Archive for the ‘Internet Marketing’ Category

What If You Don’t Know What To Blog About?

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009



What If You Don’t Know What To Blog About?

The biggest “sticking point” people are facing when considering becoming a blogger is what topic to cover. The language used to describe the issue varied and included the following -

  1. I don’t know what topic to write about
  2. I’m not an expert at anything
  3. I don’t know whether my topic can be profitable

I really feel there is a strong insecurity and a general lack of understanding around what makes a profitable topic. This is a unique challenge for bloggers, because we don’t necessarily have a product to sell, especially when you first begin. In essence, your content is your product, and if you choose a product no one wants, then obviously you’re not going to make money.

The Subtle Elements Behind Choosing The Right Subject

I’ve long been a student of niche blogging and the initial choice of topic for a blog is the same as choosing a niche for any business. You’re choosing what market to enter with the hope of success, whatever that success is for you.

In most cases success includes some kind of monetary reward, but with blogging it’s a bit different, because for many bloggers, it’s just as much about creative expression, recognition and reputation as it is about raw dollars. You have to consider your potential to make money and whether you want to immerse yourself in that industry to potentially become an expert.

It’s worth studying this method however because the people who use it are very good at figuring out where the money is, which unfortunately for those of us who focus on passion, often struggle the most with. There are plenty of struggling bloggers with a lot of passion and no dollars, so you owe it to yourself to use whatever resources you have available to make sure you’re not one of them.

The holy grail of blogging is a mix of what you love and what you can get paid for – and paid really well. Most book authors never make money from their work, yet with a blog you can put in as much effort as you would to write a book, and end up with a very cash positive asset. Best of all you can do this independently, from your home, without the need of distribution from a publishing company, who would take a large chunk of your profits.

Once you have your topic, the rest of the blogging process can be quite straight forward. It takes work of course, but you will be comfortable because you will know what you stand for and who you are trying to talk to. That’s the magic of clearly understanding your audience and what you want to be to them.

If you enjoyed this post, please share it with your followers on Twitter and other Social sites! I appreciate it, and I’m sure those who get it as a result of you sharing it will appreciate it too!

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Feeding Frenzy to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

Sign-up and learn how to make money online with a Blog Centered Business.

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar. I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

P.S. Be sure to Hit-Me-Back with a comment while you’re here. I always look forward to your thoughts and feedback. So I’m listening… Let’s Talk.

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More Internet Business Sales Leads to More Fun

Monday, September 28th, 2009


Isn’t that what everyone usually wants to do! More sales means more fun.

Here are some great posts that were highlighted on Problogger. Enjoy!

An Open Letter to Marking Newbies

Ben Settle is an email marketing maniac. In this post he shares tips for the newbies to make more money online. Pay special attention to his last tip. Also love this one, “Consume a good “how to” product at least 10x’s before buying the next one.” There are very few books I’ve read ten times (Claude Hopkins Scientific Advertising is one) but I do go through the best ones multiple times. It shocking what you pull out the 2nd and 3rd time you go through it.

Another Reason Internet Businesses Fail: The Myth of Work Versus Play

Glenn obviously hit a nerve with his audience on this one as comments keep coming in. While I don’t agree with everything Glenn says here, he makes some very good points. Perhaps Glenn and I will get together and discuss this if you are interested (where I would share a little bit different of a viewpoint and how it relates to each of our personalities).

Which Subject Line Won?

Ryan Healy talks about going deeper than just surface testing of subject lines. This is an important one for EVERYONE who tests. You do test, don’t you? It’s easy to misinterpret the results or look at the wrong numbers if you’re not careful. Notice how he pinpoints something I’ve been talking a lot about lately – everyone on your list is NOT going to be a buyer. Write the ones who will be.

Website Redesign Pulls in More Sales?

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away design wasn’t that important. It was all about the copy. In my recent tests, this isn’t true anymore. Presenting a professional appearance to your website is becoming more and more important today. Read about how Michel Fortin is currently generating 4 times as many sales by doing a redesign on one of his sites.

5 Social Media Lessons I Learned from Working With a Hollywood Actress

Some very good tips are included here. I especially like the finding your blog’s core purpose. Focus. That’s what it is all about. What is your bullseye phrase? What is your goal? What is the purpose of each element in your business? Don’t promote or do anything online simply because “others are doing it.” What is the right focus for you?

If you enjoyed this post, please share it with your followers on Twitter and other Social sites! I appreciate it, and I’m sure those who get it as a result of you sharing it will appreciate it too!

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Marketing Boot Camp to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

Sign-up and learn how to make money online with a Blog Centered Business.

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar. I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

P.S. Be sure to Hit-Me-Back while you’re here. I always look forward to your thoughts and feedback. So I’m listening… Hit-Me-Back.

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5 Ways to Get Your Blog Indexed by Google in 24 Hours

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009



This is a guest-post from AdesBlog.com. Follow Ades on twitter @ades.

We all know that content is king and that if you keep blogging… if you keep doing what you love… the traffic and the money will follow suit. While that’s partially true, there is also things that you can do to:

  • Index your newly launched blog fast by major Search Engines
  • Increase traffic to your blog
  • Improve your SERPs (Search Engine Result Positions)

Why wait right? Content can be king but waiting around for traffic to come by itself is not a good way to start blogging. So let’s start…

Getting Indexed

Let’s say you launched a blog today and want it on Google’s results tomorrow. Can this be done? Yes.

Easiest way to get indexed by major Search Engines is to get mentioned by established blogs. This usually will get your blog indexed within 24 hours. But since we are new (i.e the newly launched blog of ours) I don’t think any blogger want to mention it. So instead of begging other bloggers to notice your newly launched blog, you just have to figure out other ways of getting indexed by Google fast. Can it be done? Absolutely! (All it takes a little effort on your side).

1. Blog Communities

There are few blog related community portals that have a very good rankings in Google and other Major Search Engines Results, they are: MyBlogLog, BlogCatalog, Blogged and NetworkedBlogs, particularly MyBlogLog. This means that if you get your blog on these blog communities, Google will have no other choice but to index your blog. So, go ahead and register for an account on these communities and list your blog on it.

What to pay attention: Your blog’s description (have a proper write-up), keywords & tags (add related keywords and tags to your listing, this will be used by other members to find your blog), branding (put your logo, avatars, screenshots etc. have a consistent branding everywhere), and list your blog in the correct category.

2. Site Valuation & Stats Sites

Some of those How Much Your Site Worth? sites have a good ranking in Search Engines. All you need to do is to go there and check how much your site worth. This would create a special page for your blog and consecutively it would be indexed by Google. Here is a list of worthy sites: WebsiteOutlook, StatBrain, CubeStat, WebTrafficAgents, BuiltWith, WhoIs, QuarkBase, URLfan and AboutTheDomain.

3. Feed Aggregators

List your blog’s feed in these feed aggregators Feed-Squirrel, OctoFinder, FeedAdage. Once you have submitted your feed to these sites, they will keep track of your newly published posts and index them in their site. Whenever someone clicks on the blog post title, he/she will be redirected to your original blog post sending you free traffic and getting your latest posts indexed by Google.

4. Social Sites

Registering account on Social Sites with the same username as your blog’s URL is very effective in getting your blog indexed by Search Engines. Especially for those targeted keywords.

For example, if your blog’s name is WhiteElephant, it’s a good practice to register the same username at twitter as @WhiteElephant, and to create a page in Facebook at www.facebook.com/WhiteElephant. Having a consistent keyword-username on all major Social Sites will help get your blog indexed faster, and at a later stage it will also help build a “brand” for your blog.

So, get account on major Social Sites for your newly launched blog, namely: Twitter, Facebook (create a page for your blog), Digg, StumbleUpon, Delicious etc. By the way, it’s a good pratice to create a separate Social Sites account for each of your projects. This way you can stay focused and post messages that are related to your project. In the long run, this will help build a community that are like-minded around your project.

Note from Darren: it’s worth nothing that many social media sites (like Twitter) use no follow tags on links which means the links don’t really help with SEO. Having said this - it’s still worth getting pages for your keywords/brand as these pages can rank in and of themselves in Google and can help you to have control over numerous search results for the same keyword.

5. Misc Sites

Squidoo is a community website that allows people to create pages (called “lenses”) on various topics. Creating a topic that is related to your blog and then including your feed in that page would help your blog get indexed by Search Engines. Squidoo used to have a really good ranking in Google results, but not so much today. But it’s still ranks well and it shouldn’t be neglected.

ChangeDetection is a website that monitors sites for changes. When you monitor a particular site using ChangeDetection, it will ask you whether you want the notices to be public or private. If you say public, it will be published in their news section. For example; AdesBlog.com got an update today, type of update: text additions etc. This of course will get picked up by Search Engines and Search Engines in return will index your blog.

Technorati is a search engine for searching blogs. According to Wikipedia, as of June 2008, Technorati was indexing 112.8 million blogs and over 250 million pieces of tagged social media. It’s a dying breed, but not just dead yet. You have to definitely register for an account and get your blog listed on Technorati.

That’s it. Once you are done with creating accounts and submitting your newly launched blog in the above mentioned sites, you should see your blog in Google’s Search Results within 24 hours. Most of the time it will appear within the next few hours only.

Lastly, getting indexed is one thing but sustaining that traffic is another. And this is where the Content is King phrase should truly be emphasized. Because, without a good and valuable content, all your effort will be just wasted.

I hope you have found this post useful.

Abdylas Tynyshov (Ades) is a full-time blogger based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. He blogs at http://www.adesblog.com and is the creator of a great freeware color picker tool. You can follow him on twitter at @ades.

If you enjoyed this post, please share it with your followers on Twitter and other Social sites! I appreciate it, and I’m sure those who get it as a result of you sharing it will appreciate it too!

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Marketing Boot Camp to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

Sign-up and learn how to make money online with a Blog Centered Business.

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar. I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

P.S. Be sure to Hit-Me-Back while you’re here. I always look forward to your thoughts and feedback. So I’m listening… Hit-Me-Back.

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Are You A Blogging Zombie?: Start Thinking Differently for Unique Results

Saturday, August 15th, 2009



In this guest post from Problogger, Seth Waite from Blogussion talks about how to think differently in order to develop a Unique blog. 

Last night after turning off the lights in my room I staggered and stumbled from the light switch across the room to my soft and cozy bed. On the way over though I made sure to walk slowly, take small steps, and hold my arms out in front of me. You know the zombie walk I am talking about!

Getting closer and closer to the bed I suddenly nailed my face into our very tall bed post. OUCH! Not only did the bed post hurt my face but it really irritated me. I mean I had been doing everything right!

My arms were out in front of me, I was taking baby steps, and I was sure that I had been doing everything right. So how could this happen to me?

Painfully lying in bed, I made a startling realization. I was doing it all wrong.  My efforts to block myself by holding my arms out in front of me like some “zombie” had been to guard off unwanted crashes, bangs, and bed posts. But this move totally left my face exposed.

To combat the effects of “smashed face”, I thought up a new way to walk in the dark. Just hold your arms out straight in front of you with your hands locked together. It sort of creates a triangle. This new method not only protects my body but also my face. I now travel in the dark much safer.

In a similar vein, we as bloggers often move through the dark. We try to work online with our blogs, ebooks, social media accounts and stat counters in the same “zombie” like fashion.

We do the same things everyone else does and expect to find success doing them. Bloggers and Web Entrepreneurs that have found success are doing it different. I would suggest that they have “hit their face” long ago and found the smarter way to do things.

Here are some great examples of thinking outside the box to find solutions to your problems. Just look and see how different the ideas are and then imagine the possibilities you have in front of you.

This is why you’re fat. If the name does not intrigue you the multitude of bacon wrapped, humongous sized meals will. The site has the most simple idea ever. Create posts with pictures of crazy, greasy-goodness and maybe write a 10 word description of what’s in it. Their original idea gets them over 64,000 visits and 100,000 pageviews a day! It’s no wonder with a slogan like “where dreams become heart attacks”.

Another example can be seen in the Kansas, USA where local towns are giving away property to help build their populations and economy. The idea is different and pretty original in today’s market. (by the way… if you like the prairie and work online, this could be an awesome way to live inexpensively)

Creating interesting ideas through new means was something that the Crowley Webb team did well. They took only $20,000 and developed one of the most brilliant advertising campaigns ever seen. Ads were placed on billboards all over the city of Buffalo, New York asking to see an “Angel in Red” again, from a man named “William”. The billboards continued as a series of requests culminating in a packed pub waiting for “William” and the “Angel in Red” to meet. Sales sky-rocketed and the advertising story made the small pub famous throughout the city. (background)

You see blogging and working online is the same as these examples. The subjects had a desired goal to achieve and they realized that the ordinary way of doing things just wasn’t going to cut it, so they made something original.

Creating a unique blog is all about finding the elements your blog needs to become a stand-alone example of your expertise and authority on the subject. The resource needs to be useful and different then anything else that is being offered, and the rest is history.

You can try to make this change on your own or eventually be forced into it with a very surprising, and painful, awakening. If that face smooshing experience doesn’t do it you will be destined for more bangs and crashes along the way. The only way to change your blogging future is to think uniquely. Stop being a zombie!

Seth Waite is the writer who still has a bump on his forehead. To read more from Seth’s anti-zombie attack kit or new blog tips, check out Blogussion where he writes regularly. He can also be found avoiding that big whale being carried by very small birds on his twitter account Seth1492

If you enjoyed this post, please share it with your followers on Twitter and others on Buzz Up! I appreciate it, and I’m sure those who get it as a result of you sharing it will appreciate it too!

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Marketing Boot Camp to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

Sign-up and learn how to make money online with a Blog Centered Business.

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar. I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

P.S. Be sure to HitMeBack to me while you’re here. I always look forward to your thoughts and feedback. So I’m listening… HitMeBack. )

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7 Proven Laws To Make Money Online

Thursday, August 13th, 2009



Here are 7 great laws to follow from Stephen Pierce…

Want 7 proven Laws to make money online?

This is no fluff, no filler. Just the right information, right now to help you make money online.

Read it… enjoy it… use it… share it… profit from it!

Here are my “7 Irrefutable Laws of Making Money Online.”

Law #1 It’s not just about where money is being made, it’s about where YOU can make money.

Law #2 Communities + Conversations + Content = The center of gravity of the internet!

Law #3 Build blogs around buyers, not around markets.

Law #4 Keywords bring cash carrying buyers to your blog. (All keywords are not equal)

Law #5 It pays to get participation. (More Interactions = more transactions)

Law #6 It’s the conversation stupid! (So pay attention)

Law #7 The cash is hidden in your contribution. (Meaningful = Mo’Money vs Meaningless = No Money)

If you enjoyed this post, please share it with your followers on Twitter and others on Buzz Up! I appreciate it, and I’m sure those who get it as a result of you sharing it will appreciate it too!

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Marketing Boot Camp to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar.  I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

P.S. Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

P.S. Be sure to HitMeBack to me while you’re here. I always look forward to your thoughts and feedback. So I’m listening… HitMeBack. )

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Simple Systems of Internet Success

Monday, July 20th, 2009

It’s EASY to over-complicate the internet.

Blogging, Tweets, Social Media, Stumbleupon, Delicious, Digg, Search Engine Optimization, Authoresponders, RSS, Email Lists, Affiliates, Mp3, Videos, Youtube, Article Submissions, Publicity, split testing, multivariate testing, linking, domain names, html, pay-per-click, permission marketing, banners, reciprocal links, deep linking, FTP, unique visitors, stickiness, conversion rate, clickthroughs, bounces, popovers, slideins, forums, ezines, traffic building, sig files, viral marketing, keyword research, niches, surveys, title tags, above the fold, shopping carts, continuity, bookmarking, blog carnivals, etc.

I could have written the list above for pages, but I’m tired of writing it.

Have you ever been CONFUSED about internet business?

If this was a live event, we’d see hands going up all over the room.

There is so much information available that you can’t possibly study it all…not to mention DO it all.

You’ll find that the people who do best as beginners are those who simplify. Instead of trying to do everything (and wearing all the hats they may eventually wear as an internet business owner), they focus on a simple method they can understand.

Choose one method and DO IT.

Method #1: Articles

You’ve probably heard of the “BUM marketing method.” You can search that phrase on Google to find out more. Basically instead of trying everything to build traffic, simply write articles. Write an article. Promote an affiliate product. Submit it to article directories.

Become more advanced by doing some keyword research on the Google Keyword Tool or better yet, use top rated Wordtracker keyword research. Use those keyword phrases people are already searching for in your titles and throughout the article.

Visitors see your article. Then click through to the site you’re promoting. You make a little money OVER TIME (this method takes a lot of articles and time to build momentum).

Improve the results of it by getting your own domain, buying rights to a product you’re allowed to give away free, and use it to build your list. Then promote the affiliate programs AFTER people join your list.

The idea behind this method is simply its simplicity. You can expand by writing more articles, hiring a writer to produce them for you, or adding in other techniques (such as getting them on your list first).

Method #2: SEO

Do keyword research. Find a keyword phrase that has a decent number of searches, but isn’t TOO competitive. Here is a SIMPLE method of determining if it is tough to capture. Search the phrase on Google. Is everyone of the first page results using the entire phrase in their title? If they are, it’s going to be tough to rank.

Then visit some of these sites and see what their Pagerank is (you’ll need the free Google toolbar for that). If you all 4’s, 5’s, and above…tough competition. If you see mostly 1’s, 2’s, and 3’s, it is looking much better.

I could get much more complicated with the competitive research, but let’s keep it simple. We want a phrase that the sites aren’t all expert competitors.

Put up a Wordpress site focusing on that primary keyword phrase. Go back to the Google keyword tool to find all the similar keyword phrases Google recommends…and create your posts on these subjects. Follow the strategies on SEO.

From your blog, promote an affiliate program or a series of affiliate products that you would honestly recommend.

Method #3: Your Own Product and Affiliates

Put together your own product on a subject. For your very first product, I’d recommend maybe doing an interview with an expert on a particular subject matter.

Put it up low cost such as $10, $15, or $20. Use a script such as HAF to handle affiliates and pay you through Paypal.

Contact potential affiliates and give them 100% of the money from this front end offer. You’re primarily using it to build a list of BUYERS which you can offer other products and affiliate programs to.

Produce content and provide this content to bloggers and ezine publishers in exchange for a link (which they can even use their affiliate link).

Notice how I didn’t say anything about doing a big launch process for it? You can do that on the next one once you build a few relationships. Keep it simple.

Three Strategies You Could Use to Get Started

The above are simply 3 strategies you COULD USE to get started online. I could make any of them more complex and go into further detail on them. The key here isn’t how DEEP we can get. It’s getting started and keeping it simple at first. Once you get “out there” expand on your knowledge and IMPROVE on what you’re doing by studying the method more intensively.

The key is as much getting started and gaining momentum as it is “doing things right.” Nobody does everything right from the beginning. If you choose to do articles, a few of your first ones might not even make any profits. Then you write the one that does. This is how you learn. You see the difference. You duplicate what you did on the “correct” one. You grow.

Until next time, great success in all you do!

-Craig

Make sure you visit Article Marketing Boot Camp to learn the difference between writing articles to generate money and just writing articles. It’s so amazingly powerful, you have to try it!

Sign-up and learn how to make money online with a Blog Centered Business.

If you haven’t signed up yet to receive email notifications of when I post new blogs, please do on the sign up form found in the sidebar.  I also encourage you to sign up for RSS feeds where you can view the post in full through your favorite reader.

P.S. Follow me on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/craigsandrews

Popularity: 90% [?]

How To Write Review Blog Posts That Make Money

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

This is a guest post from Robb Sutton, a Blog Mastermind graduate student who blogs at Mountain Biking by 198, which has brought in over $70,000 in review product in its first year. Robb’s just released a new report called Ramped Reviews, which will teach you how to get thousands of dollars worth of free review products thanks to your blog.

******

If you build a good blog eventually you will enjoy the opportunity to review products and services that can generate revenue through direct sales or affiliate promotions. The trick to make this profitable without scaring away your readers, is to write a comprehensive, honest review that still converts casual readers into consumers, who take an action that returns revenue for you.

Advertising vs. Reviews

Before we jump into how to write a review that sells, I believe it is important to spell out the difference between conventional advertising and a review. Both of these mediums are forms of media exposure that have the goal of convincing a person to perform an action, but at their core… they are very different.

  • Conventional Advertising – Advertising is often just a quick pitch that keeps that specific brand name in your mind long enough for you to perform an action (typically a purchase). The advertisement is prepared by a marketing firm or the company producing the product and it features only the aspects the company wants to portray. Advertisements are often thrown through multiple sessions of market research and are heavily geared towards the psychology of the target audience.
  • Reviews – When done correctly, reviews are a comprehensive look at the good and bad of a product or service as it relates to its target audience. A reviewer is not connected to the host company to prevent bias in the reviewing process.

How To Write a Review That Sells

The ultimate challenge for a blog review writer is producing a review that is honest, but still converts. When done correctly, you can maintain your credibility as a review writer and still generate revenue on your blog.

Here are some tips to help you draft up your next successful product review.

Comprehensive Reviews Answer Questions

A well written, successful product review, should answer questions for your readers:

  • What does this product or service do?
  • What does this product do differently than the competition?
  • What does this product do that is great?
  • What does this product do that is bad?
  • Who is the ideal person for this product?
  • Where can you buy this product?

As you can see by these example questions, you are trying to answer all of the questions that a potential reader would ask.

When a search engine visitor or regular reader of your blog reads this review, they are going to ask themselves whether it is a good idea to purchase the product in question for their needs. If you do not answer this relevant question, they will not take action. Your goal should be to answer as many questions as you can in the pursuit of providing a complete product review for your readers.

A review that sells leaves no rock unturned in the search for the truth. As the reviewer, you need to give your readers insight into the product or service that they could not find anywhere else. By using as many examples, pictures and video, you are able to bring the reader closer to the product than any ad spot.

Nothing Is Perfect

In your search to provide the most comprehensive review possible for your readers, you need to remember one very important trait of every product and service on the market…NOTHING IS PERFECT.

Everything you review has both good and bad points that need to be addressed during the review process. A common mistake I see among bloggers is the temptation to write glorified advertisements as reviews in an attempt to butter up other companies into giving them free product for review purposes.

This trap is easier to get in than many would imagine. Remember…you should be blogging on a subject that you are passionate about, so it is natural to get excited about receiving product that you used to pay top dollar for. Your credibility is everything as a review blogger, so it is more important to portray the truth. Your readers will see right past your excitement if they know you are skipping over negative aspects of products in an attempt to get more free stuff.

Negative reviews (and you will have some that are very negative over time) should be fact based so you leave little argument to your conclusions. You will have readers that disagree, but they will at least respect your opinion.

Remember Your Readers

When you are drafting your reviews to publish on your blog, you need to always keep in mind your typical blog reader. If you have been blogging for any length of time, you have a pretty good understanding of how your readers react to certain language.

On one of my blogs, Mountain Biking by 198, we often receive emails and comments about how we should have gotten more technical with our reviews. While there are a small number of readers that would like to talk about suspension curves and shock dampers, the majority of the readers are either not interested or wouldn’t understand the terminology. The majority of the readers want to have the question “will this bike fit my needs?” answered, and that is what we provide.

Try to take all constructive criticism to heart but at the same time remember who your common reader is while you write your reviews. After all, you want your writing to appeal to your core audience.

If your audience is a bunch of web coders, it is a smart idea to get technical. If your blog readers are looking for ways to shed the pounds but still eat food that tastes good, it is not a good idea to go into the extreme details on how food is processed. Get the idea?

Summarizing Features

Like it or not, there are two different kinds of readers that are going to read your reviews.

  • The reader that soaks up every word of your content with the utmost intensity.
  • The scanner that just looks for the main points and hits the road.

When you draft up a successful product review, you need to make the review work for both types of blog readers. The easiest way to get the scanner to pay attention is by using attention grabbing headlines throughout the review and summarizing your points at the end of the article. If you open any car magazine, you can quickly scan a review article and get quick points and a basic yes or no on the car.

At the end of your product and service reviews, provide a quick summary paragraph and a list of the good and bad points of the product. This summarizes the article for the word for word reader and gives a quick focus point for the scanner.

Affiliate Links in Reviews

If you wrote a successful product review, the reader will have determined if they need to take action or not by the facts you presented. At the end of your review, insert your affiliate link with a bold header that clearly explains that the link is for purchasing the product reviewed. Hopefully, all of your hard work paid off and your readers that need a product like that take action.

One Last Word

Your credibility as a review writer is everything. The more your readers take your advice and have a positive experience with the interaction, the more success you will see with your blog and your review writing. Under no circumstances should you ever risk that credibility for something free. Once that trust is broken with your readers, it is very hard to gain back.

Robb Sutton

If you want more advice from Robb on how to get free stuff to review on your blog, grab a copy of his new report called Ramped Reviews

Popularity: 100% [?]

ROI on Your Time and Money

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

What’s your return on investment?

A lot of times people only think of this in terms of money they invest, but even more important is what your return for the time you’re investing in an activity.

Are you tracking everything in your business…both money and time spent?

If you’re not, you’ll never find the profit leaks which are occurring a daily basis. What caused me to think and write about this subject was when I spent time in my shopping cart running sales reports. I was looking at the sales numbers by product over the past year.

The numbers didn’t surprise me. What I found was that while every product has been profitable, some simply weren’t worth the time invested.

Once I looked at the profits of each product and compared it to time I spent creating the product originally (I had to look back at some of my old daily calendars to estimate this at times), the ones with the absolute best profit to time ratio fit into several categories.

1. The “group” type products have resulted in the best return on time investment.

These are products I created with someone else such as the A-to-Z internet marketing Truthprints and the Ultimate Interview Product Solution.

The #1 reason these have been a great ROI is they were created in no more than 3 days time total (and that’s including flying to and from where I recorded them). The sales copy took longer than this, but that is true no matter what the product.

2. Continuity programs have resulted in a good return also.

While I have to spend time on my own personal newsletter every month, the SALES COPY part is only done once (and then tested and updated) instead of having to constantly produce new sales pieces. Once you count in my profits from promoting OTHER people’s continuity programs, the ROI gets even better (since I’m not DOING their product). Plus with continuity you have to factor in the additional purchasers make because of the long-term relationship with you.

3. Set it and forget it products have done well.

One of the best examples of this is a Christian product I sell at http://www.NewChristianFinance.com. It is NOT a big seller, but Clickbank sends over a decent check every pay period…and I haven’t touched it in more than a year now. Zero…zilch…nada. Most of the sales are from affiliates who find it on Clickbank. Not a big winner, but I’ll bet you can understand why I’m putting more of these types of mini-projects together. The key here is to do projects that DON’T require regular updates. Adding in time to update the product would reduce the ROI.

How Does This Apply To You?

The above were simply from looking at my sales numbers by product. You have to always remember everything has an opportunity cost. If you spend 20 hours on this project, then that’s 20 less hours you could have spent on something more profitable long term.

You can also look at the time you’re investing in each business activity.

How much time do you spend on forums? How many sales has that resulted in for you?

What about your social media activities? Maybe you’re not after direct sales there. So how many JVs have you put together (and resulting profits) from the time spent?

Writing your blog? How is the investment coming along (this one takes some time till the investment is returned so look it long term like over a year invested).

When you take a serious look at the real numbers, you may be surprised. You may also find you need to reinvest your time in a different direction. If one area is producing much better for the time invested than other areas, expand it. Reduce the losers. And what works best for one person MAY NOT be what works best for you in your niche. That’s the big roadblock many people run into.

This is why you must look at your test results and your time investments…not everyone else’s.

Popularity: 91% [?]

JVs For List Building

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

As you know, I often concentrate on slow and steady business building methods. Here’s how to grow your lists each day. Here’s how to earn more money this month than you did last month. Here’s how to improve your conversion for greater results from all your marketing.

What about when you want results…NOW. Not next month…and not one week from now?

Since the money is in your relationship with a list, what about when you want to grow your list FASTER than ever before. Out goes PPC as it is expensive and it takes quite a bit of time to get a campaign optimized for great results. Out goes just the basic free giveaway for building a list. You have the enticement but not the marketing.

In comes the JV.

Whether it’s to make money with immediate sales or build a list, the QUICKEST way to profits is through some type of JV deal.

You find those in your market who ALREADY have your future subscribers and customers on their list. You come up with a deal or a value trade that is a triple win (the subscribers win, the JV partner wins, and you win). Then you run the deal.

It could be as simple as participating in a free teleconference. For example, one recent group teleconference I participated in added 300 subscribers in less than 24 hours at no cost whatsoever. If each of those subscribers is worth $1 a month to me, that is an extra $300 per month for my business for the one hour I spent on the call.

Or it can simply be creating a new product which you price at a low level such as $10 to $20. You give away 100% commissions and use software such as Rapid Action Profits to pay the affiliates immediately through Paypal. In this case, you wouldn’t just be building “free subscribers,” you’re adding BUYERS which are worth MUCH MORE MONEY to you.

I’ve put together a list of 7 QUICK JV List Building Strategies. I’ll be sharing them on a special teleconference call tomorrow at 2 PM Eastern (1 PM Central – and so on). That’s July the 7th.

Here is a quick list of some of the other teleconferences which will take place in this series on list building (please note that I don’t know all the speakers and can’t comment about what they will discuss).

- July 21st – Michael Savoie @ 2pm Eastern

- July 29th – Debra Thompson Roedl @3pm Eastern

- August 4th – Pat Marcello 6pm Eastern

- August 11th – Guido Nuusbaum -3pm Eastern

There is to be another list building call on July 14th but the speaker is still up for discussion at the moment by what Michael Kehinde told me.

Popularity: 68% [?]

Keep SEO Companies From Cheating You – Part 2

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

NickHere is a feature article from Nick Bokhonok who has been creating web projects, internet marketing and SEO tools since 2000. His expertise is helping people generate good quality backlinks to their site…which is an absolute requirement for getting top search engine rankings in competitive phrases.

In December 2008 Nick released Free Traffic System – free community where bloggers can build backlinks, get free content and push their sites to top pages in search engines. Because of the value provided, this community has grown to over 10,000 members in this short period!

This is Part 2 of the publication which was started here. We are explaining how to make sure that SEO companies do not cheat you and do exactly what you pay them for. In the first part of this publication we explained how exactly SEO companies can cheat you on keyword research. Now the time is to talk about other types of SEO services. In an upcoming 3rd part we’ll talk about the off-page part of optimization (link building).

I will mention here that I want to make sure you don’t understand the prices Nick mentions below. The big keys to SEO come not as much in the on-page optimization, but also in the off-page and the link building (which can be very time consuming). You’ll also notice he doesn’t list a price at all for “writing” of the page itself. This is where the most involvement is on the page.

I agree with Nick completely on the fact that it’s quick to do all the meta tags. If you’re being charged high fees for those elements, you’re being cheated. Plain and simple. And if those factors are ALL an SEO company does for you, they’re missing it BIG TIME.

Here’s Nick…

Onpage Optimization

Onpage optimization (also known as onsite optimization) is about making your web page fit specific standards that are encouraged by Google and other search engines. We will not go into all details of these standards. In a nutshell, they are simple – your page must be “readable” to the search engine bots, in nice simple code.

This is like feeding birds in the park: if you give them crumbs – they eat them with pleasure, but if you throw them bread that is wrapped up in paper and double wrapped up in something else – poor birds will go crazy trying to get to the food.

The same with search engines, if you build your site with the help of site constructors (also known as Content Management Systems or CMS) which wrap up your text into huge piles of clumsy programming code – then search engine bots will have big troubles trying to “read” and index your text.

That is why before we go to the nuances of onpage optimization, I would recommend you to ask your SEO companies what site engine/site constructor/content management system they are going to build your site. And – by the way – if the choice of site engine is in your hands from the very beginning, then make a wise choice so that your text is readable and the CMS has at least basic SEO features included.

My personal choice over the last years is WordPress. And Terry’s blog which you are reading right now is also built on WordPress. It does not mean that this is the only site engine that is OK for SEO, but more and more people choose WordPress today, because lots of SEO tools are automatically inserted into this site engine.

The Maximum Onpage SEO Package

For you to understand how not to get cheated on the onpage optimization with your site, it would be very helpful to have the list of “maximum onpage SEO package” – in other words to know what exactly can be done as part of onpage SEO on your site.

Here are a few elements we’re going to cover:

- meta title of page
- meta description of page
- meta keywords of page
- URL of the page
- text of the page (the body of the text – what you actually see when you read a page)

It is also important to know that parts of the text of the page – like headlines, subheadlines – are also wrapped into special codes. These codes give “hints” to the search engine robots “this is a headline in my text, it is important” or “this is a subheadline, it is also quite important” etc. This is done with the help of html code like H1, H2. You do not need to know these codes, but your SEO company should be using these tags when they build your page.

NOTE: Depending upon the site engine there might be additional elements for onpage optimization. For example, WordPress has tags and these tags can be very helpful in generating more traffic.

Make Sure to Use *Golden* Keywords in Onpage SEO!!

This is very important. Usually onpage SEO is done to make your page or site look more “adequate” for a specific keyword. That is why if you have one or several *golden* keywords researched for your niche (read more about *golden* keywords in Part 1 of this publication), then it is absolutely vital that you have at least one page optimized for the *golden* keyword.

In simple words it means that this *golden* keyword must be used throughout the page: in the URL of the page, in meta title and description, in the text itself, etc.
Surely do not overdo the optimization, it does not mean that every sentence of your text should have the *golden* keyword inside. Mentioning it 1-3 times in the text is fine.

But it is vital to use the *golden* keywords in onpage SEO, because you pay money to get these keywords found, and surely you need to capitalize on them.

Prices and Cheating

The typical catch that SEO services use is to sell you a less valuable job as a more valuable job. As there are no fixed standards on the market, you cannot appeal to any prices.

I would try to help you with the following. I will explain what exactly each job from the “maximum onpage SEO package” is about. And then you – with the help of the common sense – will be able to pre-estimate what price is ok for it and what is too much.

You will also see that the prices are quoted on a “per page” basis. It is done so, because each of the pages of your site needs special care. Surely today there are solutions that can clone one and the same meta title, description and other elements to all pages of your site. But this is not very good for the SEO, because search engines will see that all your pages have the same info, and it can look unnatural.

That is why it is really better if all pages of your site look a little different when it comes down the texts of meta title, meta description and the texts on the page. If you cannot afford it, then at least make sure that onpage SEO of the 2-3 pages on which you are focusing your attention do not get “cloned” on all other pages of your site – these 2-3 pages must have unique, hand-made onpage customization.

(*) meta title of the page

Meta title is the text that you see at the top of the browser, like shown on the screenshot

Search Engine Optimization

Meta title is very important for SEO, because it is not only shown in the browser, but also part of the meta title is shown in the search engine results, like this:

Title Tag

As you can see, meta title is not something that is seen only at the top of the browser window (where hardly any human being will focus attention on), but also in the search engine results. And this is important, because a meta title that is not attractive, a meta title that is not intriguing enough to make the surfer click the page is a waste of effort.

So, the work about meta title is a combination of SEO (putting your keywords into it) and copywriting (making your title appeal to the potential readers).

Price: $5 per one page – I think this is quite a fair price, but you can try to negotiate a discount if you order many pages and, perhaps, can even drop in to $4/page on big amount of pages.

(*) meta description of the page

You cannot see meta description anywhere in the page (only in the HTML code of the page), but description is visible on the search engine results. I am showing it here:
Description Tag

As you can see, meta description is also important not only for SEO, but also for attracting the attention of the potential readers, because a big portion of meta description is shown in the results of the search engine.
This means a nicely written intriguing description can help you to attract more readers. So, in an ideal version this is also a combination of SEO and copywriting.

Price: $5-10 per one page – as description is longer than meta title, you can hear the argument about increasing the price for it. And this is logical. But I assume that this is NOT SO MUCH text to be added; instead of one sentence like you have with meta title, this is about 2-3 sentences in the meta description. Plus, if you order a nice package, I am sure that you can negotiate the meta title + meta description to be done for $7 per page on nice volumes.

(*) meta keywords of the page

The importance of meta keywords for SEO is disputable, and you can hear that meta keywords are not really that important as they used to be years ago.

My personal experience shows this is true – meta keywords are getting less and less SEO value. But if you get them negotiated as a bonus to your onpage package – why not?

Price: my personal opinion is that this particular item of onpage optimization that needs to be fought for. If you want to get it as a nice bonus to your package and your SEO company is not against it, great. If they try to get some extra money for this very service, then I do not think it makes any sense to pay any additional more for it.

(*) URL of the page

With URLs it is very simple – it is great for SEO if your *golden* keywords are used in the URL of this page.

Search engine bots “read” the URL as well, and if you have a *golden* keyword mentioned in the URL – it can be an additional SEO boost that will help you to get a better position in search engine results for this very keyword.

NOTE: there is one technical nuance – not all site engines allow to put any keyword you want into the URL of a specific page. And this is a SEO disadvantage if you cannot do that. So, my recommendation to you – when you are choosing the content management system for your site – to make sure that your site constructor allows putting the keywords into the URL (like Wordpress).

Price: this job is pretty simple; basically it is just about putting the keyword in the URL and making it more or less readable, that is why I do not think that it is worth any additional money. It is much better if you can negotiate it to be as part of meta title and meta description pack – and all this can be done for up to $10 per page, especially if you hire them to do that for a nice number of pages.

(*) text of the page

This is the biggest textual part and that is why it has lots of variations.

First of all, you need to find out if YOU or the SEO service is going to create the text for this page. It is very important, because this can be the most expensive part of the onpage optimization.

If SEO service is writing the text for you, then the best type of text you can get is a unique text. Surely this unique text costs a lot. For example, one piece of unique text of 450 words can cost you starting from $15 to more – it all depends upon the niche and how many pages you are ordering. And if this is done by a professional copywriter, then of course the price will be much higher (but so would the results once visitors get to the page).

There is one typical catch that can be used about unique text, SEO services can try to sell you rewritten text as unique. There is nothing bad about rewritten text, but the price for it is not as high as for the unique text. That is why if you decided to buy unique text, make sure to use services like copyscape.com for checking the uniqueness of the text. There for 5 cents (in their paid membership) you can check the uniqueness of any text and be sure that you get what you paid for.

But, once again, unique text is not obligatory. If you cannot afford to pay for it or to write it yourself, hire SEO service to rewrite the text. There are lots of PLR (private label rights) packages with articles that allow to have been rewritten, without any legal problems, and SEO services typically have lots of these PLR packages available. One rewritten article (400-450 words inside) should cost around $10 – this is quite a fair price.

Also ask SEO service if they will put H1, H2 and other HTML mark up code in the text on your pages. This job is not obligatory and even without it your text (provided it has at least one *golden* keyword inside) is already helping you. Still, if a SEO service can do that marking of the text with proper codes – this can be an extra SEO boost to the quality of your text in the eyes of search engines. I do not think that this job can cost more than $5 per page, because usually it is about just putting a code here, a code there, and it can take 2 minutes.

Price: I am not giving any exact prices here, because you see that the choice is huge here – articles can be unique or rewritten or given by you; the HTML marking of the text can be done, but not necessarily. Too many options. But I gave you hints about how much each of the jobs can cost.

For more details about offpage optimization (link building) and how to keep SEO services from cheating you on this part of SEO – wait for the upcoming Part 3 of this publication and stay tuned to Terry Dean’s blog.

Popularity: 44% [?]

1 Simple Question to Boost Your Profits

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Sometimes I do in depth articles or long lists of ways to increase your profits.

Other times it’s to your benefit to learn a profit booster you can use ANYTIME.

That’s what I’m going to share today.

Here’s the phrase you need to learn.

“What else?”

Here’s how we’re going to apply it all throughout our website.

You put up a squeeze page to get people to subscribe to your list. On the next page many people simply say thank you for subscribing and they tell you to check your email to confirm and receive the free gift you promised.

“What else can you do here?”

Add a special offer here. It could be a discount or some other bonus. After someone subscribes, say thank you for subscribing, but also tell them here is a special we only make available to new subscribers. Depending on what you’re offering, you may produce a 5% to 20% sales rate on this page (lower ticket items such as $50 or less).

I’ve also found an extra benefit to doing this here. If you can get the first sale quickly from a new subscriber, you’re going to find they’re worth much more to you in the long-term as well. They’re not just a freebie seeker at this point. They’re a buyer. Huge difference between those two classifications.

Even better if you can get a 2nd sale from them…

After they buy this first product, what else?

You can do an immediate upsell after they purchase (you could continue this through multiple upsells but you will find quickly there is a point where it is too much in one spot). You also will want to put an offer on the thank you/download page after they purchase this first product.

What if you currently only have one product? Then that’s where you can review or recommend an affiliate product.

Let’s look at another application. You’ve done 6 follow-up email messages in your series. “What else can you add?” You can build an almost unlimited email sequence out (I quite a few clients with more than 1 year’s worth of follow-up messages in at least one of their autoresponders).

Below is a video from Dave Hamilton. He was originally a winner when I ran a contest for my Internet Lifestyle Retirement System. Here is the review he sent in for the product.

Note how when he followed one of the suggestions from the course (the thank you page offer), he achieved a 40% sales rate from his visitors. Wow Dave! He must have used a very good offer.

Popularity: 40% [?]


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