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Track your Packages with Twitter

April 24th, 2008 by John Herman, under operations, products, tools, twitter, web applications. No Comments

via Make Use of Directory

@TrackThis has started on Twitter. Now you can direct message them and updates on your package progress will be sent to you in Twitter. It supports UPS, USPS, DHL, and FedEx.

Track This Twitter Profile

5 Keys to Using Facebook

April 22nd, 2008 by John Herman, under facebook, products, viral marketing. No Comments

Facebook has released a guide to using Facebook Pages. You may have received a copy from them already if you are using Facebook Pages. Here are their 5 Keys to Using Facebook. (via TechCrunch)

Keys to Using Facebook

1) Make business personal
People primarily use Facebook to share personal information with friends. The more you showcase the human element of your business, your products, and your people, the stronger of an effect it will have on everyone who views it.

2) Update your Facebook Page frequently
Facebook is geared to highlight new information and recent changes. The more often you add new content, the more often people will come back to your Facebook Page. You can also send Updates to your fans to announce in-store events, special promotions, new products, concerts, screenings, or other news.

3) Harness the power of News Feed
The News Feed on users’ home pages tells them what their friends are doing. When users become your fan, News Feed tells their friends and invites them to become fans as well. In turn, this can lead to the friends of their friends finding out about your business through their News Feeds, and so on in a virtuous cycle. News Feed is the key to spreading your message virally on Facebook.

4) Choose the applications that are best for your business
Facebook and its outside developers have built thousands of free applications for businesses, bands, and every other type of organization. Your Page comes with the basics pre-installed, but you can easily add whichever other applications are right for your business. For instance, a restaurant may choose to add an application for online ordering or reservations, while a film may add a cinema-locator so the user can find the nearest screening without ever leaving Facebook. You can even build your own applications. The more useful your applications are to your customers, the faster your fan base will grow.

5) Promote your Page through Facebook Ads
Facebook Ads allow you to reach exactly the audience you want and bring them to your Page. You can choose your audience based on age, gender, geography, educational status, relationship status, and precise interests or keywords. Your ads can be socialized so that users’ interactions are reflected in the ads their friends see, increasingly the virality of your Page. You can run ads both in traditional “banner” locations and in the News Feed. As with your Page itself, the key to success with Facebook Ads is to experiment and iterate on your work.

John’s Note: Of course they are going to recommend doing this. ;-) I question their ability to target the ads with such a huge ad inventory though. Click here for some evidence.

Facebook experts are all around you: in your family, on your staff, amongst your customers, at your competitors. Don’t hesitate to ask them for advice and to follow their lead when you see a successful strategy at work.

Here is a copy of the full insider’s guide:


Facebook Insider’s Guide to Viral Marketing - Get more documents

Click here to view this document in a full screen.

12 Steps to Creating Your First Info Product

January 18th, 2007 by John Herman, under information products, products, sales, strategy. No Comments

Business Coach Donna Gunter shares her 12 tips to creating your first information product.

The creation of your first info product is a huge first step toward implementing multiple streams of income in your business.  It means that you have something to sell prospective customers to "size you up" as they consider purchasing your services.  It means that you can sell something 24-7 from your website that demonstrates your expertise. It means that you’re well on your way to creating a passive revenue stream for your business.

Unfortunately, for many, this notion of creating an info product comes with a "fix it and forget it" mentality. Granted, the creation process requires a great deal more work than the maintenance phase, but at no time can you just leave it to the Internet gods that people will find your product and purchase it.  You’ll be constantly tweaking your sales page and your marketing strategies, especially if you’re using pay-per click as your primary marketing method. So, while an info product is considered passive revenue because it doesn’t directly involve the selling of your time, that doesn’t mean that you can passively stand by and hope it sells.

Your process doesn’t have to be as detailed as I’ve outlined here, but if you want to do a thorough job in the creation process, I suggest that you embark on all the steps.

1.  Solution to a Problem.  The best-selling information products provide a direct solution to a major problem of your target market.  If you’re a professional organizer, the problem might be how to clean and store and organize holiday decorations so that they can be easily found and used from year to year.  If you’re a weight loss coach, the problem might be how to stay motivated when you’ve hit a weight loss plateau. Jot down some of the primary problems of your target market and the process by which you help your clients resolve these issues.

2.  Determine Your Offering.  Info products come in all types of formats, from ebooks to ecourses to recorded teleseminars to podcasts to special reports to CD and DVD sets.  Take stock of your target market and determine what format would best fit their lifestyle.  Are they virtual business owners who work from home at their computers for most of the day?  Then an ebook or ecourse would probably work well for this group.  Are they busy executives who travel frequently?  Then you might consider a portable audio format.  You can also combine formats to appeal to a variety of learning styles or lifestyles.

And, of course, cost is a major consideration. Do you want to create a physical product that has to be shipped, or would an electronic download work?  There are much greater costs on your end to produce a physical product than an electronic one, and you also have to deal with product fulfillment as well if you choose to sell a physical product. I tell my clients to start with an electronic version and test it out, and if it’s successful, move to a physical product, which has greater perceived value in the eyes of consumers.

3.  Pricing.  Pricing of info products is all over the map.  Check out your competition (yes, there will be competing products on the same topic aimed at the same target market) and see what they’re charging.  You also need to take a look at your contact database and make some assessments of the value of your information to them as well as what you think they will pay.  You can survey your database to determine this info, or base it on comparable offerings in the marketplace.  Many times my clients get hung up on the notion of comparing pricing for their info product to what they can find in the local bookstore.  Generally, pricing for info products is higher than retail bookstores because the info being sold online is specialized for a target market and is delivered immediately upon order (if it’s an electronic download.

The pricing strategy that also seems to sell better online is ending your price with a 7, like in $17, $47, etc.  If you offer a high-priced product, consider offering payment via an installment plan, where you charge a bit more each month for the product than if someone were to pay for the product in full at time of purchase.

4.  Technology.  Do you have the technology in place to create and deliver your offering?  If it’s an ebook, you’ll need either a PDF writer program or ebook compiler software.  For an audio program you’ll need a microphone and audio recording and editing capabilities.  For an ecourse you’ll need either autoresponder software or a direct to desktop solution. For delivery you’ll need a shopping cart that can deliver electronic products or take shipping info for physical products as well as some type of merchant account to take credit and process credit cards.  You’ll also want a sequential autoresponder service to follow up with your buyers.

5.  Create the Product.  This is typically the most labor intensive part of the process, as you’re actively recording or writing or videotaping your information for the product. Some products are easier to create than others, especially if you’re recycling other content that you have into a new product.  If you’re starting from scratch, however, give yourself a full 3-6 weeks of steady work time for product creation.  After creating the product you may want to have it proofread and/or edited in some fashion by a proofreader or an audio/video expert.

6.  Graphics.  A picture tells a thousand words, and more importantly, info products sell better when the visitor has a graphic representation of this intangible info product item. If graphic design isn’t your specialty, find someone to design an ebook cover or podcast album art for you.  You may want to have the designer also create a website header banner for the product that you can use on your sales page.  You can generally have both of these done for around $200.  The more professional your image, the better perceived value your product has.

7.  Domain, Hosting, and Website.  I believe that each info product should have its own domain name and sales page to be most effective.  Domain names are pretty inexpensive, so you could actually buy several for each product — one that reflects the product name, for example, and one that reflects the result someone will receive after using your product.  You can use the various domain names and websites for a variety of testing purposes as you go to sell your product.  If your plan to create multiple info products, you’ll probably want to obtain a website hosting account that will enable you to host multiple domains from the same account.  Another option is to forward your product’s domain name to a "hidden" page of your primary site.

8.  Copywriting.  There is a specific formula to copywriting for one-pages sales letter websites.  The best way to get ideas for your sales letter is to create a Marketing Swipe file of other sales copy that you like.  From your swipe file take a look at the headlines, the introduction, the subheadlines, the listing of benefits, the product description, the outline of the features, the call to action (request to buy), the closing, and the postscripts. You’ll begin to see a pattern emerge when you look at 4-5 sample sales pages.

9.  Shopping Cart.  Once your product is complete, you need to upload the product into your shopping cart and set up the cart for purchases.  This may mean that you also need to set up shipping and handling charges for physical products and integrate your shopping with your shipper of choice. If your state requires the collection of state sales taxes, you’ll need to integrate that as well.

10.  Follow-up Autoresponders.  Creating a series of autoresponders to follow-up with a customer after purchase enables you to stay in front of the customer and reminder her about your other product/service offerings.  Design a series of 3-5 autoresponders that will be sent out after a purchase to check in with your customer and tell her the next step she needs to take after her purchase.  This might mean referring her to another info product, asking her to join some type of subscription service, or experiencing your service with a free trial.

11. Capturing Contact Info.  Sadly, not everyone who visits your website will buy what you’re selling.  However, you can still capture their contact info by creating a free giveaway for those who may not be ready to buy.  This might be a special report or free ecourse, and you follow the same steps outlined previously for creating this giveaway.  You’ll also need to create 3-5 followup autoresponders here as well that will ultimately offer them your product once again.

12.  Publish and Promote.  Now, you’re ready to sell. Publish your website and begin to promote your offering to your own database.  You can create a buzz about your product by writing a press release, offering a free teleclass, buying ads on other websites or in other newsletters, publishing articles, creating podcasts, purchasing pay-per-click advertising, requesting colleagues to send out notices to their contact lists, and creating an affiliate program in which others can sell your product for a commission.

Creating your first info product can be a time-consuming process.  However, once it’s created, you stand to earn income from it for years to come.  Start to expand your business offerings today with information products.

Online Business Resource Queen (TM) and Business Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed service professionals learn how to automate their businesses, leverage their expertise on the Internet, and get more clients online. To sign up for more FREE tips like these and claim your FREE gift, TurboCharge Your Online Marketing Toolkit, visit her site at http://www.GetMoreClientsOnline.com. Read about running an online biz at our blog, http://www.getmoreclientsonlineblog.com

Writing is hard…

July 13th, 2006 by John Herman, under Succeeding Steps, products. No Comments

We have been working with author Laurie Dart on designing her first eBook The Everyday Guide to Writing Wisely. I had already been looking for a book that could answer my quick grammar questions and this foot the bill.

I would recommend it to anyone that has to write anything.

Selling to Big Companies

July 8th, 2006 by John Herman, under products, sales, small business. No Comments

Jill Conrath of Selling to Big Companies Blog shares her 7 Key Strategies for Selling to Big Companies

7 Key Sales Strategies to Get Into Big Companies
Selling to large corporations today is tough, tough, tough. Prospects don’t answer phones, all calls are routed to voice mail and no one ever calls back. When sellers do manage to set up an appointment, customers want them to get to the point and get out. It’s hard for them to differentiate their products/services or develop strong relationships. Most sellers are pretty frustrated right now, but don’t have a clue what to do differently.

Read the full entry here

via Duct Tape Marketing Blog