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I saw a site promoting video products today and it had this ‘fact’:
The Industry is predicted to grow ten-fold in the next 5 years. By 2013, video will account for 2/3 of all global Internet traffic including mobile phones.
So I wonder where this prediction came from?
And even if it’s true, it doesn’t say, “2/3 of all internet marketing traffic will be video”. Yet that’s their premise in suggesting I buy their product.
As far as Internet Marketing (IM) goes, there’s been a massive increase in the number of video-only sales pages. Even video-only opt-in pages – I can’t know what I’m opting in for without watching the video. Well screw you, I’m not wasting 2/3 of my life watching videos when a few bullet points would tell me what I want to know and pique my interest enough to opt-in (or not).
You’d like to think these people have split-tested a video-only version against other pages – text only, text and video. I would bet my business they haven’t.
Video-only is a lazy way to do sales pages; yes, video is great for the psychological triggers that are harder to do in text. But I buy mostly on facts, not emotion. And yes, I know according to many, most people buy on emotive triggers, not ‘boring’ details – like facts. Well why not provide both, you lazy SOBs?
This is what I think happened:
Someone added video to a sales page and got good results. Then someone started selling the idea that video increased sales or opt-ins.
Next thing, someone’s doing opt-in and sales pages where virtually the only content is the video (e.g. most clickbank products now).
And crucially, many many other people thought “this is the trend, this is what I should be doing”. And it came to pass that video-only pages proliferated, no-one bothered to split test and sales depended on an emotionally laden, factually lacking video.
OK, I’m extrapolating a lot from my own feelings, my own loathing of video-only pages; I hate being forced to watch a video with a signal to fluff ratio of 5%. I didn’t set out to make this a promotional post at all but if it wasn’t for my trusy enounce video speed control (http://www.enounce.com/), I’d have gone mad by now. At least I can squander only 10 minutes of my life at a time rather than 20.
Am I the only one? What do you think? I’d love your comments…
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Anyone who knows anything about me knows how much I nag people about the importance of leverage, about sticking with something long enough for it to reap rewards, about how powerful and valuable multi-level programs are.
It’s just a few days away from my 5 year anniversary with EasyHits4U, a program that exemplifies all the above points of importance, so I thought I’d put pen to paper, figuratively speaking, and share some of my ‘vital statistics’.
My first referral was gained on the 17th March 2007 (that’s the only reason I know my join date must have been round about the next day or so because my first referral was a long term friend and would have joined right after me).
I’d already created VitalViralPro a few months before so naturally EasyHits4U went into the Downline Builder.
I never ever promoted EasyHits4U directly, everything was done through VitalViralPro – as I promoted VitalViralPro, so some of those incoming referrals would join one or more traffic exchanges below me and then in time, others would join below those referrals.
Also, it’s easy to think that I had an advantage because I owned VitalViralPro; not so! I promoted VitalViralPro like all the other members. I had no more advantage than you have when you’re the sponsor and your referral is…well, your referral.
So my EasyHits4U downline grew. It’s interesting that even now, after 5 years, I only have just under 400 direct referrals. That’s less than 7 referrals per month. But here’s where the magic happens…
Those 397 direct referrals have referred 1356 people; they in turn have referred 2087 people!
Those 2087 people have referred 4016, who’ve referred 6531 who’ve referred 6714.
That makes a staggering 21101 people in my downline!
That’s all well and good but what’s in it for me?
Well EasyHits4U is a 6-level program (if you’re upgraded, and I of course would be mad not to be!). I earn credits from my referrals (15%-10%-5%-3%-2%-1%) – so if a first level referral surfs and earns 1000 credits, I get a bonus of 150 credits. If a level 6 referral did that I’d get 10 credits.
I always explain this the same way to people that have yet to grasp the importance of getting referrals in traffic exchanges; most traffic exchanges pay 10% from direct referrals so having 10 referrals that surf the same as you is like having another you working for you for free.
So with my downline, 400 (approx) at 15% is like having 60 free surfers. On level 2, 1350 (approx) at 10% is like another 135.
Without showing all the math, it turns out my downline is like having an army of 617 surfers!!
If that isn’t leverage, I don’t know what is!!
Of course we all know that many, many of the downline will be inactive or surf very little. Even so, it’s enough to bring me in 22k credits a month for free. At EasyHits4U prices ($5.95/1000) , that’s $130 of credits I’m getting every month without needing to lift a finger. I can’t remember what I pay per month for membership but it sure isn’t $130.
My downline grew by 21 members in the last 24 hours too – so the whole this is really starting to compound now.
It’s grown by 18% in the last 9 months and it should keep growing at that kind of rate. And remember, I have promoted this program quite passively. If it was my main business and that was multilevel, I’d be promoting a lot more actively.
And that’s one of the key learning points with anything multilevel. All of the benefit comes later – often quite a lot later. And for a lot of people, that’s unpalatable – they want results now!
Well I didn’t sit on my backside doing nothing while I waited for my EasyHits4U downline to grow – I did lots of things that had a more immediate effect. But I have always planted seeds in multilevel programs where I see them because they’re your passport to an easier life!
I hope this post inspires you to plant your own seeds now – the sooner you do it, the sooner you reap the rewards.
There was a scare recently in a field I work in – whether a hoax or not, a hacker claimed to have all the usernames/passwords from a particular site.
That’s not an unfamiliar story – some sites are sloppy and almost deserve to be hacked (not that I wish harm on their members but those owners must always do their very best to be secure – sloppy definitely isn’t good enough); some sites are maybe unlucky and become the unfortunate victims of some 3rd party vulnerability.
The also not unfamiliar story was the panic of people saying, “shit, I use that password for my online banking, I need to go change it”
Ok, I dramatised that. But it’s 100% true that a lot of people panicked because they had the same password they used for the hacked site in many other places. Paypal accounts, clickbank accounts, twitter, facebook, their blog.
I can’t think of the term right now, I’m too old and un-hip (though I do know about planking and flashmobbing (some PG content in that one)) but it’s where someone leaves their facebook or twitter account logged in and a friend, family member or work colleague posts masquerading as them. Several of my friends have changed sexual orientation and they were the last to know!
If you have different passwords everywhere then you have damage limitation – if they hack one account, there’s no reason to be worried about your other accounts (unless you stored all your passwords in a notepad file somewhere someone got access to!)
This is an affiliate link – use it or go direct but do get this product – roboform or something similar. Depending on your circumstances there are different versions (free and paid). My version is on a dongle that I can take anywhere and also includes online backup should I lose my passwords. It easily generates random secure passwords like xLr4!R7C^KdW – you couldn’t remember that if I typed it front of you, much less guess it. But with roboform the other advantage is that you don’t type your password in – keeping you safe even if you had an undetected keyboard logger trojan on your computer.
If you don’t get roboform, at the very least use a system for creating passwords on each site. if your facebook password was kokatie99ob no one is likely to spot that your password is easy to remember for every site yet fairly unguessable and fairly unlikely someone would spot the pattern and be able to hack your other accounts – though they might (that one uses katie99 always but uses the last 4 characters of the site name in reverse order, 2 in front, 2 behind).
To be honest the latter suggestion is much better than the same easy password everywhere but nowhere near as good as having true random passwords.
If someone hacks one account, they do limited damage. If they hack one of your social accounts they could not only embarass you, they could trick your friends into all kinds of things – how would you ever recover from that!
And if they hack your paypal or other important accounts…
People online are too casual, too careless, too trusting or too unlucky – whatever the excuse, thousands of accounts get hacked every day. Chances are it will happen to all of us at some point, even the most careful. All the random passwords in the world won’t mean a thing if someone hacks into a site you use through a vulnerability – make sure the only damage you suffer is the loss of that account!
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In the days before the internet and even before network marketing and franchises became popular ways for people to start their own business, being an entrepeneur meant something. You couldn’t really be a tire kicker. You either started and ran a business or you didn’t.
Franchises didn’t really change that – the kind of person that invests many thousand of dollars in a business is pretty serious. They may fail but the percentage of tire kickers is very low.
Network marketing made it easy for anyone to have their own ‘from home’ business – low start up cost (but still a few hundred dollars typically), no premises or staff needed. All you needed to do was work the business – get out promoting it.
And that’s when you see tire-kickers (the 1.0 type) first appear.
Despite having a ready made business with step by step instructions for success that, if they follow, will just lead to an ever increasing income – they do nothing. Or they do something but not what the plan says. And they moan – boy do they moan, about how the business doesn’t work.
It’s reckoned the moderate success rate amongst network marketing ‘entrepeneurs’ is around 2-10% – with nearer 2% being the norm for most businesses.
Bear in mind that these entrepeneurs had to make some investment and get off their butts to even get started.
Now the internet comes along and online ‘bizops’
Now there’s almost no barrier to becoming an entrepeneur. The number of genuine, hard-working entrepeneurs hasn’t decreased, in fact there’s many, many more.
But the number of tire-kickers has increased dramatically. Not just tire-kickers but people that don’t have, or won’t follow, a plan. The new breed of people that want results instantly whilst not needing to do anything or invest anything.
These are the tire-kickers 2.0.
They don’t think long-term; they can be ’100% committed’ to a program that promised them $10k a month within 90 days and they’ll switch to one that offers it in 60 days. Or one that offers it with even less recruiting. Or no recruiting.
Jon Olson recently blogged on HitExchangeNews about promoting ‘evergreen’ products.
I wouldn’t have chosen the term evergreen personally but he’s bang on the money (to me the term evergreen is already strongly associated with content that is always relevant rather than tools, but I’m splitting hairs)
A standard business model for ever has been the service / support industry. Don’t go digging for gold, sell shovels. Goldmines / gold-diggers will come and go like the phases of the moon but they’ll always need shovels.
That well-used cliche implies a selling type business. So if you have a shovel store next to a goldmine and the turnover of gold diggers is high, today it might be Joe you sell to but next week when Joe’s shovel breaks, he’s in another town at another goldmine and buys his shovel from another store. Not so bad for you – there’s always new diggers coming through.
But what if Joe was obliged to buy his shovels from you because you sold him the first one. It wouldn’t matter then where he went to dig, you’d get all his shovel business.
Pretty hard to make that analogy sound plausible in the context of gold-digging.
But online, in the service/tools sector it’s the norm!
You ‘sell’ someone an autoresponder and that has a monthly fee on which you get commission. Doesn’t matter how fickle they are jumping from bizop to bizop, so long as they keep their autoresponder, they’re rebuying that every month from you and you alone.
And here’s something that makes services like this even more attractive to promote:
Many of them ‘tie in’ the customer!
Now I know that doesn’t sound very customer-centric but provided the product you promote is sound, it doesn’t hurt that there’s a built in retention mechanism
Someone who builds a list in autoresponder X won’t switch to Y very readily.
Someone that has lots of tracking links of service A will know it’s a lot of work to change to B because they have links invested all over the place.
Just like someone that has thousands of business cards printed will be reluctant to change their phone number.
So doesn’t this sound like a really simple business? You join a service program as an affiliate and you promote it. Ideally you upgrade from the outset but if money’s tight you do everything for free till you’re getting enough commissions to cover your own upgrade. And then you just keep regularly getting new referrals so your commissions go up every month.
That is the the underlying principle of a solid business plan with an income that takes time to build.
Not sexy maybe but much sexier than believing you’re going to be rich in 90 days and then ‘shockingly’ not being!
There are many ways to make it work a lot better than the simple outline I described but that’s another post.
Today I was pondering if there was code that I could paste on to a web page in order to allow someone to add themselves to one of my circles.
And it occurred to me how simple it would be for big G to launch at least a basic autoresponder service based on this concept!
I can’t wait! It’s so obvious, it’s bound to happen.
It’s amazing how a different viewpoint can be enough to give you that ‘aha moment’.
I just read Seth Godin’s latest post ‘Naive or Professional’ and realised something profound. Or it least it seemed profound because it felt like something hit me smack between the eyes when I read his last sentence:
Wow!
It’s always amazed me how difficult I find it to ‘sell’ VitalViralPro to people. It’s a tracking service that can track 3rd party pages – no other service can do that (not reliably anyway) so why is it such a hard sell?
I tell people they should be tracking but still they don’t. The industry as a whole tells people they should be list building – yet still they don’t. And we wonder why our words fall on deaf ears…
Seth really made me realise why!
After the pain of the smack between the eyes subsided I realised that actually this had crossed my mind before but not in such a succinct way. Thank you Seth for that sentence because that insight is just what I needed.
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I dutifully upgraded to WP3.2 a few days ago (and then to 3.2.1 when I came to write this!) and my main admin menu disappeared!!
I guessed it was a plugin problem…but…how do I deactivate it if I can’t see my main menu?
After some googling I discovered the (now obvious) script I need – plugins.php – just manually delete the end of your url and type plugins.php and you can disable plugins till you find the culprit.
I’m not going to name the specific plugin – probably not fair, I just hope they fix it soon. But for now I have to disable it, write a post and remember to re-enable it. What a PITA!
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It’s amazing how many people won’t look twice at an honest email that says you have to look at this as a 3 year plan of consistent activity. Yet show them a glitzy sales pages that says they can be earning thousands of dollars hands free in next to no time and they’re in!
And all this against a background that unless they do something different to what they’ve been doing for the last x years, they’re going to still be in that 9-5 till retirement age – whatever that age is by the time they reach it.
There are three ingredients (at least) to becoming financially independent:
All three can be traded against each other depending on your circumstances but if you put enough of those 3 ingredients, in whatever proportion suits you, you stand a chance of being successful.
Notice I only said a chance.
You also need the right plan. I’ve done it myself and I’ve seen it hundreds of times already in my time as an ‘entrepeneur’ – both online and off: someone puts all their eggs in one basket, invests various amounts of those 3 ingredients, only for the opportunity to fizzle out or go bust or just disappear. And what are most people left with? Maybe some experience and a new lesson learned (or not).
If someone says you need to get in quick, they’re lying or it’s a crap opportunity. Investigate the business by all means but run a mile from that ‘sponsor’. To be fair, they’re probably just telling you what their sponsor told them.
Here’s a tongue in cheek hierarchy of businesses for making you wealthy:
Note in the top 3, you own the main asset, not someone else! The business may not last for ever but at least it’s you, not someone else that determines your fate. Don’t fall for the security blanket trap of feeling safer promoting someone else’s business because “they must know what they’re doing better than I would”
If you’re devoting all your effort to promoting even the best online business, how sure are you that they will be around till at least when you retire? Or even if they’re around, that most of your downline won’t go chasing after the next new thing in a years time?
Promoting someone elses business may be many peoples rite of passage in internet marketing – it’s often a necessary part of the learning curve on the way to being financially independent. But don’t get complacent – get into a rhythm, a daily routine, automate as much as you can and then use your income and freed up time to start considering and executing your next plan.
Because while your only asset is an income from someone else’s business, you’re can never hand on heart say you’re financially free.
For example, if you’ve joined an online MLM business (I love MLM businesses but you have to know the ones to pick) then chances are you’ll start out by sending traffic to them directly. And if you do enough of that, your downline will grow, your income will grow. But there’s no security. If they disappear tomorrow, you have nothing to show for your investment (unless you were banking 25% of your income in case of that eventuality).
Knowing that your income is in the hands of the Gods should scare you into rectifying that as early as possible. Start TODAY – it’s never too soon.
If you’re new then it’s fine to get started by earning or paying for traffic and sending it to your chosen business. Get into a daily routine doing that until it’s semi-automatic. Now use the time to learn about list building.
Now, instead of directing traffic to your business, you direct it to you first – on to YOUR LIST. You can promote the business to the members of your list and keep a good relationship with the people on your list.
And if the unthinkable (inevitable?) happens, you still have one very valuable asset that will mean you can hit the ground running.
And because you can get leverage from a list, it becomes viable, practical and desirable to build more than one online business.
In my next post I’m going to talk about what makes a very very solid way to grow an online business
And no, I’m not pitching any particular program – I’m pitching a principle.
Here’s to success for all
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When you’ve read the post, giving it a ‘like’ will reveal a random free gift.
I’ve spent a lot of time recently (in bursts) trying to move away from using a desktop mail client (Outlook) to Gmail. I love Outlook and I have years of emails in there but the advantages of having my mail online, accessible from anywhere is too great to resist now.
So bit by bit, I was changing newsletter and program emails over to gmail. However, I kept most of my mailers pointed to Outlook. At first glance, that seems surprising because of the volume. But I was able to whizz through credit emails much faster from Outlook than doing it in Gmail (click on a mail, find the link, click, click back to inbox).
sidenote: Jackie O’Connor-Hagood pointed me in the direction of a Google Labs add-in that gets rid of this problem – Google Auto-advance.
Before Jackie told me about that add-in, I joined ViralInbox – it seemed the ideal solution. It has so many great features and I really love the program.
What scuppers it is that so many mailers don’t have separate contact and list addresses grrrrr. Perhaps they think it’s clever and people will have to look through the credit mails to make sure they don’t miss a system/notification/owner mail. But it frustrates me big time.
I want to use ViralInbox for my list address for mailers – I don’t really want all those mails coming into my gmail account, with all the filters I have to set up. But a stronger motivation is that I want commission/referral notifications and important messages to go to gmail because I would only have ViralInbox open when I was wanting to earn credits. Gmail is open all the time of course.
So that’s part 1 of the rant – mailer owners, you are hampering my flexibility.
Part 2 is that many programs won’t accept an email of the format name+topic@gmail.com. I know not everyone is familiar with this format but it’s incredibly useful. I could have name+personal@gmail.com and name+business@gmail.com and then it’s much easier to set up the filters in Gmail.
But mailer after mailer won’t let me use that format of address. If I have to send all mail to my main name@gmail.com, the filtering is that much messier.
But I persevered. The mailers with separate contact and list addresses were easy of course (especially if they allowed name+contact@gmail.com) – I set the contact address to gmail and the list address to my ViralInbox address.
The mailers with only a single email address I had to direct to gmail and then set up forwarding filters to send (forward) just the credit mails to ViralInbox – so far so good.
That’s when I had a mini private rant at Google because only after I’d invested considerable time in setting all this up, did I spot a note on a Google help page that informed me I could have as many forwarding addresses as I wanted but I could only have 20 forwarding filters.
So, Mailer owners – I don’t think having a single address helps you and it certainly doesn’t help us – we’re very likely to miss any important message and even your marketing emails. And please get with the times and accept name+topic@gmail.com addresses.
And Gmail – why this seemingly pointless limitation?
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Whatever your marketing funnel, you don’t want it to have leaks. If you pour a litre of oil into a funnel while topping up your engine, you want to know that a litre of oil makes it into the engine, not half a litre.
Judging by many funnels I see, people are content to get just 1 drop in the engine from a litre bottle!!
In this post I’m going to show you a couple of free or low cost tools that you can use to plug leaks in a couple of typical scenarios.
Every time you do something that directs a visitor to a page, you need to be thinking about leaks. If I send traffic to an affiliate page, most of that traffic will leak. In fact if I send 1000 visitors and 10 buy from the page, that’s pretty good – isn’t it? Well it’s not bad, but what about the 990 that leaked never to be seen again?
The only surefire way to have zero leaks is to only promote affiliate products from your list. That way if they go take a look, they may not buy but they’re still on your list so you can try something else in the future.
However, you’re going to be doing lots of other activities than just promoting products to your list – this is where you want to plug as many leaks as you can.
So how can you do that?
Well the first thing is that it very much depends on context so the pointers I give here should be taken away and adapted to your own funnels or pipelines.Much of this isn’t rocket science and much of what I’ll be saying is just pointing out something that may not be obvious to you right now (because you just haven’t though about it). But once it’s pointed out, you’ll slap your forehead, say doh! and never make the same mistake again.
Just think of the number of different strategies for sending someone to a sales page to try to make a commission:
And many more possibilities.
If you’re sending visitors that are not on your list then there’s the potential, no the certainty, that you’re going to lose most of those visitors. So let’s look first at two attempts to plug some leaks – the forced opt-in.
Of course there’s no such thing – you don’t have a gun to their head. But a forced opt-in means the vistor either signs up to your list (and then gets to see the intended page) or they don’t see the intended page at all.
At one time, this was all the rage. But you’ll find now that it’s becoming increasingly unpopular with visitors. Visitors are on enough lists, they don’t want to opt-in or have to register just to see a sales page. After all, from their perspective if they don’t buy, they’ve just added themselves to another list for nothing.
However, done right it still works and can be done without annoying your visitors. For example, in the link or advert they click, explain why they should opt-in. A good example would be an advert that says ‘join my newsletter for a $20 discount on the RRP”. Now the visitor won’t get so annoyed.
It’s also reasonable and expected that someone should exchange their name and email in return for a free report. So forced opt-in has it’s place, just don’t use it unless you’re offering something in return. Don’t use it just to restrict access to the sales page.
This is more visitor-friendly. Just ask them if they wouldn’t mind opting on to your list. Of course, the more you offer in return, the more likely they are to comply.
Optional opt-ins could be a gateway page (a page you send them to before the main sales page) that has an opt-in form and a ‘no thanks, take me to the sales page’ link.
It can also be an opt-in form on the sales page itself. This is a passive opt-in. They are totally at liberty to opt-in or not. To get good opt-in rates depends on having an opt-in form that catches their attention and a compelling reason to do something that is optional. Free gifts are the norm, be it newsletters, reports, ebooks, discounts etc.
The point is that you want to capture people that don’t buy before they’re gone forever.
Another popular optional opt-in method is to have an exit pop-up. This is a special form that appears if they attempt to leave the sales page. Sometimes these pop ups require a mouse click to dismiss them, sometimes not. Sometimes there is a fake live agent that might offer a discount. These work on newbies but not on anyone that’s been online two days or more.
Done the wrong way, these are becoming quite unpopular with visitors. If they click away from the page, they don’t always want to see another offer and it can simply antagonise them. However, if the offer is genuine and worthwhile and, most importantly, closely related to the original advert (or link and description) that got them to the sales page in the first place, this works moderately well; “ok, you don’t want to buy this gizmo, how about you grab my free ebook on how to care for your gizmo – just give me your details and I’ll send it to you.”
Another way to capture more of your visitors is to have a related offer on the page. This can be done in a wide variety of ways. The idea is that if one product doesn’t appeal, the other might.
However, this can be counter-productive; it really depends on a lot of factors.
Peel away ads are a very good example of this. They are so eye-catching that they can get a good response rate. The theory is that if someone is interested in the sales page, they’ll ignore the peel away ad. But if they aren’t interested, they might just peek at the peel away ad before they leave for ever. And the peel away adcould be an opt-in or lead to an opt-in.
There isn’t really one right way, though a few ways would certainly be considered definitely wrong. As mentioned, don’t force them to opt-in to see a sales page without giving something in return – you opt-ins will be negligible and so will your sales.
Done right then hypothetically your sales page should do no worse than it would have done originally but of the 990 visitors that previously would have just disappeared into the ether, you’ll get another 20 opt-ins to your list.
Firstly, you do need an autoresponder to plug leaks. I recommend Aweber or TrafficWave.
Secondly you need to implement your chosen method of leak-plugging, i.e. opt-in strategy.
If you own the sales page then you could consider designing an opt-in form into the page. Just grab the form code from your autoresponder and design it in.
However, there are a couple of specific scenarios I’d like to show you because they’re very powerful…
Do a search for “wordpress optin plugin” or “wordpress autoresponder plugin” and you’ll find many possibilities, many of them free. I haven’t reviewed extensively because I already have two that I found that work well for me. Neither are free but considering the potential value of plugging your leaks, they’re very worthwhile. However, once you grasp the principle then you may be able to find free alternatives.
The first one is Digi List Builder. I really like this and it’s really easy to add to any WordPress blog.
You can actually see this in action on this blog – the opt-in form at the bottom is one aspect but there’s more. You may also have by now seen a timed pop-up. This is part of the same plugin.
The second works differently in that if someone moves their mouse out of the area of the page (like to hit back or click on a toolbar bookmark), a visitor friendly opt-in appears. I say visitor friendly because they’re not forced to click anything to carry on. You may also see this one in action if you try to move away from the page.
It’s called wpLapDance but please don’t be put off or offended by the name – it is a seriously good product. At the moment I run both because they plug leaks in complementary ways and if I had to recommend just one or the other I’d find it a tough call right now.
This is something that gets me really excited because it is so easy to implement.
Suppose you really want to tweet an affiliate link. You do know you shouldn’t do that, right? It’s rarely very effective. Well the following technique can be used to plug a leak on an affiliate sales page but works best if you create your own gateway page, like a review page.
The two tools I recommend can both do what’s needed (and a whole lot more besides).
Take a look at this link to an article I wrote on the IMfaceplate site. Now ordinarily I would send a visitor to the article with an IM Faceplate URL – in fact it’s this link here. But what would they do if they like my article? If I’m lucky they’ll browse around IMFP and maybe join under me or find my twitter follow link.
But by using the first link where I use my BZ9 tools to create the opt-in bar at the bottom I’ve given the visitor an easy and clear way to sign up to my list if they like the article.
Another similar set of tools I highly recommend is Widget Quik
Both of these tools can do so much more than just this. My preferred tool right now is BZ9, particularly forĀ the opt-in form at the bottom of a page. But you can use either of these tools to create exit pages that can capture the visitors details and a host of other things. I’ll be creating an article in the future on each of these tools. Both tools have great demo pages so you can see what they’re capable of.
Most people have a leak the size of a dinner plate in their marketing funnels. Use the tools on this page to significantly plug those leaks and stop throwing so much traffic down the drain.