity that enables you to do these things – for free – whenever you wish:

  • Establish or enhance your reputation
  • Spread the word about you and your business
  • Acquire new customers who already like and trust you
  • Obtain invaluable advice from experts on what you should – and should not – be doing to earn more money
  • Participate in successful joint venture partnerships
  • Get unbelievable returns on your internet marketing seminar investments
  • Build strong and lasting friendships with colleagues, mentors and clients

    Think of the benefits you’d gain from just a few of those powerful results.

    What is the amazing activity that makes it all possible? Don’t groan when you read this: it’s networking!

    This proven business-building activity is often overlooked or intentionally ignored because many people have preconceived – and inaccurate – notions about what it involves.

    If the thought of networking makes you cringe, you’re not alone. Here’s what Ken McCarthy, founder of The System Seminar and one of the world’s foremost experts on internet marketing, says about networking: “When I hear ‘networking,’ I imagine myself at a Chamber of Commerce mixer with a stack of business cards, randomly saying hello to people and exchanging cards, and I feel a twinge of pain!”

    And yet Ken didn't avoid networking; he found another way to do it. He attributes his remarkable success entirely to building powerful, mutually beneficial relationships. One of those relationships is with marketing legend Dan Kennedy. He met Dan at a workshop, made himself useful, and kept in touch. This informal style of networking eventually led to an extremely profitable business partnership.

    Everyone, regardless of his or her personality, can find a way to network and reap the rewards. The trick is to learn how to do it successfully, and understand that the benefits make it well worth the effort.

    David Garfinkel, internet marketing pro and founder of the World Copywriting Institute, said, “Networking is the one ‘soft skill’ in business that pays more dividends than knowing how to sell, how to write copy, how to grow businesses or investments, or anything else – if, that is, you know how to do it effectively. And there’s the rub – most people don’t.”

    If you are serious about wanting to boost your bottom line, expand your business and get an immense advantage over your non-networking competition, follow the examples and heed the advice of top marketing pros.

    They all use the power of networking in one form or another.

    Self-published author and freelance writing expert Peter Bowerman said, "I haven't used much networking to build my copywriting and publishing businesses, but after reading how others have benefitted from networking, it depresses me to think how much money I've left on the table. Whatever you think 'networking' means, it's only one small part of the story. Discover all the facets of this misunderstood and underutilized tool, and watch your bank accounts rise."

    Put as much effort into learning about networking as you do about any other aspect of marketing.

    And stop leaving money on the table!

    To learn how internet marketing pros Ken McCarthy, David Garfinkel, Joe Vitale, Michel Fortin, Alice Seba, Fred Gleeck, Robert Middleton and 42 others use various networking techniques to build their businesses and stay on top, check out Bonnie Lowe's eye-opening new ebook, “Networkaholics Revealed! True Confessions From People Who Networked Their Way to Success, and How You Can Do the Same.” For more information, visit http://www.Networkaholics-Revealed.com.

  • Internet Marketing: Are You Killing Off Your Customers?

    Internet Marketing: Are You Killing Off Your Customers?

    Writen by Virginia Bola, PsyD

    Those of us who spend our spare time on the Internet are exposed to unrelenting sales pitches for everything from clothes to books to health supplements to stock trades. Rather than the information, education, and entertainment we initially sought, we find we have entered an apparently unlimited yellow pages with colored, flashing ads exhorting us to pull out our credit cards and "Click Here."

    Nowhere is this more rampant than in the field of Internet marketing itself. At the bleary-eyed end of a day on the computer, it sometimes seems as if everyone alive is trying to make a living online. If you still have doubts about the extent of the issue, get yourself a throwaway email address on Yahoo! or Hotmail. Then join a couple of safe list mailers. Your bulk folder will soon be stuffed with hundreds of e-mails, all trying to sell something and all guaranteeing that their product will absolutely solve your problems, make you rich, grant you the good life you have always wanted and all without breaking a sweat.

    Who are all these people? They are your neighbor down the street, your uncle Jim, your daughter's fifth grade teacher, the store clerk who sold you a new suit, and the pleasant lady who delivers your mail. They are you and me and everyone we know. They are from all walks of life and all corners of the globe.

    The Internet is truly democratic, catering to children playing with their parents' computer, to the poor reaching out through flickering dial-up or hunched over public computers, to adolescents blogging their inner turmoil, to business moguls amassing greater wealth through their imposing websites, to porn kings spreading their message of filth, and terrorists communicating their deadly plots.

    In this mishmash of dreamers and schemers, how do we all fit in? Surrounded by purveyors of everything that exists, we are the buyers and the targets. We are the innocent victims of the unstoppable letters from Nigerian widows and their British barristers. We are the suckers who receive yet another notification of our enormous winnings in some non-existent lottery drawing. Our little in-boxes provide a conduit to the world and stuff - good, helpful, ugly, or sick - comes pouring in.

    There must, literally, be a hundred thousand e-books in the vastness of cyberspace, training people how to market products, their own or somebody else's. A substantial fortune could be blown in only a few days by acquiring books, reports, videos, and software all promising a fast and effortless journey to easy street.

    I'm not going to teach you to sell, or market, or promote yourself. As noted above, there are millions of resources on that already out there. So what will this book tell you? It will tell the slick sales reps and the marketing mavens and the irrepressible admen what the rest of us are looking for, what we want, what we like, and what we are going to demand.

    Listen up, gurus. We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore!

    Dr. Bola, a clinical psychologist, sometime marketer, and
    consistent consumer is offering complimentary copies of her
    book "Seven Super Simple Tips: I Am Your Customer" from which
    this article is taken. Feel free to download at:
    http://www.dietwithanattitude.com/SuperSimpleTipsCustomer.html

    Internet Marketing: Are You Feeding These Customer Demands?

    Internet Marketing: Are You Feeding These Customer Demands?

    Writen by Virginia Bola, PsyD

    I am both a consumer and a marketer. I buy frequently online because I hate to shop. Before the advent of the Internet, I bought everything I own through printed catalogs and customer service telephone lines. Ordering online is easier and faster, assuming good site navigation and minimal credit card snags.

    I market two books, an e-zine, various free reports, and some affiliate products. Over the past 12 to 18 months, since my first website launched and I dipped a toe into the murky waters of e-commerce, I have encountered the experience of a lifetime.

    I have been suckered, lied to, and exploited. I have also met some wonderful, friendly people who gave me value for my money, a wealth of support, and a helping hand. I have received some heart-warming expressions of gratitude for ideas I have introduced and articles I have written. I have been moved by the plight of some readers who dwell in difficult circumstances far from the sunlit uplands where the marketing gurus reside.

    I wrote this report after thinking about what I, as a typical Internet customer, really want. I hope that it strikes a chord with you also and that much of what I demand overlaps with your own needs.

    I attempted to boil down everything into one or two axioms of online customer service, some rules and structure that would bridge the gap between passive and active, giving and receiving, and buying and selling. This is what I found:

    1. Honesty.

    Nothing negative can connect to an honest message. We may or may not be interested but we will always deal respectfully with honest and forthright material. We have nothing but admiration for those willing to express an important opinion, no matter who may take offense. Conversely, we are sickened by lies, twisted information, and misleading communications. When a plea for disaster donations involves the purchase of something to make a few extra bucks for a sales guru, we recoil in revulsion. When we are promised the universe and delivered an asteroid, we shrink in spirit and goodwill and all of us are diminished.

    Life is too short and our time too precious to waste it on the snake oil salesmen who will eventually choke on the toxicity of their own wares.

    2. Creativity and Novelty.

    There are those who constantly create, ideas and products streaming from that black pearl of evolution, the human brain. There are those who destroy what they fear, what they cannot understand, what they cannot have, and what they can never appreciate. And then there is the vast majority between the two extremes, those who consume, badly or responsibly, what others have created.

    We need a regular flow of creators to expand our lives and hold back the darkness. We need intelligent consumers to spread the creations of the few throughout the world. The best idea or product is meaningless if no one is aware of it. We need to identify where we fit in - perhaps as a creator in one field, occasionally a destroyer in another, and a consumer most of the time.

    Problems arise when we get mixed up in our real role. If I don't create something, then it is not mine. I may market it, sell it, publicize it, but I can't legitimately take credit for its appearance. That is the basis for copyright laws and legal patents. From music to written material to software and products, the Net has struggled with the concept of ownership and its frequent infringement. The online world is so vast and virtually limitless that we are in desperate need for every genuine creator we can find. We need to nurture their genius rather than co-opting and diluting it through misleading intrusion into the works of others.

    3. Respect.

    If we truly respect each other, the proverbial con job has no place to rear its ugly little head. There is room for everyone because we all whistle a different tune and choose different road to reach disparate destinations.

    Within a framework of mutual respect, we no longer encounter winners and losers. We overcome obstacles, solve problems, and forge new answers by working with each other rather than at cross purposes.

    Life is a tremendous game. When we play it in such a manner that all can win, we have beaten the game at last.

    Dr. Bola, a clinical psychologist, sometime marketer, and
    consistent consumer is offering complimentary copies of her
    book "Seven Super Simple Tips: I Am Your Customer" from which
    this article is taken. Feel free to download at:
    http://www.dietwithanattitude.com/SuperSimpleTipsCustomer.html

    Internet Marketing - A Powerful yet Underutilized Tool to Promote your Business

    Internet Marketing - A Powerful yet Underutilized Tool to Promote your Business

    Writen by Kenneth Hall

    Recent research has shown that decision makers spend time researching their decisions on the internet. Businesses with a good web presence have the upper hand in these situations. People looking for information are more likely to be responsive to information they see than if it was just splashed in front of them as is done on printed media. With the potential for selling being so great on the internet, why are more companies not taking advantage of the internet as a marketing tool?
    Every business can have a web page but the web page should not be just a feeble statement of the business but a strong marketing tool. It is all very well to have a home page but does it excite people into wanting to know more? When people leave the page, will they come back? Will they remember the business for what it offers and the benefits it gives?

    The reason most web sites fail is that they have not been optimized for search engines and for surfers who are looking for what the site has to offer.

    Web sites that get little or no traffic are failures. Sites that get traffic but no benefit to the business are also failures.
    Sites should be designed with a view to leading the visitor along a path of reason that will leave them wanting to indulge themselves with the products you offer. With this in mind, you page should be far more than just a home page. Your site should elicit interest, arouse curiosity and awaken a desire in the visitor that will result in them either buying immediately or returning to do so at a later time.

    A web site that works is a web site that increases your business!

    A computer professional for the past 25 years. He has been involved in many areas of technology including network design, performance management of large computer installation, web design and internet marketing. His current business is focused on helping small businesses to get internet enabled.
    http://www.leejames.co.za

    Internet Marketing and the Small Business

    Internet Marketing and the Small Business

    Writen by Melih Oztalay

    The internet marketing landscape has changed quite a bit in the past 3 years and has further defined itself further in the past 12 months. With Google raising $4 Billion from new stock offerings in 2005 we will see more changes underway over the next 3 years. Unfortunately, I fear the small business is going to be left out in the cold in this process. Perhaps a better statement would be that the small business has already been left out in the cold.

    This writing is certainly not designed to provide a solution to the growing problem. More so, it has been written to raise the awareness and acknowledge the difficulty small business has on the web. Certainly the small business does not receive any sympathy from the major search engines in their quest to provide quality information for those that are searching the web.

    Let’s review how the situation has been created. We have to make the assumption a small business does not have the financial resources for a proper advertising campaign on the web (even though it is less costly than offline advertising) and they do not have the man-power to devote time for the non-costly methods of marketing. Yes, I have distinguished between advertising and marketing.

    Marketing is the process or technique of promotion, selling and distributing a product or service. Advertising is to make your product or service publicly known; an announcement to call public attention by emphasizing qualities to arouse a desire to purchase.

    Can the small business market at no cost? Yes, absolutely, however, the issue at hand is not expenditure but time. Time they are already spending on their business and do not have more time to spend on non-costly marketing methods on the web. What are these non-costly but time-consuming marketing methods? This would include but not limited to writing articles, maintaining newsletters, maintaining email addresses with auto-responders, submitting their articles through a variety of methods and resources over the web. Let’s not forget standard search engine optimization issues and HTML coding. Oh, the best one of all is “natural” link exchanging as defined by Google. If you have not already been there, manual link exchanging is a time consuming process even if you do decide to spend money on lost cost services that can assist. You cannot use “link farms” as that is against search engine policies and will cause your listing to be down graded.

    In order to reach top ranking on the search engines it all boils down to links (or link exchanges, link popularity) and content. Inbound only links better than reciprocal inks. Writing content for your site, articles, news, newsletter is time consuming to properly write a 500 word article and the submission process is not easy either. Some services and software exists to help you in your submission of articles, but just like link exchange services they can only do so much. Could you create a blog and place your articles, certainly. However, you can see the “things to do” list only keeps growing for the small business owner.

    Could they engage in pay-per-click campaigns? Sure, however, you now are entering in a financial issue and one that does not necessarily provide a great return on investment. Pay-Per-Click campaigns are good as an overall marketing strategy and if you use it in combination with a variety of other internet and search engine marketing methods. On its own it cannot provide the returns the small business is seeking. Searching the key phrases (no longer key words) and understanding which ones to select is equally not an easy task. It requires due diligence, research and analysis to understand the information and make an informed decision. Assuming they can get past this part of the pay-per-click process, the next phase is writing the pay-per-click ad headline and content. Unfortunately we see many small businesses flocking to pay-per-click advertising in hopes of a quick return. They might as well go to a casino!

    There is indeed another problem associated with Pay-Per-Click campaigns. The ratio of exposures to hits is equally a problem when you are supposed to keep a certain percentage ratio between the two. When search engines like Google are allowing your ad to be placed on other websites with their Google Adsense, your exposures are indeed going up, however, how many people actually click on the links? From Google’s perspective probably a lot, but from the individual advertiser’s perspective this is not necessarily a good situation. Google is now dictating what key phrases you “should” bid on and ultimately consolidating the bidding war into small key phrase groups and larger number of advertisers.

    Lastly, at least for this writing, but not necessarily on the subject, is time to see revenues. There is no doubt that it takes months for a website to propagate through the Internet. This is by no means a short-term situation and expectations need to be set accordingly. Just because you have a website does not mean that you will see rewards anytime soon. Once again we get into the dilemma of time resources to do the necessary internet marketing work in order to see benefits 6 – 9 months later.

    Requirements set by the search engines as they seek to provide quality responses to those that are searching are making it increasingly difficult for small businesses to compete on the web. So, who will end up on the first page or in the top position of searches for key phrases? Unless something changes and the small business is given a chance, it will be the larger corporations that have the man power time and the money.

    Melih Oztalay is the CEO of SmartFinds Internet Marketing. SmartFinds Internet Marketing provides a variety of business internet marketing services including research, analysis and planning.

    Internet Marketing and Public Speaking: The Murder Board Practice

    Internet Marketing and Public Speaking: The Murder Board Practice

    Writen by Larry Tracy

    I recently posted an article titled “Internet Marketing and Public Speaking: Ten Tips for When the Twain Shall Meet.” One of the tips concerned a means to practice your sales presentation with a “Murder Board.” I received several emails requesting a fuller explanation of this practice method.

    I decided to write two explanatory articles, so vital is this method to improve one’s public speaking, specifically in preparing a presentation aimed at selling off-line your on-line product. In this article, I’ll provide an in-depth explanation of this practice method; in the second, I’ll cover the seven steps need for a successful Murder Board.

    Simply stated, the Murder Board is a realistic simulation of the actual presentation to be made. Colleagues role-play the audience, asking the type of questions they believe this specific group is likely to ask. It is intended to be more difficult than the actual presentation.

    If you want to become an effective and persuasive presenter to boost your on-line marketing, this realistic practice session is the most effective shortcut to speaking excellence. It allows you to make your mistakes when they don't count, increasing the odds that you will shine when the actual presentation is made.

    The Origin of the Murder Board

    The term Murder Board has its origins within the U.S. military, specifically within the extensive training system of the U.S. Army. When a person has been selected to be an instructor at an Army school, he or she must go through a demanding instructor training program.

    Graduation and designation as an instructor is dependent not on a written test, but successful delivery of a 50 minute class from the curriculum of the school.

    The audience for this crucible can be instructors who have gone through their own Murder Board, and are determined that this would-be instructor will experience the same frustration and humiliation they did. They ask tough, realistic, questions, the type of questions their students are asking.

    At the end of the 50 minute class, the aspiring instructor gets a a thumbs up—meaning he or she can now join this band of brothers and sisters as an instructor, or a thumbs-down, meaning another “opportunity” to go through a Murder Board.

    Lessons from the Pentagon

    This realistic simulation has permeated the military culture. As an example, when I ran the Defense Intelligence Agency's (DIA) briefing team, we had three Murder Boards before the daily briefing to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

    The first one was at 5:30 AM, the second at 6:30 AM, the third in front of two General officers and all the analysists, one hour later. By the time my briefer or I was standing in front of the Chairman, those intense sessions had provided the right answers to virtually any conceivable question the Chairman was likely to ask.

    Why have a Murder Board?

    This painstaking practice session has two overriding objectives:

    1. Hone delivery skills

    2. Anticipate probable questions and objections so succinct, accurate answers can be developed.

    Many presenters, while accepting the need to sharpen delivery skills, reject the idea of a Murder Board, confident they can anticipate the difficult questions likely to be asked, and need not practice in front of others, especially their peers. These people may actually be displaying a false bravado to mask their discomfort at speaking in front of a group, perhaps exposing their lack of skill in the presentation art, and/or their apprehension at giving a less than sterling performance in front of their colleaqgues.

    They are also very mistaken. I have given more than 3000 presentations, and always find it beneficial to conduct a Murder Board before an important talk. No matter how hard we try to think of tough questions that may be asked, a little censor in our mind generally provides only questions to which we already have answers. In my executive training workshops, I always emphasize the importance of a Murder Board, and the practice presentations made by my clients are set up as Murder Boards to get them accustomed to this simulation.

    I am in good company in believing that we need other minds to assist us in preparing for a sales or other presentation.. The man who possessed perhaps the greatest mind of the 20th Century, Albert Einstein, realized that even he needed help. He once said:

    "What a person does on his own, without being
    stimulated by the thoughts and experiences of
    others, is even in the best cases rather paltry and
    monotonous."

    The Murder Board is the presenter's version of the actor's dress rehearsal, what lawyers do in preparing a witness to face cross-examination in a trial, what the flight simulator is to the pilot.

    Just as with the actor, the witness, and the pilot, this simulation permits the presenter to learn from his/her mistakes, so that the actual presentation is (1) more responsive to the informational needs of the audience, (2) answers are developed for likely questions to be asked, and (3) overall speaking confidence and competence enhanced.

    The Murder Board enables you to visualize the presentation in advance. Not only is proficiency in speaking increased by such a meticulous practice, so too is self-confidence. Public speaking ranks high in the pantheon of phobias because, in large measure, of the apprehension that one is going to be embarrassed by not being able to answer questions from the audience.

    If you have been able to anticipate questions, then you can develop answers ahead of time. Think back to when you were in college or graduate school. Your GPA would probably have been higher if you could have seen the questions before the final exams. The Murder Board permits the presenter a look at the audience's probable "exam questions."

    The only obstacle to developing a question-anticipating simulated presentation is your imagination and willingness to take hard hits in practice so you can be more effective in the actual presentation.

    Copyright 2005 Larry Tracy

    This article is excerpted from Larry Tracy’s book, The Shortcut to Persuasive Presentations. Larry, a retired Army colonel, has been cited in numerous publications as one of the top presentation skills trainers in the US. His website is at top of Google for “persuasive presentations. Visit it for FREE tips and additional articles:
    http://www.tracy-presentation.com

    Internet Marketing And Public Speaking: Ten Tips For When The Twain Shall Meet

    Internet Marketing And Public Speaking: Ten Tips For When The Twain Shall Meet

    Writen by Larry Tracy

    Internet marketing and public speaking? Not quite ham and eggs, is it?

    Those two phrases are rarely found in the same sentence. After all, many people decide to do their marketing in cyberspace so they’ll never be required to deliver a sales presentation or a speech.

    If you are one of these people, you are making big mistake by not developing your speaking skills, because you are cutting yourself off from the vast off-line market.

    Why should internet marketers seek to improve their public speaking? For the simple reason that by so doing, they and their products can become known to people who are are uncomfortable buying on-line. They prefer to know their is a human being at the other end.

    In this brief article, I’ll give you a "shortcut system" that will enable you to package your substantive knowledge so it can be delivered in an interesting, engaging manner. It is a distilled version of what I provide business people in my workshops who are almost universally in the off-line world.

    To whom can your presentations be delivered ? How about Rotary Clubs and other civic organizations who are always looking for speakers?; What about fellow internet marketers at seminars?; And remember high schools and colleges, where your audience is likely to be more computer literate than the general population, experienced in buying on-line but eager to go eyeball-to-eyeball with the internet marketer who has a great product.

    Keep in mind that an effective speaker is one who concentrates on satisfying the needs of the audience members, so that these people conclude that what you are proposing (selling) is in their best interest—for your purposes, buying your product, Ebook or service.

    The Ten Tips outlined below are not classroom theory, but instead evolve from the real world lessons I have learned in almost 3000 presentations, and in my workshops for off-line marketers. They have worked for me, they have worked for my clients, and they’ll work for you.

    1. Have a specific objective

    If you don't know what you wish to accomplish with your presentation, your audience certainly won't know either. Your objective may be as limited as making sure your audience will remember your URL, or a full understanding of the benefits they will gain by buying your product.

    Remember that giving a great speech or presentation should never be your goal; it is merely a means to an end, and that end is what you want your audience to do with the information presented.

    Be specific, and in preparing your presentation, spell out your objective in no more than a sentence or two. Print it out and tape it to your computer monitor. This will keep your preparation focused and on target as you progress throughthe drafting of your presentation.

    2. Know your audience's problems, needs and concerns

    To be a successful marketer, your presentation must be audience-centered. You must know the problems of the people to whom you are speaking, because your objective is to offer them a solution. This requires in-depth-research about your audience.

    Keep in mind that the prime motivation for people to listen to you is their perception that your presentation will benefit them. "What's in it for me?" is the classic question of all audiences, on-line or off-line

    3. Structure backwards

    We have learned to write and speak in a 1-2-3 structure: (1) Introduction- (2) Body - (3) Conclusion. For oral presentations, this is highly counterproductive: In contrast to reading a memo, people do not have the luxury of going back and reading again what was missed the first time.You want your audience to hear and understand the bottom line message- "This product iwill solve your problem."

    Initiate your draft with your conclusion, focusing on merging your objective with your audience's problems, interests and concerns.

    Place your conclusion on a card marked (3), then develop an introduction that signals the audience that you know its problems and will be offering a solution. Place this on a card marked (1).

    Finally, place your supporting arguments on a series of cards marked (2A), (2B), etc. This 3-1-2 System provides focus, structure, and thematic unity, and is the heart of my training workshops.

    4. Practice solo with tape-recorder or video-camera

    After completing the presentation draft, practice by yourself with a tape-recorder or video-camera. You will be at your weakest in this initial practice, hence the advice to have nobody present whose comments could seriously hurt your confidence.

    Listen to your presentation, note the rhythm and cadence, the "uh's", "y'knows", and check your mastery of the subject.

    If videotaping, note your mannerisms and body language, and coordinate your gestures with your vocal inflection.

    5. Practice with colleague, friend or spouse

    After completing the solo practice session, you are ready to practice in front of another person. Choose this person carefully, as you do not want a hypercritic who will find excessive faults with your presenting style. Neither, however, do you want the type of person who finds no faults whatsoever, and praises you to the skies. You need honest and constructive criticism aimed at "tweaking" your presentation.

    6. Convene a "Murder Board" practice session

    The "Murder Board, a term I bring to my training workshops from my military background," is a rigorous practice session. It is the speakers equivalent of the flight simulator used for training pilots how to deal with in-flight emergencies, or the moot court readying lawyers for courtroom combat.

    Select no more than four people to be your simulated audience, and share with them all the intelligence you have gained on your prospective audience. These four people will then role play your audience.

    Their comments, questions and criticism help you correct your style of delivery, find the gaps in your knowledge, and anticipate questions and objections.

    7. Arrive early to meet and greet

    Personal contact and interpersonal skills are important for the success of any presentation, but they are absolutely vital when you attempt to persuade people to buy the product you are selling. We tend to accept information from people we like, but reject it from people we don't like.

    When you arrive early, you can get to know members of the audience and let them relate to you as a human being. If it appears appropriate, mention names during your presentation of people you have had the occasion to meet prior to the presentation. Nothing is so sweet to the human ear as the sound of one's name being mentioned positively by a speaker.

    8. Use visuals to support, not to impress

    Visual aids, including the ubiquitous PowerPoint, can make or break a presentation. The advantage of using them is that most people are visual and can more readily absorb information that is graphically presented.The danger is that visuals can bore an audience, setting them off into daydreaming, not listening.

    Be careful in word choice in your visuals—and, of course, in your delivery—to avoid Geekspeak, unless you are speaking to an audience as familiar with this unique form of jargon as you are.

    Bottom line ion visuals: Don’t have the wonders of PowerPoint remembered, but the substance of your presentation forgotten.

    9. Employ rhetorical devices

    Repetition of key concepts, the careful use of the strategic pause, and parallel construction are just a few of the devices you can use to add spice and cadence to your presentation.

    Two examples of such techniques will illustrate this important tactic. Winston Churchill, instead of saying "We in Britain owe a great debt to the pilots of the Royal Air Force," expressed this thought with the memorable words "Never in the field of human conflict have so many owed so much to so few."

    President John F. Kennedy used a classic device of parallelism when he said, "We must never negotiate out of fear, but we must never fear to negotiate."

    Use your imagination to see how you can arrange words to create such cadence and rhythm.

    10. Conduct immediate post-presentation analysis

    Your instinct after completing a challenging presentation is to breath a sigh of relief and relax. Big mistake.

    Within minutes, sit down with a note pad or tape recorder and record the questions asked, the reaction of the audience to your presentation, your impression of your own performance, etc.

    Don't wait until the next day. Short term memory is precisely that, and you will remember only generalities. The immediate analysis will provide specifics.

    Transfer this specific information to your data base, and you have an excellent head start to use in the Murder Board leading to your next presentation..

    Use these tips, and the next time you leave your keyboard, you’ll find you are now as eloquent in front of a group of potential customers as you are behind your computer.

    Copyright 2005 Larry Tracy

    This article is excerpted from Larry Tracy’s book, The Shortcut to Persuasive Presentations. Larry, a retired Army colonel, was hailed by President Ronald Reagan as “an extraordinarily effective speaker.” He is one of the top presentation skills trainers in the US. His website is at the top of Google for "persuasive presentations."
    http://www.tracy-presentation.com

    Internet Marketing and Leveraging the Power of Networks

    Internet Marketing and Leveraging the Power of Networks

    Writen by David Waring

    Creating a network -- meaning a community of users -- for your company is something that has always been valuable, but has become virtually indispensable to the success of any Internet company. The leaders of the Internet -- such as Google and Yahoo! -- all apply the idea of creating a network, and have profited substantially from it.

    The best way to create a network is to provide your users with free services. This accomplishes two vital goals:

    Attracts Users. Getting qualified traffic to your site is one of the most fundamental objectives of any online business. If you don't get people to your site, you're probably not going to make any money.

    Giving away quality content and/or services free from your site is probably the best way to attract users. You increase the likelihood of other people linking to you -- as your site will have quality content worth linking to -- and thus will boost your rankings in search engines. By giving away something for nothing, you also encourage word of mouth; people enjoy informing others of free offerings, and virtually all of us love the idea of receiving something for nothing. As a result, giving away free content and/or services can be one of the most cost-effective ways of getting new users to your site.

    Builds Trust. One of the biggest factors in determining how easy it will be for you to sell products/services online is how much the user trusts you. The more expensive your product/services are, and the less recognized your brand is, the more trust will be required of you for you to sell your product/service.

    When you provide your users with a quality product or service that is free, they are going to like you. They are going to realize that unlike the vast majority of other companies out there, your firm actually offers something of value -- and best of all, does so for free. As a result, you have earned the trust and credibility needed to sell other products/services to them.

    So, what should you offer as a free service? That depends on what industry you're in. One of the best free offerings a firm can deliver, though, is digital content. This can be as straightforward as text or as complex as video editing software. Digital content is a great free offering for two reasons:

    1. Digital information is one of the few assets that one can give to another person without losing it oneself. This encourages the spread of your freely distributed product/service, which in turn increases its value to you as a promotional tool.

    2. It has no variable costs. Once you've created it, the cost of distributing it is probably close to negligible. As a result, the marketing tactic of delivering a free product/service will not cut too deeply into your bottom line.

    Once you have a free product that can attract a large user base, you should be in a great position to sell services to your user base. If your product/service is particularly good and is one that is conducive to repeat usage, you can easily sell services based around your free offering. This can be extremely effective and lucrative if done properly.

    Generally speaking, there are three categories regarding ways you can develop revenue streams around your free offering:

    Selling services

    Selling add-ons/accessories

    Selling network access

    Let's explore each method in greater detail.

    Selling Services

    Selling services essentially involves selling expert consultation or customization to the free product that was offered. The concept is best illustrated through a few examples:

    Software companies: An increasingly common practice amongst software developers is to distribute a version of their software that is completely free. No functionality is withheld; the product is available free of charge in its fullest form. Many of the users, though, will require customization to the software -- which the developers of the software are in a prime position to provide. As a result, some software companies are beginning to distribute their product entirely for free, knowing that they can sell custom services to a given percentage of the users. In this way, the free offering becomes a marketing tool that paves the way for closing sales. Such marketing tactics are increasingly replacing advertising as a more effective means of obtaining clients and establishing a brand name.

    Consultation: At the turn of the millennium, Internet marketing guru Seth Godin published his book Unleashing the Idea Virus -- and, instead of accepting the hefty advances and publishing deals he was offered, decided to distribute the book for free online. The decision, which was greeted with much skepticism at the time, seems to have been a wise one: the ebook has been downloaded over 1 million times, thus helping to establish Godin as the premiere Internet marketing consultant, and allowing him to command a premium price on consultation and public speaking services. The free distribution of content attracted users and allowed him to earn trust. He could then monetize this by offering service components such as consultation and guest lectures.

    Selling Add-ons and Accessories

    Another method of creating revenue streams around your free offering is to offer add-ons and accessories that supplement your free offering. One of the most prolific examples of this occurred when bookseller Barnes & Noble began to offer free online courses in a variety of topics. The courses are completely free, but students are encouraged to buy the books that serve to supplement the education provided in the classes. The strategy has proven to be immensely successful, as Barnes & Noble's online courses are a prominent part of the company's offering to this day.

    Selling Network Access

    With networks being the fundamental concept that drives everything about the Internet, creating a network around your free service - and then monetizing that network -- is something that most certainly can be done. This is most typically done through advertising, premium interaction, or matching services.

    Now that you understand the basics of creating a network the last and most important step is to start implementing a network building strategy and test out your ideas in real time.

    This article was written by David Waring, CEO of The ActoNetwork. For more information on the power of networks and online marketing in general check out our free Internet Marketing eBook located at http://www.actonetwork.com.

    Internet Marketing Alternatives - You Must Know!

    Internet Marketing Alternatives - You Must Know!

    Writen by Seth Chong

    Membership Sites

    “Do I really need to create an e-book for sale? Can’t I do some other things?”

    Absolutely yes you can do many other things, you don’t need to necessarily create an e-book for sale. There are too many things out there you can do on the Internet! In fact, there are too much to list we’re embarrassed we can’t tell you everything.

    Let’s have some examples:

    You may be someone who’s very good in playing the piano, having a membership site to teach people how to master piano in a short time is a good idea. Maybe you know something about sky diving, sea diving, you know about mountain hiking, every each of them can be turned into a great money making opportunity.

    A hobby usually, is excellent as more than half of the people who goes online every day are searching for information related to their hobbies. Membership sites are very profitable, we’ll explain why.

    Let’s take a membership site for example, which teaches violin. Every week, you will only need to update step-by-step instructions where your subscribers can follow and learn.

    Even if they know how to play the violin, they still need music pieces right? There are tons of music pieces out there. Updating 5-10 pieces of music you personally choose will probably be the only working routine for you each week.

    After that, you can consider having a trip some where and enjoy yourself, Austria for some classical music, Disneyland in Florida, and come back the next week just for the sake of updating it! Well not really, you don’t need to return because having an Internet Business gives you the freedom to do it from anywhere, anytime – as long as you have a laptop with an Internet connection.

    That’s all!

    Nevertheless, you will need to do your very best to make the membership site worth while, people who are happy with your membership site will gladly become your recurring customers in the future.

    The fundamentals are: you will need to sound special, you want yourself to be appealing to people, give them a reason why they must sign up for your membership site. It must be something different, that’s how your membership site will be preferred than music teachers.

    For example, anyone who joins your membership site will get to learn the violin in 2 days,

    “How can I start a membership site?”

    There are many ways. Nevertheless, we would rather stay on to using paid membership scripts or companies which provide a membership system, trust us that’s the best way! You don’t want to waste a lot of time and effort to figure out how to get the membership system going.

    We would rather pay a higher price for breads in Delifrance because they taste more delicious compared to the breads in other shops. Furthermore, we don’t want to risk having a stomach upset after our meals.

    Same goes with the membership site, we would rather spend more money buying a membership script or paying for the service, run a neat and tidy membership site for customers so that they can have a nice experience in their process of learning, than confusing them with lots of unnecessary problems.

    If you are interested in creating a membership site, a few of the membership scripts you can use are Interlogy and aMember, simply make a search on Google with the keywords “membership scripts” will get you all the results you need. You can even hire experienced programmers to write a membership scripts especially for you, and as for most of the professional Internet Marketers VisionGatePortal is the hot one. VisionGatePortal provides a very good membership system, hosting, as well as excellent support.

    =======================================================

    Physical Products

    To achieve more success doing business online, we will need to jump into selling physical products.

    This is not a secret, but it is the best step if you want to make a difference between driving a Chevy or a Porsche. If you are aware all along, Internet Marketers who are really successful lately have been coming up with their own physical products.

    Here are little examples of the famous Internet Marketers which are making a fortune from their physical products: John Reese with Traffic Secrets, Jeff Walker with Product Launch Formula, Tim Knox on eBay, Yanik Silver with Underground DVDs, Derek Gehl with Insider’s Secrets and Andrew Fox with Millionaires Mega Yacht.

    People are usually attracted to something they can keep, feel, touch, see or hear. Physical products can be sold for a price so much higher than it is as e-books, or downloadable software even up to even ten times!

    Now the problem is, not everyone is willing to do it. You’ll need to hire the fulfillment house to do everything for you: producing the products as you want them to be, wrap them up, and prepare them for shipping. It will cost a large number of money.

    The higher the price of your product, the more you will earn. It’s something really common but sometimes they just sound so common we just happen to forget about them.

    John Reese for example, earned 1.08million in one day with Jeff Walker’s product launch formula selling $997 per course. $997 is a really big number, but his product is highly sought after and many people will still buy from him.

    If you’re selling books on the Internet, consider changing them to files. Make them more manageable, people want to keep something and refer them from time to time, and you’ll make it easier by providing the files with a few bookmarks.

    Physical product selling is very profitable – especially when it can allow you to have vacations anytime you want, anywhere you like, and the fact that it lasts long.

    Always aim for furthering your business, be a credible business man or business woman, make customers glad, only in that way can you earn a great income from the Internet.

    Seth Chong is the owner of IMViral, one of the largest, greatest viral Internet Marketing Newsletter which is being spread around the world, you can sign up and see why the world's talking about it at http://www.IMViral.com

    Internet Marketing: A Look At The Basics - The Internet Marketing Course

    Internet Marketing: A Look At The Basics - The Internet Marketing Course

    Writen by Donovan Baldwin

    You know, I have been an internet marketer for almost ten years now. I have reached a point where I actually support myself, and quite well, I might add, from my internet businesses.

    It wasn't always so. I made a lot of dumb, and sometimes ignorant (the two are not the same) mistakes along the way. Somehow, I managed to learn enough about internet marketing to get successful at it in spite of myself. However, in the process, I paid for a lot of junk and wasted my time on a lot of things that didn't work. I usually refer to this as "accidental tuition".

    As a result, I get a little irked when someone approaches me, or posts a message on a forum, saying or implying that they want to get into or have found an internet business that "makes money" or "guarantees" success. I have found that a successful internet business is just like the brick-and-mortar kind. It takes dedication, motivation, inspiration, hard work...and sometimes blind luck.

    A successful internet marketing strategy is just like its non-internet business counterpart. It is made up of several factors, and does not simply consist of putting a guy on the sidewalk with a sign on a stick, or building a website and submitting it to search engines. Most people would not expect the sign on the stick to work marketing miracles, but, probably in internet ignorance, they tend to believe the website + search engine = success scenario.

    Many who read this article think that way, at least until they read what I wrote in the paragraph above this one. Despite the negativity of the previous paragraph, however, I am not trying to discourage anyone from forming an internet business or diving into the internet marketing pool. It's fun in here, and the more the merrier! I DO want to dispel unrealistic expectations of what is involved in running an internet business in general, and what is involved in internet marketing in particular.

    A point I am gradually sneaking up on is that, like many things in life, successful internet marketing may not be as simple as it looks. Nor will one single strategy work for every internet business at all times. It will be necessary to learn many things and some, which may seem simple and basic, may need to be modified to meet the needs of each unique internet business. The bright side is that many techniques are tried and true and will probably serve anyone well, although they might work better for one business than another.

    Internet marketing itself can seem relatively simple. You start with a good product or service, create quality marketing vehicles (most important being the website), and then you lead people to the website. In fact, that's all that internet marketing is about...getting interested people to your website.

    How do you do that? Well, that's where things get complicated. You can use Pay-Per-Click search engines, search engine optimization, opt-in mailing lists, free gifts, business cards, flyers, contests, rewards! The list is bounded only by your imagination.

    There are four basic ways to acquire the mass of background information you need for a successful internet marketing strategy:

    1. Go through the internet university of hard knocks, like I, and so many others, have.
    The tuition is high, and it will probably take you a few years to get your diploma.

    2. Go into research. That is, read everything you can find on the internet, running an internet business, and internet marketing. This too will take a long period of time, and you will still probably have to go out of pocket as you test your learning at various points.

    3. Find a mentor. There are people on the internet who have been successful and who share this information with others. Quite often, even they charge a fee, but your opportunity for success might be higher. However, it is difficult to find someone to be your mentor. They are running their own businesses.

    4. Take an internet marketing course. If you can find the right course, even though you will have to pay for the course, the information you can glean can save you hundred or even thousands of dollars as you wade into the fast running stream of internet business opportunities. I have taken three of these courses myself, and wish I had known of their existence when I first started trying to make money on the internet. I could have save thousands of dollars and hours of time, and an immeasurable amount of frustration.

    Simply taking an internet marketing course will not guarantee you success, of course. In fact, you will begin to realize how many ways you can fail! However, you will learn important lessons that you can use to create a successful internet business. I do NOT recommend trying to learn it on your own.

    Donovan Baldwin is a Dallas area writer. A graduate of the University Of West Florida (1973) with a BA in accounting, he is a member of Mensa and has held several managerial positions. After retiring from the U. S. Army in 1995, he became interested in internet marketing and developed various online businesses. He has been writing poetry, articles, and essays for over 40 years, and now frequently publishes articles on his own websites and for use by other webmasters. He has blogs on the subjects of weight loss and health, hybrid cars and alternative fuels, and internet marketing and related business topics.

    Internet Marketing - Advantages and Disadvantages

    Internet Marketing - Advantages and Disadvantages

    Writen by Christopher W Smith

    Everyone seems to be jumping on the internet marketing bandwagon lately. In the race to get their business online, many successful businesses forget to ask themselves some tough questions about what they are doing, what their expectations are and what their plan is to meet those expectations.

    The internet can be a powerful tool that can put you on solid footing with bigger companies. On the other hand, the other companies may have more money to pay for advertising. Here are a couple of things to keep in mind as you analyze your internet marketing strategy.

    Advantage of Internet Marketing

    - your store is open, 24 hrs a day, 7 days a week. Further, your customers are worldwide in reach, and can shop anytime that they want to

    - the cost of spreading your message is next to nothing. Emailing your subscription base is more oftne cheaper than sending a letter through the mail

    - updating your subscribers can be done almost instantly through email. Visitors to your website can get up to the minute information on each visit. If you are having a sale, your customers can start shopping at the discounted prices literally as soon as they open their email

    - if you have an information sensitive business, such as a law firm, newspaper or online magazine, you can deliver your products directly to your customers without having to use a courier

    Disadvantages of Internet Marketing

    - online marketing is not free. The cost of software, hardware, wed site design, maintenance of your site, online distribution costs and of course, time, all must be factored into the cost of providing your service or product.

    - slightly over 50% of households shop online. While that number will continue to grow, you are reaching less than two out of three households.

    - the internet is still regarded as a source of information gathering for the majority of your customers. Of the number of visitors to your site, the vast majority of visitors who are motivated to buy will do so in person. Many people prefer the live interaction when they buy. If you have a small business with one location, this may deter customers from buying.

    - easier to have outdated information on your site, thus timing of updates is critical

    - there is no replacement for good old fashioned customer service. The majority of internet marketers lack customer service and inquiry response programs. As a result, many online visitors to your site will already have painted your site as poor service before they have even contacted you. The majority of websites also have poor navigation, which makes it difficult for your visitor to find what they are looking for. Many sites were created with a marketing view, not a customer service point of view.

    - is your site secure? Does your customer know this? There are many incorrect stereotypes about the security of the internet out there. As a result, many of your visitors will not want to use their credit card to make a purchase. The fear of having their credit card info stolen is a clear and present danger in the minds of your visitors

    - there is a lot of competition for your product already out there. By the time your visitor finds you, they have already been clicking many links. Unless they can find what they are looking for quickly, they are gone.

    - many web visitors expect something for free. What do you have to offer them?

    There are many other pros and cons of internet marketing. Its important for you to consider each when creating your internet marketing strategy. Each of the disadvantages can be overcome, but only if you view the customer experience from the eyes of your customer, not as an internet marketer.

    Northern Source offers web design services for small businesses. You'll find more helpful hints at http://www.northernsource.com

    Christopher Smith has been creating web sites for small businesses for over 7 years. In addition to providing deisgn and consultation services, Christopher also provides tips on search engine optimization, internet marketing and traffic generation.

    Internet Marketing: Add 'Targeted' to Your 'Advertising'

    Internet Marketing: Add 'Targeted' to Your 'Advertising'

    Writen by Radhika Venkata

    I don't think there are people who don't know about 'Disney' and
    their stuff. Still those guys advertise a lot.

    Everybody knows the 'Microsoft'. Still they don't spend a day with
    out advertising.

    Why?

    Advertising is the simple, basic and a MUST follow step in your
    business.

    = You can reach many people who don't know about your product

    previously.

    = You can make potential customers from advertising.

    = You can explode your sales by advertising.

    = You can brand yourself from the crowd by advertising.

    How to advertise to get all the above results?

    "TARGETED ADVERTISING"

    Targeted means the advertising specifically points to your potential
    audience.

    If you keep a flyer on 'Chocolates' in a Grocery store is also
    advertising. Keep that flyer infront of the schools will be
    'targeted advertising'.

    There are few excellent and proven methods to do this 'targeted
    advertising'.

    1. TARGET KEYWORDS IN SEARCH ENGINES:

    By keeping keywords in your title and keyword metatags you can direct
    good amount of targeted traffic to your site.

    Select target keywords in phrases.If your website is about ezine
    articles, then you can use the keywords like-

    free content

    free ezine articles

    free reprint articles

    content for ezines

    ezine articles

    articles for publishing

    You can see the keywords pertaining to your website at-
    http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/

    If it is necessary, use your demographic location in keywords like-

    realestate business Miami

    DON'T forget to keep few keywords in your title of the pages and in the
    text content.

    Always look in to your weblogs to see what keywords people are using
    to reach your site. Add them to your keywords list.

    2. PAY PER CLICK SEARCH ENGINES:

    You can use the same above principles in selecting keywords. Always monitor
    your bidding money and track your results.

    3. EZINE ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS:

    http://www.ezinearticles.com/add_url.html

    http://www.ideamarketers.com/

    http://www.ebooksnbytes.com/articles/submit.shtml

    http://www.smallbusinessoutpost.com/forms/submit_article.htm

    http://www.web-source.net/articlesub.htm

    http://www.dime-co.com/articlesub.html

    Before submitting articles:

    1. Select your audience.

    2.Try to be brief and clear. DON'T write a topic which you don't know
    by yourself.

    3. DON'T give your article a feel of sales page.

    4. DON'T put affiliate links in the body part of your article.

    5. DON'T forget to keep Resource box at the end of article.

    6. Don't delete the links on your server,if you submitted them in
    previous ezine articles. If you delete them, people will see 'page not
    found' error. You are losing a potential customer.

    4. EZINE ADVERTISING:

    Ezine advertising do works if you are careful in selecting the ezine
    that focused on your website topic.

    You can search for the ezines of your interest at-

    http://www.freezineweb.com/

    http://www.marketing-seek.com/directory/index.shtml

    http://www.ezinesearch.com/

    http://www.ezinelocater.com/

    http://www.ezineworld.com/index.php3

    http://ezine-universe.com/

    http://www.ezineadsource.com/

    http://ezinewebring.hypermart.net/

    http://www.ideamarketers.com/

    1. Select the ezine that pertaining to your website or product.

    2. See how many subscribers are there for that particular ezine.

    3. Take care of the position of the ad like top place, bottom at the end
    of the ezine etc.

    4. Track the results.

    5. YOUR OWN OPT-IN LIST:

    You must have your own opt-in list. When people subscribed to your
    mailing list means, 'I am interested, send me the information'.

    With this type of targeting you will get good results with your advertising
    campaign.
    http://www.scripts4webmasters.com/follow-up-autoresponder-pro/index.shtml

    You can take your visitors email addresses by:

    Giving freebies

    Publishing ezines

    Conducting surveys

    Contests

    Free membership to your private site

    ONLY thing you should follow is "DON'T exchange your mailing list with
    the third parties".

    Radhika Venkata (c)

    Subscribe to 'iNet Marketing Ezine' which is completely focused on Internet Marketing. Receive FREE Ebooks with Resale rights! http://www.webmasters-central.com/subscribe.shtml

    FREE Ecourse 30 days Solid workout to increase your online profits! http://www.ebooks-world.com/ecourse/index.shtml

    Internet Marketing 101: Putting an Online Twist on an Offline Model

    Internet Marketing 101: Putting an Online Twist on an Offline Model

    Writen by Kathryn Beach

    If you're just starting out in internet marketing, you probably feel overwhelmed by the sheer volume of information available. The learning curve is less like a hill and more like a cliff! If you've been at this business for a while, you may be frustrated that you're still not making any money, or not enough money. You may be wondering why no one is reading your ads, or why all those visitors to your site are not buying anything and not returning. Where do you start? How do you convert the casual visitor to a return customer?

    Relax and breathe. None of us was born an internet marketer. We all have to start someplace. A great place to start is by looking at something you already DO know, offline business. We all shop somewhere. Pick a store you're familiar with, maybe the grocery store where you shop at least once a week. Pick a small store to focus on, not a huge supermarket. Now pretend that's just an empty lot or building, and you're an aspiring grocer. What do you need to do?

    There's 3 big steps you need to take.


    1. First you have to have a crystal clear picture in your mind of exactly what you want to do. What do you want to sell, and what do you want your store to look like? Spend some time dreaming, so you can see everyone who is in your store and what they are buying. Your store needs four walls, a floor, doors and windows, and a roof. You need to decide on size, the first step is to figure out what you want to sell. You think about what people in your town need and buy regularly, the availability of these products in other well established stores, and decide on your niche and your location. Maybe it's bread, canned goods, cereals, candy, ice cream, soda, milk, and cigarettes on a busy corner near a residential area with no other store in walking distance. Maybe it's a natural food store in a yuppie neighborhood. Maybe it's gas and snack foods near a highway.

    2. Secondly, you have to understand what you need to have in place to make that dream come true, and how you're going to do it. What does your store need by way of infrastructure? You need shelves, freezers and refrigerated cases, a counter and a cash register. Probably you need a small office and bathroom as well. You need electricity, lighting, heat, air conditioning, desk, chair, phone, fax, maybe some music, paint, flooring, security cameras and so on.

      Once you decide on the layout of the store, you will know what size of a building you need to build, buy or rent. How are you going to finance this, and how will you afford to stock your store, from savings or from a loan?

    3. Assuming that you now have a fully-stocked and operational store, how will you get people to shop there? You could advertise in newspapers, radio and tv; put up signs; offer door prizes and/or sales; offer free advice and information (recipes, menus, shopping lists, health and nutrition information, diet information); sponsor events (a booksigning by a famous cookbook author, co-sponsor a food related festival); build familiarity and trust by joining social, charity or business clubs, or volunteering at local events.


    Fine and good, you say, but I still don't know how to make money online. Let's take the example we just developed and convert it to online business.

    Gazing Into Your Crystal Ball

    First the concept. What do YOU want to do? What do the people that frequent the internet want? First and foremost, right behind email, people online are looking for information. There are places online you can go to research hot topics, such as Overture's Keyword Selector Tool. Here you can see how many times a word or phrase was searched in the last month. You can do a Google search for these terms to see how many websites are already available sharing that information. As you keep narrowing down your focus, balance between your passion, what other people want, and what's already available. A very small niche with very little competition with targeted promotions can become a very lucrative business.

    Your Shopping List

    Now the infrastructure, the Short List:

    a) internet real estate = a website. This can be an affiliate site or your own. You can get a free website with no outside advertising here: http://www.finitesite.com

    b) products: No matter what your interests, there's an affiliate program with products that fit; you may want to sell related ebooks, Amazon.com books, etc. Clickbank is a good place to find electronic information products.

    c) tools: you will need a tracking system (known as a link tracker); an autoresponder; a link rotator.

    d) knowledge: you will need a splash page program and/or some basic html and advertising knowledge. A free html tutorial: http://www.pagetutor.com

    e) an expense budget, no matter how small at first.

    You Need More Than Two Cans and a String

    Promotion: people enter your world (the internet) via a browser. Since "the internet" is intangible, many people confuse the vehicle (AOL or Yahoo!, for example) with the destination itself, the internet. So let's be gentle with our potential visitors and make their journey from landing pad to your neighborhood as effortless, pleasant and convenient as possible.

    If they are interested in buying widgets online, they will soon realize that there are a million widget salesmen out there. So they start narrowing down their search, and they comparison shop. First and foremost, they are information gatherers. Where do they go first? Probably to a search engine. Then they start exploring. They visit a site; if it fits their needs, they may bookmark it before they move on. When they move on, they may return to their Google or Yahoo! search results, or they may follow a link off of the page they visited.

    So getting yourself listed in the search engines is important. This does not require your own domain name, although it's the best route to go, but a website where you can control your page content is essential. A search engine will not list a replicated affiliate website, such as http://any-old-program.com/aff_id=102109 but it will gladly list http://your-domain.com/any-old-program. Search engines want new, original information, so write something original on your website about every program you join. Link your articles, etc. to your web page, then link that page to your affiliate program.

    Your own domain name, carefully chosen, will help to brand either your name or your website name, such as wallywalton.com wallyswidgets.com widgetworld.com etc. If you get a free website with finitesite.com, your url will be finitesite.com/wallywalton or something like that. It might be finitesite.com/member/wallywalton -- I forget, it's been a while since I had a site with them :) With some work, you can get a site with a url like this into the search engines. It's a great way to start if you can't afford domain name, hosting etc.

    Sooner or later, your site visitor will be ready for a purchase. Maybe they will drive off to the nearest hardware store armed with all their new information and buy a widget there. If they found your site in the search engine, visited and bookmarked it, maybe they'll return and buy from you. Maybe they'll buy from the site they went to after your site. But 9 times out of 10, once they've left your site, they're gone forever.

    And Now the Quiz, Purely Common Sense

    How do you get them to come back? Here's a pop quiz for you, choose the best answer (it's a no-brainer):

    a) offering so much valuable information, they bookmark your site and return on their own;

    b) building so much trust and familiarity that, when they think of widgets, or of asking for an opinion, or for buying anything widget-like, they think of you (that's called branding your name);

    c) promoting your website so much that, when they think of widgets, they automatically think of your website (that's also branding, the name of your site in this case)

    d) have a mailing list they can subscribe to (this might be the online equivalent of a guest book in a store) and receive updates on information on your website;

    e) have contests on your site;

    f) endorse other people's sites and products, with an appropriate byline including your own url;

    g) give away things;

    h) hang out in places online that your potential visitors frequent (forums, bulletin boards, chat rooms, conferences, seminars) and make friends, give away free information and helpful links and tools, include your url in your signature where allowed;

    i) blogging and using RSS feeds to keep people thinking of you and your widgets;

    j) being a part of the search engine revolution and exploring the world of tagging, or social bookmarks (creating your own search engine with other like-minded anarchists :)

    k) all of the above.

    Each of these concept, infrastructure, and promotion ideas could be an article in its own right; but this is your basic outline for building your online business. The ultimate power of the internet is to level the playing field for both major corporations, little ol' you, and everyone in between. A business that fully utilizes the internet can throw away the purchased leads list, because cold calling and cold emailing is a thing of the past. Using the internet to its fullest business potential means putting your message where your potential customers can find it, and letting them come emailing, looking and calling for you.

    Be sure to take advantage of the unique power of the internet, and keep the "internet" in your
    internet marketing.

    Kathryn Beach has been building websites and businesses online since 1998. She shares knowledge from personal experience, about getting started in affiliate marketing on her website, Affiliate Marketing Tips To receive her newsletter visit http://www.7affiliatecentral.com/amt_updates_salespage.html and fill out the online subscription form.

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