Marlon Sanders has released the latest issue of ‘Marketing Minute’. The featured article is titled “$90,000 A Month From A Free Ebook?”. [Article]


Marlon Sanders’ latest article:

$90,000 A Month From A Free Ebook?

A brief history of name squeezes, opt ins, ebook incentives and other intriguing stuff related to how much you bank this week.

The secret story behind $90,000 a month from a free ebook

by Marlon Sanders

When you’re just starting your online business, here is the one key to your success:

With all the high tech and marketing wizardry on the Internet, the basics have been, are and always will be — basic!

Step one: Get people onto your list using a FREE or highly attractive offer.

Step two: Get ’em to make purchase #1 from you.

Step three: Get ’em to make purchase #2.

Step four: Go for big ticket sales or recurring monthly billing. You could move this step up to three or even two in some cases.

In the field of Internet marketing , step one has just gotten pummeled over time in terms of what it takes to do it.

Here are the stages opt-ins have gone through:

Stage one: The free report or newsletter

Originally, you could offer a free report or newsletter and get people to join to your email list.

Jonathan Mizel coined and TRADEMARKED the term Name Squeeze. He was smarter than me. I’ve originated and innovated many things in this business but never had the smarts to trademark them.

Then, later on, people deny what you did. If you trademark, you got the PROOF. Mizel? He’s a smart man.

Oh, other people CLAIM they invented the Squeeze Page. Ask them whose coaching club they were IN. And WHO owns the stupid trademark.

Yeah, ask them that. Watch them dance.

Stage two: The ebook

Later, Terry Dean popularized the free ebook in exchange for the opt in. The problem became that everyone started offering low quality, crappy private label rights ebooks for the opt in. (Not that all plr ebooks are low quality.)

So people stopped opting in for those because they figured the value was equal to the information — worth less than nothing.

Some people went to offering a BUNCH of plr. OK. If one piece of crap doesn’t get your attention, I’ll throw in a whole bunch of it.

Again, I don’t want to be overly critical of reprint rights or plr. I’m just explaining the history and psychology of what has gone done.

Stage three: The seven day ecourse

About the same time, Ken Evoy of Site Sell fame started the whole 7-day ecourse craze. That became watered down into 7-day pitches and low quality information. Plus, the delayed nature of the gratification didn’t make it the ideal system from the outset.

All of these incentives for opt ins were initially effective but lost their punch as everyone and their dog jumped on the band wagon.

Thus, Marlon’s rule of the band wagon:

When everyone else jumps ON the band wagon, the results will diminish. That doesn’t mean jumping on the band wagon is always bad. For example, some would call video on the Internet
a band wagon.

That’s more like a here-to-stay thing. Not a band wagon. Kinda like TV vs. radio. You couldn’t really call TV a “bandwagon” although in the early days I’m sure some did.

Anyway, usually, when everyone starts doing something, the effectiveness goes down. Often, way down.

Kinda like sales letters.

When you see so many, the bar is raised as to what it takes to create a sales letter that works. You can’t use the same formula I used years ago. You have to adapt and improve.

Everyone says you can be lazy in niches. And it’s sort of true. But you know what? I often see the BEST sales letters and marketing being done in niches. I can’t explain why. But that’s what I observe.

Stage four: The 50-page report

Rich Schefren wisely came out with a free report that was 50 or so pages for his first launch. I don’t know if he was the first person to do a lead generator like this.

But his certainly hit big. He repeated his formula with “The Attention Doctrine” manuscript. I think Rich has added in Stomper-type videos to his mix.

Scott Boulch pioneered his List Virus software and method where you pay affiliates .50 to $1.00 per download of the free report. This is typically in the context of a big product launch.

Stage five: The case study videos

Stompernet innovated by putting out extensive in-depth case study videos to get opt ins. Some of them are an hour long. I think they may have added in videos.

You will notice things went from simple free reports to sequences of very elaborate videos and PDF’s. If you’re competing in the Internet marketing niche, and doing big product launches, this is what it takes.

In most other niches, you can be 10X lazier. Although like I say, sometimes the sophistication of what people do in niches is far beyond what you might expect.

So where does that leave YOU?

How do you get people on YOUR list so you can move on with the equation?

1. Test and try different things.

What’s old can be new again. I know of one marketer just killing it with a free ebook offer. Others have gone to offering free video downloads. Others have gone to a free members site structure.

2. Whatever you use as your opt-in incentive, you have to sell your offer.

Don’t assume people will want it because it’s free.

There is no shortage of free information on the Internet today. So sell your offer.

3. Watch your opt ins live!

This is a great idea I picked up today from Jason “video guru” Moffatt. He keeps his aweber open live and watches opt ins as they come in. That’s just to keep opt ins on his mind.

I love that idea.

What you pay attention to grows.

What you don’t, withers.

So now back to my grabber. I love that term. I guess Gary Halbert started it way back when by calling the dollar bill at the top of a direct mail letter a “grabber.” More recently, terminology was picked up in an outstanding book called Neuromarketing by Renvoise & Morin.

My grabber to get you to read this article was the $90,000 a month from an ebook.

So I have a new friend/consultant. I paid him for an hour of his time ’cause he’s an Adwords guru and “old school” marketer, which I respect.

Anway, he’s killing it on Adwords with a front-end opt-in incentive of a free ebook. Yeah, that’s it.

A free ebook.

Terry Dean would smile and feel vindicated. Personally, I was shocked.

So what’s his secret formula?

Step one: Offer incentive — free ebook

Step two: Get email address

Step three: Send emails

Step four: Ask for money

How’s that for back to the basics?

The one thing he does is builds a little more credibility for his free ebook vs. what you normally see. Frankly, the campaign in terms of execution is underwhelming.

The graphics are kinda ugly. The content is nothing revolutionary. There isn’t a real USP that screams at you.

It’s just the basics very well executed.

But WHAT you offer doesn’t matter. Could be videos. Could be a printed book. Matt Bacak is using the free CD. Could be a free membership. Could be about ANYTHING that lights a fire under your customers and gets their tail end off the sofa, as I think John Carlton would say in a little more spicy language.

So my new friend gets 22% to 30% opt ins on the front end. I’m not really sure the exact numbers. He changes the story a bit from time-to-time.

Doesn’t really matter. And he’s in a niche vs. competing in the fast-paced life of intensely competitive, superstar Internet marketing “guru” launches.

My numbers right now are around 15% at my current name squeeze: http://www.pushbuttonletter.com

That’s the page I’m using as my opt in from a Google Adwords campaign.

I’m still an Adwords hack to tell the truth. But I’m learning slowly but surely.

I’ve never been super fast out of the gate. I’m more of a keep at it and keep learning type.

Do you know what your numbers are on your opt-in page? Or if you have a sales letter with an opt in somewhere within the page, do you know your numbers?

Do you track them?

Have you tried a different incentive lately?

My new objective is 25% opt ins. If you get 1000 clicks from Google organic or paid search and you get 250 opt ins, then convert a decent amount of those into customers (2% to 10%), you have something you can make bank with.

It’s all numbers.

My friend spends $1.00 a click. 25% opt in. So out of 1,000 clicks that’s $1,000 spent and 250 opt ins. 10% buy at around $40.00. That is $1,000. So basically he breaks even on the front end or first sale and makes money on the back end or follow up sales.

That’s pretty much the formula that makes any business successful.

Now, most people only get 5% to 15% opt-ins from Adwords from what I hear. Like I said, to date my best is 15%. And converting 10% of opt-ins is a challenge. 2% to 5% would probably be average, although I haven’t looked at the numbers lately.

Conversions depend on the offer — what is the price and what do you get for your money?

You test and try different things.

Oh, I’m NOT telling you WHO my friend is or what his business is.

Why? ‘Cause I don’t want people copying my friends ads and trying to destroy his business.

The point of this article is: If you aren’t getting enough people into your marketing funnel, increase the attractiveness of your incentive.

If you compete in the arena of Internet, using flanking and guerrilla moves to avoid the need for Stomper style content videos to generate leads.

If you’re unfamiliar with flanking and guerrilla moves, you really need to get my Red Factor training. I can’t even remember if it’s still available or not. I think we took the offer off the market.

Oh well. You snooze, you lose.

I hope this article has given you insight. To reiterate, there’s a simple formula that works online. It IS the basis of what I first wrote about years ago in “The Amazing Formula.” And it still works
today and will always work.

Step one: Generate a lead by offering a very attractive low cost or free offer

Step two: Follow up

Step three: Ask for money

Step four: Build customer relationships and provide good service

Step four: Ask for money again and again

Step five: Treat your customers well. They are the goose that lays the golden egg

Step six: Smell the roses. None of us are here long enough.

Marlon Sanders

For more free tips, articles and resources on how to promote with blogs, podcasts, Facebook, Twitter, and all kinds of other stuff, visit: http://www.marlonsnews.com

Marlon Sanders

Marlon Sanders is the one guy who can help you trade products for dollars instead of your own personal time. http://www.productdashboard.com.

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*IMNewswatch would like to thank Marlon Sanders for granting permission to reprint the latest article.

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