|
You want customers. I want customers. We all
want customers. And traffic alone is not enough. We need "interested"
customers. Customers ready to listen, ready to buy. So you may find yourself
asking, what do they want anyway?... and how can I get them to buy?
Instead of concentrating on the "getting",
why not try to "educate" them and sales will follow --- not once but many
times. Why is that? Credibility!
If you are writing Articles, or publishing an
Ezine, then you are an Internet Marketer with some measure of success. Your
goal might be to help them understand that there are ways to make money
without spending a fortune, and without plunging over cliffs with "herd
mentality" of the latest get-rich-quick idea: the biggest single reason
for failure on the Internet.
I have never filled a matrix with
"spillover", and only once did I ever get my money back - and that was like
Vegas - a tease to keep me in the game. But if you made $10,000 in three
months, send me proof and I'll join under you.
You have successes, BUT you have also had
failures. Share these with your potential customers. Show them the speed
bumps that you encountered, and how to slow down and re-examine the road
ahead, or steer around them altogether. Teach them the need for a healthy
dose of skepticism with ploys that try to get them to "buy now!"
For example, digital eBooks that claim "...
limited supply" --- how funny! Digital products are downloaded ad infinitum.
But it must still work or we would not find ads still using that ploy. Now,
dry your eyes -- I have fallen for lines just as bad.
Most people on the Internet fall into the
habit of reselling products and services that they, themselves, have never
used and maybe never will. So please, use the products and services you
advertise. Your personal satisfaction will show in your promotions. Your
buyers will be happy and you will build credibility.
My good friend Graham Hamer told me a story
once, about a trip he made to visit a distant relative. He had the address,
phone number, and a map of the general area (though not a street map). When
he entered the town, either the map was old or the roads had been updated,
because he was soon hopelessly lost. Eventually he stopped at a gas station
to ask directions.
When this was no help, he continued in
circles and stopped again by the side of the road near a guy who was cutting
his grass. This fellow's directions seemed simple enough, but a while later
he was still lost and now losing his patience.
Then he phoned his relative. You guessed it
--- he was at her house in minutes; never really being more than a mile off
to begin with.
The moral of his tale is this... If you
want to know how to get somewhere, ask someone who's already there.
© Esther Smith 2004
About
the Author: Smith has published numerous articles and writes a blog for
all artists:
http://the-self-taught-artist.com/blog.html
She also coaches new students on how to leave the time-for-money trap and set up
Leveraged Income for life.
http://thepermanentventure.com/dcc.htm If you can’t sing or ride a
bull, you better learn how to make your money work for more money.
|