Posts Tagged ‘ amazon

14 Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters 11 February 2010 at 7:07 am by admin

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This is part one of a three-part series on how to profitably translate advice from old-school marketing guru Dan Kennedy to a new online environment.

Dan Kennedy is the Sovereign of Sales Letters. (Or maybe that’s the Duke of Direct Response.) He knows exactly how to deliver a marketing message with maximum clarity and zero confusion. As he’ll readily tell you, he’s one of the world’s highest-paid copywriters. His classic book The Ultimate Marketing Plan promises low-cost ideas and high-profit results.

This book delivers on both counts, and it’s well worth the read. But it was written in 1991, and at first seems like it’s more relevant to a restaurant or dry cleaner than it is to a web-based entrepreneur.

If you have a hard time translating bricks-and-mortar advice to your internet business, well, just be glad we’ve got Copyblogger.

The Ultimate Marketing Plan walks you through the 14 steps Kennedy considers necessary to build a bulletproof marketing plan that can help you to explode your business.

And this post will tell you how to translate those to what you’ve been up to.

Dan Kennedy’s 14 Steps to the Ultimate Marketing Plan

1) Putting together the right message

This is your business’s Unique Selling Proposition, boys and girls.

The principles behind the USP have been talked to death. You can call it the Purple Cow, your market position, your winning difference, or just the answer to Why Should Anyone Read Your Blog?

The reason the USP has been talked to death is that this core idea is essential to effective marketing.

Even though defining your USP is one of the best places to start when you’re building a solid marketing plan, it also seems to be one of the easiest places for people to get lost.

Kennedy defines the USP this way:

When you set out to attract a new, prospective customer to your business for the first time, there is one, paramount question you must answer:

“Why should I choose your business/product/service versus any/every other competitive option available to me?”

Kennedy, in his characteristically cranky style, has also been known to call this “justifying your reason to exist.”

You must know the facts, features, benefits, and promises that your business makes — inside-out, upside-down, backwards, forwards, and sideways. Because if you can’t clearly articulate what makes your business unique, how can you expect anyone else to care?

You will need to crow about your business if you expect it to expand, but it’s pivotal that you are trumpeting the right things.

The right USP coupled with the right offer, especially at the right time and place, is important for any business. For a business fighting for attention with millions of other blogs all over the world, it’s essential.

2) Presenting your message

Regardless of where you choose to market your product or service, there is a right and a wrong way to deliver your message.

According to Kennedy, the customer has five mental steps to take between first contact and completing the sale.

  • Awareness of a need or desire
  • Picking the thing that will satisfy that desire
  • Picking the source for that thing
  • Accepting the price/value argument
  • Finding reasons to act immediately

Let’s say your particular product is a vacation package that includes a seven-day cruise.

Pictures of an island paradise might spark initial desire, while shots of a cruise ship will put a finer point on the new longing. Information about what makes your company’s cruises different will let the prospect know that you’re the right source to satisfy their craving.

Copy that paints a picture of all the fun to be had as well as the tremendous value of the package, backed by proof (user testimonials and pictures both work great), will serve to convince your prospect that his money will be well spent.

Finally, a special, a limited time offer, or perhaps a coupon or room upgrade, will help to get the deal done today rather than . . . never.

Whether you’re online or off, it’s your job to lead the prospect through these five points. Without clear road signs, your prospect will get lost.

3) Choosing the right audience

Who you don’t serve is every bit as important as who you do. It is always okay to trim the tribe.

Let’s say you’re planning to open a steakhouse. What do you think is most important to a spectacular opening day?

  • Elegant decor?
  • A well-trained staff?
  • Ample parking?
  • A robust menu?
  • Reasonable prices?
  • Delicious food?

The answer: None of the above.

The best thing you could possibly have when cutting the ribbon at your new steakhouse is a starving, steak-hungry crowd with a growl in their collective belly.

Which means you don’t want to send your marketing message to vegetarians or calorie counters.

When it comes to reaching your audience online, you’ve got to find the equivalent of those hungry carnivores.

A blog that tries to speak to everyone will find few, if any, readers. It’s always smart to choose a general topic that’s got wide appeal. But within that topic, the tighter your focus, the easier it will be to grow an enthusiastic base of readers, then customers.

4) Proving your case

It seems every decade makes us more jaded. The Internet has only accelerated the process. Your marketing messages needs to survive a lot of cold, hard skepticism.

Some people might argue that you should never put negative thoughts into your customer’s head.

You won’t be.

You’re simply addressing what’s already there.

You cannot ignore this step. Proving your case will get you a lot farther along on your way to making the sale.

Address objections. Your prospect may desperately want your fantastic online cooking course, but she’s got a list of objections holding her back. Fortunately, we’re no longer in Kennedy’s 1991, where you had to use a photocopied 16-page letter to tackle each objection. These days you can do it in blog posts, email autoresponder sequences, and with virtually any form of social media.

Social proof is key. You’ll notice up there in the left-hand corner, that Copyblogger proudly advertises its 100,000-plus subscribers. That’s not bragging. It’s a decisive emotional trigger. Nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd.

Gather testimonials. Happy, satisfied customers can be a magnet for more. What others say about you will always carry a much higher impact than what you say about yourself. While it’s a great idea to put customer testimonials on your own site, you also want to always be aware of what people are saying about you off your site.

Pictures tell a story. Before-and-after, shots of the product in use, or bright smiles on the faces of satisfied customers. Seeing is believing. If you can prove your point with pictures, you’ll go a long way toward silencing the skeptic. Images can also set a powerful mood, which gives your copy an instant emotional charge.

5) Putting your best foot forward

Like it or not, first impressions matter.

If you run a brick-and-mortar business, make sure your store is squeaky clean. Freshly washed windows and a floor you could eat off of will help to create an environment that’s conducive to sales.

Believe it or not, the same holds true online.

If you’re using WordPress for your business, make sure you’ve got a great-looking theme that’s well optimized for SEO. (As you might guess, we’re rather partial to Thesis.) Even if you’re on a budget, you will still be able to do some basic customization.

Make sure your layout is simple and clean. Emphasize your USP with a strong tagline. Be sure your page instantly conveys how you can benefit your reader and potential customer.

When you can afford it, have someone customize your site in a way that’s unique to you and your business.

Either way, if your website is your business, it should look its absolute best. Fortunately, for a tiny fraction of what bricks-and-mortar businesses pay in rent, you can have a “storefront” that shows you’re serious, professional, and worthy of your customers’ business.

(In case you think I’m not too good at counting, the other 9 lessons gleaned from The Ultimate Marketing Plan will come in two future posts. The links to the book are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you buy it, I’ll be able to buy a pack of gum! Put any of this advice into action and you should get quite a lot more out of the deal.)

About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy, as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter.


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+ The Tales Silently Told By The Cannons Of Titles By admin 08 February 2010 at 7:28 am and have No Comments

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What Bestselling Authors Know About Writing Titles

They vary by genre, but the majority of bestselling authors and editors return to the same hooks time and again to routinely sell obscene amounts of books. On the recommendation of Clayton Makepeace, a celebrity in the web’s direct response copywriting world, I decided to visit a bookstore and peruse the titles on their shelves and take note of what titles grabbed me.

As Makepeace explains:

“Just step through the front doors and take a deep breath: Can’t you just SMELL the money?

“This year, we Americans will spend considerably more than $30 BILLION on books and magazines.

“For the numerically challenged among us, that’s thirty thousand MILLION dollars!

[...]

“As they’d say here in North Carolina, ‘That’s some powerful BIG binnus!’

“Now, with that many shekels at stake, you’d expect the competition to be ferocious. You’d be right.

“Take a look around the store. How many book and magazine titles do you figure you see? 10,000? 20,000?

“Guess again, oh Prescient One. This is one of the bigger temples.

“You are in the presence of nearly 200,000 titles! Lay one copy of each end-to-end, and they’d stretch out for some 25 miles!

“Imagine being the marketing guy or gal whose product is only one of 200,000 competing for your prospects’ attention …

“… AND being limited in your quest for A-I-D-A (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) to a single thought that will fit on a book jacket – or worse – on its spine!”

(I’d just like to point out, for those of you self-conscious about pumping schlock by the barrel, that there are at least 5 different writing style tactics used in those few lines.)

I selected the following titles for their brass-knuckles-in-your-face aggressiveness in calling for attention. They’re augmented by some selections found on Amazon’s 2009 Best Seller List.

Self-Help Category – Hook: Improve Your Life

- How To Save Your Own Life: 15 Lessons On Finding Hope In Unexpected Places

- How To Talk To Anyone – 92 Tips

- Finish Your Old Year Wrong! Hangover Survival Guide

- Eat Out & Still Lose Weight

General – Hook: Curiosity About The Unknown

- Super Freakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance

- Born To Run: A Hidden Tribe, SuperAthletes And The Greatest Race The World Has Never Seen

- The True and Outstanding Adventures Of The Hunt Sisters

- Horse Soldiers: The Extraordinary Story Of A Band Of US Soldiers Who Rode To Victory In Afghanistan

- The Cure: How A Father Raised $100 Million And Bucked The Medical Establishment In A Quest To Save His Kids

This category particularly fascinates me, so I thought I’d add in my grain of salt as to why these titles work. I don’t know that you can generalize to all books in this category, but the following traits stand out to me at least in the above set of titles.

1. We love stories. We grow up with them, science has proven we remember them better and so on. These books promise a story (or several)…

But not just any story!

2. These books promise a remarkable, quirky or otherwise unexpected story, often explicitly – with words like “outstanding adventures,” “extraordinary story,” and “quest”.

What really strikes me though is the variety of  implicit ways the titles make the promise of such a special story.

  • “Patriotic prostitutes” makes me think, “Huh? That’s an unusual adjective to associate to prostitutes… “Global cooling” and “suicide bombers” buying life insurance are equally quirky. The book Spunk and Bite that I referred to in my previous post on schlock explains that to achieve this stylistic element you just need an unusual adjectives noun-pairing. The trick is to find a pair that isn’t contrived.
  • “Hidden” and “the world has never seen” plays on our near-universal desire to know secrets, as any unimaginative marketing salesletter-page guru will tell you.

3. There seems to be a thread of ‘belonging’ or what Maslow’s hierarchy of needs addresses as “social needs” – the human desire for relationships with others.

Patriotic prostitutes belong to a nation.

A hidden tribe – well, that’s pretty explicit.

Sisters have family bonds.

We see a ‘band of soldiers’. Not just a group – an organized team with links between themselves.

The father was out saving his kids.

4. This may just be me, but I think there’s a bit of self-actualization (the peak of Maslow’s pyramid) hinted at or made explicit in each title. I’ll let you guys look them over and figure out the details.

Politics – Hook: Prove What They Believe

- Hot, Flat And Crowded: Why We Need A Green Revolution – And How It Can Renew America

- Liberal “Victims” And Their Assault On America (by Ann Coulter, naturally)

- The War On Success: How The Obama Administration Is Shattering The American Dream

- Obamanomics: How Barack Obama Is Bankrupting You And Enriching His Wall Street Friends, Corporate Lobbyists And Union Bosses

- An Invonvenient Book: Real Solutions To The World’s Biggest Problems

Essentially, these titles just repeat back to people what they believe or are concerned about. The right wing titles (which outnumbered the left wing books in the store I visited) also aim to boil readers’ blood.

The Obamanomics title repeats back the following widely held views. Many people are disgusted by the bonuses Wall Street paid itself from the average American’s taxes, which anger just boils even further when these same people hypocritically argue for fiscal restraint as concerns other Americans e.g. in terms of providing health insurance to the poor.

Thomas Friedman’s title does the same sort of preaching to the choir (“we need a green revolution”), and adds in the national-aspirational bit in a way that seems to simultaneously strike the ‘belonging’ and ’self-actualization’ chords.

Miscellanea:

- The Long Shadow Of the JFK Assassination – I liked the shadow image

- Crash Course: The American Automobile Industry’s Road From Glory To Disaster – I think this addresses our curiosity and incredulity at the near-failures of the Big Three.

- Knockout: Interviews With Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer – And How To Prevent Getting It In The First Place – This seems to be another hook targeted at incredulity, combined with a self-help hook. “Cure” cancer? Prevent it? Awesome!

Conclusion

If you’re ever rocking away in your chair trying to knit up a title to fit your piece, a trip to the bookstore might be just the inspiration you need!

Gab GoldenbergGab Goldenberg wrote this post on behalf of Red Fly Marketing, an online marketing company in Dublin offering savvy search engine optimisation and web design.


Creative Commons License photo credit: Jean & Nathalie

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The Tales Silently Told By The Cannons Of Titles

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+ Google and Amazon Partner Up to Integrate Amazon Associates Program into Blogger Blogs By admin 16 December 2009 at 1:52 pm and have No Comments

In the last few minutes Blogger.com has flipped the switch on a new way for Blogger blogs to be monetized from within their system – an integration with Amazon Associates program. Expect an official announcement from Blogger/Google shortly on this new partnership (update: here it is) – but in the mean time, here’s the scoop.

Previously the ‘monetize’ tab on the back end of Blogger blogs only had options to set up AdSense – but today you can now do the same with Amazon.

If you’re a Blogger.com blogger log into your blog – click the monetize tab and choose Amazon Associates. Here’s what you’ll see:

Monetize Tab

You can either set up a new Amazon Associates account if you don’t have one or login with your existing one.

WIth it enabled you can enable a product finder in your blog editor which will enable you to add Amazon links and/or images as you’re posting blog posts.

Blogger Editor with Amazon Associates

I’ve only just tested it but it all seems pretty seamless and I’m sure for those wanting to make money from a Blogger blog it’ll be an appreciated new feature – particularly in the hottest buying season of the year.

It’s also an interesting story on the front that two major online players – Google and Amazon – are working together on this. It makes sense for it but as far as I know it’s the first time the two have done anything on this scale. It’ll be interesting to see if the partnership leads to any other areas of their empires.

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Google and Amazon Partner Up to Integrate Amazon Associates Program into Blogger Blogs

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+ WIN a Book By Commenting on This Post By admin 12 December 2009 at 6:34 am and have No Comments

win one of these booksOK – I have a pile of books that is growing beside my desk (and on my desk… and on my bookshelf) made up of books that I’ve either finished with or that I have multiple copies of.

+ 3 Ways to Make More Money with Amazon’s Affiliate Program This Christmas By admin 24 November 2009 at 5:24 am and have No Comments

Earlier in the year posted here on ProBlogger 11 lessons that I’d learned on the way to making over $100,000 with the Amazon Associates program (I wrote a followup post with 10 more tips too).

In that post post I posted a version of the following chart of my Amazon Associates earnings:

amazon-associates-tm.jpg

In the previous version of the chart I didn’t highlight the holiday seasons but I did want to point it out explicitly now as we are currently in one of the key times of year if you’re an Amazon affiliate (or for many other affiliate programs).

As you’ll see in the chart – all but one of the 4th Quarters that I’ve been promoting Amazon have been record periods for me. From what I can see – while the economy is certainly down at the moment – this current quarter looks like being yet another record for me.

I post this chart for one reason and it is this….

If you’re going to promote Amazon this Christmas – you’ve got to start now. The buying season has started. Yesterday I saw a big day of sales on Amazon and the kinds of products being bought indicate to me that much of it is gift buying.

In the coming week we’re going to see Christmas shopping start in earnest with some of the post Thanksgiving sales that stores like Amazon put on. As a blogger – you need to be positioning yourself to capitalise on this buying.

Here’s three things that you should do:

  1. Get People in the Door – Amazon optimizes its site brilliantly to convert people into buyers who enter the site – so your goal is to get people in the door and let Amazon do its job of converting people. This doesn’t mean just linking to anything – you want to keep your links into the store relevant – but if you’re going to do some reviews or promotions of Amazon products – now’s the time
  2. Watch What Amazon is Promoting – at this time of year Amazon puts on a variety of sales and runs specials on many products. Keep an eye on products in your niche, watch for what they are promoting and when they promote something relevant to your industry – take advantage of that opportunity to point it out to your readers.
  3. Run Christmas Related Posts – this is a great time of the year to put together a few posts that highlight lists of products related to your readers. 10 Stocking Stuffers for Photographers will be a post on DPS in the coming week (based upon this question that I asked my readers). You don’t want to let this kind of thing over run your blog but a few fun posts like this both gets people in the door at Amazon but also gets them thinking about buying and in the buying mood.

There are plenty more tips in my previous post on making money with Amazon Associates Program (and the followup post) but those are three that I think are particularly relevant for this time of year.

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+ Friday Recap - Little Genius Edition By admin 20 November 2009 at 12:21 pm and have No Comments

Welcome back to Friday, friends. There was no major news this week. Oh, wait. There was that one minor blip on the radar — a.k.a. the release of Twitter’s new, official retweet feature.

The long and short of it is that no one likes it. Lisa Barone dissects the many shortfalls of the function in Why Twitter’s New Retweet Feature Sucks. (Tell the Wall Street Journal I said hello, Lisa!)

cloud computing

Google also had some news to share this week. The source code for Google Chrome Operating System has been opened up to developers. That news and other updates were shared by Google during a press conference this week. You can find coverage of the event across the Web, but readers got a special treat as Matt Cutts joined the liveblogger corps.

Microsoft announced that their anticipated cloud computing system, Windows Azure, will be fully live early next year. The company is inviting software developers to create programs for the platform, hoping to catch up to the cloud computing pack leaders Amazon and Google.

And Yahoo!’s playing catch up in the social search arena as the search engine introduces Twitter results, as well as photos and videos, to their news search results. However, unlike the direct access secured by Google and Bing, Yahoo! will be using Twitter’s public API to incorporate tweets.

Twitter added a new API to the family this week, the Twitter Geotagging API. Now tweets can be geotagged to display location information about where the tweet was posted from. The feature is opt-in only, and is not available on Twitter itself, but through third-party applications.

tweet for a cause

As the wave of holiday season giving rolls up, search aggregator LeapFish is using Twitter as a tool to donate a Make-A-Wish gift to a young boy and his family. A simple tweet and LeapFish will donate $.05 toward sending a four-year-old to Disneyland. They’re still far from the $10,000 goal. Won’t you take a moment and tweet?

With Thanksgiving less than a week away, we’ve officially entered the winter holiday season. PPC Hero offers us search and shopping statistics, popular gift categories, peak shopping days, and Yahoo!’s holiday campaign best practices and tips.

As I get myself in shape for the eating marathon that is Thanksgiving, it’s hard not to send out a wish of support to all the poor, deprived waffle lovers in the country. Breakfast lovers are renewing the cry “leggo my Eggo!” ever since the waffle maker announced that a shortage would exist until the middle of next year. Here’s hoping none of your loved ones have waffles on the wish list this year.

SEO industry thought-leader Danny Sullivan wrote a search marketing industry retrospective on the 10-year anniversary of the first search marketing conference. What were marketers talking about 10 years ago? Human powered engines, cloaking and that little engine Google.

baby in glasses
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Hard to believe that big monster Google was ever a baby, but it’s true. How are these for some fascinating facts about babies? New research shows that newborn babes cry in their native tongue. Picking up language patterns from the womb, babies come out crying in the familiar inflections of the local language.

One doctor of linguistics has performed his own language experiment with his newborn, speaking to his kid only in Klingon for the first three years of his life. The result? One adorably nerdy three-year-old.

We may never fully understand the mechanics behind language acquisition, but for some, it sure is fun to try. One mystery I wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole is the Riemann Hypothesis, an unsolved math problem that turned 150 years old this week. If you’re more adventurous than I am, give it a shot. Solving the problem comes with bragging rights and a cool $1 million. [Also a lifetime supply of pocket protectors, nerd. --Susan]

In coming-down-the-pipes news, Twitter’s co-founder has confirmed that corporate, for-pay Twitter accounts that offer additional feedback and analytics will be launched in a matter of time. Meanwhile, rumors about a Google-branded Android phone have been all but confirmed.

Slightly more certain is the fact that 2010 is just weeks away. How did the first decade of the new millennium pan out for everyone? It’s been quite a ride, hasn’t it? The Webby Awards has published its list of the ten most influential Internet moments of the decade. It boggles the mind that these formative events only occurred in the last few years when it’s hard to imagine life any other way. I mean, like whoa.

Things I learned from Boing Boing this week:

  • One can have a spiritual experience at an aquarium. Or just by watching an online video of an aquarium.
  • Though we once thought warm bloodedness was a trait of every mammal, a recently discovered extinct goat was cold-blooded!
  • Money has always been in fashion, but origami takes it to the next level.
  • Kitties are cute. Okay, it may not have been a learning moment, but in a must-see vid shot from a police car dash cam, one kitty worked his magic, thus proving that kitties are cute! [And that that policeman was dedicated. He was going to get that ticket written, affectionate snugglekitty or no. --Susan]
  • While I thought it was just a fiction dreamt up by The Pirates of the Caribbean writers, the rising and setting sun can actually flash green!

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+ Speech Recognition for Bloggers – The Ultimate Guide By admin 20 November 2009 at 5:45 am and have No Comments

Speech recognition technology has come a long way in the last few years – in this in depth, informative and inspiring video which Jon Morrow (Associate Editor of Copyblogger and Co-founder of Partnering Profits) shares his first hand insights into speech recognition for bloggers.

Jon does all of his blogging via speech recognition so he seemed like the logical guy to ask to cover the topic – in the video (I’m glad he agreed). In the video Jon makes recommendations of software, hardware (the hardware is key) and even demonstrates how he uses them in his everyday blogging.

The video itself is also a great illustration of using video to communicate.

Speech Recognition for Bloggers — The Ultimate Guide from Jon Morrow on Vimeo.

Recommended in the video by Jon are a number of technologies including:

Bookmark this video today as it’ll be something you want to come back to again.

Jon Morrow is Associate Editor of Copyblogger and Cofounder of Partnering Profits. Get more from Jon on twitter.

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+ Why Google HQ Loves Thin Affiliates By admin 17 November 2009 at 7:51 am and have No Comments

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Despite what you may have read, Google secretly has a love affair with thin affiliates. Like a techie and Gizmodo, Google can’t get enough of affiliate marketers who build sites with no value add. If Google has its own internal Twitter, Eric Schmidt would tweet, “I heart affs who rely on search to power their business model.” Why?

Google loves thin affiliate sites because they:

1) Are lazy.

2) Lack brands that would cause people to be loyal to them.

3) Give Google their AdWords data.

4) [Sometimes] do Google’s testing for Google. [NB: A high converting lander doesn't lift you above the status of thin affiliate.]

5) Repeat what’s in a datafeed verbatim, making it easier to pinpoint key data in the absence of a Google base feed. For those of you in this boat, read Rae on how to handle affiliate datafeeds properly.

All of this enables Google to launch affiliate sites like its mortgage comparison tool, which sells traffic on a cost-per-lead basis. Aaron Wall has also pointed out that Google’s getting into retail affiliate marketing, which will increase as universal results become more widespread.

Google loves thin affiliates because they’re no competition. They’re disposable.

I told you guys over a year ago that Google aims to be the world’s biggest affiliate. Thin affiliates are a lovely source of competitive intelligence.

What’s the takeaway for internet marketers?

Google is progressively taking all the value in search traffic for itself. If this trend continues in the long term, search will gradually become a lower-and-lower ROI marketing channel as competitors bid the traffic/leads etc into the stratosphere.

And that’s not just for affiliates! Google is taking on Amazon too, though that battle should won’t be as easy as picking on thin affiliates. What’s the difference?

Amazon has:

  • A huge brand. Even if Amazon blocked Googlebot in its robots.txt, people would still visit Amazon to shop online.
  • A first-mover advantage in ebook readers with the Kindle.
  • Other marketing channels, including its affiliate program, public relations etc.

While it’s trite by now, Internet marketers – both affiliates and merchants – would do well to imitate Amazon. Developing a brand, a first-mover advantage, and non-search marketing channels are going to be increasingly important for online businesses to minimize their risk.

Sadly, this suggests that we’ll see a swing back from permission marketing to interruption marketing. Not tomorrow or even in 2010, but very slowly over the next few years. Wonder what Seth Godin would think of that?
Creative Commons License photo credit: Photomish Dan

Gab Goldenberg(While comments are closed here, you can tweet feedback to me via @GabGoldenberg. You can also check out my blog’s affiliate marketing posts.)

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+ Entering a World of Money-Making Websites By admin 13 November 2009 at 12:03 am and have No Comments


Considering that you are reading John Chow dot Com, I’ll go out on a limb and say that you’re probably interested in making money online. Each of you may bring a slightly different skill set to the table. Some of you may be interested in affiliate marketing, others in freelance writing, and others still in professional blogging.

One of the biggest hurdles that you will face with any endeavor is the inevitable learning curve. Wouldn’t it be easier if you could just start making money right away? That seems to be the idea behind Websites for Sale World, which serves as the subject for today’s review. From this site, you can you grab a wide range of turnkey businesses that require no prior knowledge or expertise.

Get Started with Turnkey Online Business

While its name may lead you to believe that you can buy individual websites for the purpose of making money, Websites for Sale World is actually a membership-based site that grants you access to all the resources all at once.

Entering a World of Money-Making Websites?

Available as a UK version or a US version, Websites for Sale World offers “all types of turnkey packages ready to start making money.” This includes not only the raw website files themselves, but also information on how to earn money from Clickbank, AdSense, Amazon, eBay, and so on.

My initial reaction to Websites for Sale World was not a positive one. It seems to be completely lacking in any of its own branding, not offering a unique logo or header image at all. The rotating banners at the top lack in professionalism and the same can be said about the site in general. A simpler, cleaner layout could work wonders.

Types of Sites for Sale

Navigating a little further down the main page, you’ll see the different types of websites that come with a membership to Websites for Sale World.

Entering a World of Money-Making Websites?

These site templates, like the ones for Amazon or online travel, come pre-populated with products and services for sale. The sites are meant to be completely turnkey, so you can start making money right away.

According to the documentation, the sites will update themselves too, so you only need to focus your attention on driving targeted traffic to your site. Naturally, you’ll need to provide your own domain and hosting too.

Flipping Ringtones and Wallpapers for Profit

One example of the available websites for sale in this “world” is the ringtones website. From this site, you have the opportunity to sell ringtones, wallpapers, screensavers, games, and other mobile content. You can check out the live demo to get a better sense of what you can expect.

Entering a World of Money-Making Websites?

The layout is relatively easy to understand, but it makes me feel more like I’m looking at a simple landing page or a parked domain page. The profitability can be good, though, if you manage to get the right traffic to the site.

As an example, Websites for Sale World says that you can sell a cell phone wallpaper image for £3.00 to earn a commission of €1.38. Expanding this example to include 110 sales of various mobile products each day, they say that you can earn a profit of €47,772 a year.

How Much Does It Cost?

To go along with the eight turnkey websites (and counting), Websites for Sale World also offers a number of bonus items to go with your paid membership.

Entering a World of Money-Making Websites?

There are SEO tutorials, monetization tutorials, “free software to help you in building your websites,” information on website flipping, a list of over 2000 wholesale suppliers, and e-books on building an e-book empire and making money from ClickBank.

Interestingly, joining the membership network is not a monthly subscription. Instead, joining Websites for Sale World comes at a one-time cost of £149 through the UK site. Alternatively, you can hit up the American site and pay $246.

CLICK HERE TO TRY WEBSITES FOR SALE WORLD

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+ Leapfish Unveils Real-Time Social Search Engine That Captures The “Living Web” By admin 05 November 2009 at 2:06 pm and have No Comments

Leapfish has just unveiled a new multi-media and real-time search, communication, and sharing platform that gives consumers a very convenient, fun, and personalized way to experience and share the traditional and real-time Web, which Leapfish call the “Living Web.”

The new LeapFish search allows users to do the two things they do most often when online: search and share. The new search platform combines the ability to search and share real-time and traditional content in any media format in a single interface across a range of different sites (Twitter, Facebook, Digg, etc).

The new LeapFish search experience offers consumers a real-time search engine, an advanced customizable personal homepage, more multi-media results from the entire Web and the ability to share any piece of content found online.

Leapfish Social Search Engine

LeapFish Search Engine Features :

  • Real-Time Search Engine : A fresh multi-media real-time search engine capturing results from all containers of real-time content (e.g., Twitter, YouTube, Twitpic, Flickr).
  • Searching and Sharing : Easy and convenient sharing features empower users to merge traditional content into the social and real-time Web as they search and find content anywhere online (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, Digg).
  • Variety of the Web : Delivering rich multi-media content from the deep and wide new Web via integration of leading authorities in website aggregation, videos, images, news, blogs, tweets and much more on every search query (e.g., YouTube, CNN, Twitter).
  • Personal Internet Dashboard : Technically advanced customizable personal homepage allowing consumers to build their own dashboard to the Internet by adding multiple news feeds, blogs, applications, tools and more (e.g., Facebook Application, Twitter Application, Mashable Feed)

Leapfish search results are aggregated from Google, Yahoo and Bing. I like how you can view results from all three search engines with just the push of a button. Makes it very easy to compare results. The real-time search is very cool. At the moment, it looks like it’s pulling all its results from Twitter” target=”_blank” rel=”nofollow”>Twitter, which makes sense since Twitter is as real time as you can get.

One thing I’ve noticed while using Leapfish. There’s A LOT of information about me on the living web. For example, Leapfish found that I am for sale for only 99 cents at Amazon. I had completely forgotten about that.

To try the new search experience for yourself, visit www.leapfish.com.

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Leapfish Unveils Real-Time Social Search Engine That Captures The “Living Web”