Posts Tagged ‘ cool

The Force is Strong With This One: 10 Ways to be a Direct Response Jedi 02 December 2009 at 7:40 am by admin

image of a young Jedi

Do you remember the doubt on Luke Skywalker’s face when he first held the cool metal of an inert light saber? Looking up at Obi-Wan, he believed it when he said, “I can’t go with you to Alderaan.”

Last summer, we felt just like young Skywalker as we waded waist-deep into the bog of online writing. There was much to learn, forces at work looking to sway us to the dark side, and at times, it was hard to believe in ourselves or our path.

What a difference one year makes. Our business is taking off, we have great clients who appreciate our personal attention to their projects, and we’re actually living the dream of doing what we want to do for a living — writing.

But the path to online success wasn’t easy. We’ve run fast and fallen flat on our faces, then got right back up to battle again.

Would you like to unleash The Force in your content? Here are 10 ways you can become a direct response marketing Jedi.

1. Be a deliberate Paduan learner

Jedis are recognized for their innate ability to harness the power of The Force.

Unearth the exceptional inside you and nurture it constantly. Find your Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda, listen to the wisdom these established Jedi masters have to share. They were once where you are now, and understand the dangers and temptations lurking ahead. Be willing to listen, and they can help guide you toward the proper path.

2. Beware the dark side

Fear, anger, aggression, envy, pettiness, and insecurity — they are all natural feelings.

It’s easy to look at the empire building done by your competitors and wonder why you’re not having the same kind of success. Often, we are unable to see the work behind the successes, so it’s easy to believe that someone else got something undeservedly.

But you weren’t there on their journey. You don’t know the long hours, hard work, or embarrassing failures that have been poured into their current successes.

Nothing happens overnight. You will succeed in due time. Shortcuts might lead to a black helmet. Patience and dedication to learning are necessary elements in any good Jedi. You may be a phenomenal writer, or innately good at social media, but you must do your time like everyone else. Anakin fell to the dark side because he believed he was above his teaching.

3. These aren’t the droids you’re looking for

With a wave of his hand, Obi-Wan Kenobi was able to get a hover car full of fugitives past a trio of heavily armed storm troopers.

Writing persuasive copy can pull your reader into your point of view and create a mutually beneficial situation. It’s not enough to convince your prospect, you must also make sure they feel good about their decision if you want them to happily return for more.

4. Do or do not. There is no try

If you want to be an awesome writer, write awesome stuff.

Don’t try to be great. Be great.

That doesn’t mean fake it till you make it, but rather learn what you need to do and then do it to the best of your ability. Always seek to better yourself. Perfecting your craft will ensure that you are not simply trying to be a Jedi master, but are actually growing into one.

5. Use the force

Who needs a computer to hit the target? Trust your well-honed instincts.

As you progress on your path to Jedi master, your instincts will continually sharpen from the experiences and knowledge you accumulate. You’ll know the right things to do, the clients to avoid, and what to do when you make mistakes. A significant slice of success is due to how sharp you can keep the edge of your instinct. Make sure you know when to trust that inner voice.

6. Show empathy

Find out where your prospect is from, what he/she does, and what’s important to them. Just because you’re writing for an online audience doesn’t mean you can’t utilize the web equivalent of good eye contact.

This doesn’t mean being a phony; people can usually smell a Lando Calrissian a mile away. Find a way to relate to people that is genuine. Most well-rounded writers should have varied enough interests and experience to connect with others authentically.

7. I know there’s still good in you, I can sense it

Luke believed there was good in his father all the way until the end. Who knows if it would have been buried without the young Jedi’s belief.

Project the traits you desire for your prospects and watch how well they respond.

8. Don’t be a Sith

A Jedi is always looking out for others; the Sith only look out for themselves.

Develop content that puts others first and you will always come out a winner. We’ve all had experience with shady operators who use content scrapers, pass off others’ work as their own, and look to sell you on half-baked info products with no substance. Not only are these actions bad business, but word will get out about what kind of person you are. Whatever success you have will likely be short-lived.

9. Beware the clones

A Jedi can part a sea of storm troopers with a light saber in one hand and a wave of the other.

Do everything you can to stand apart and make your name synonymous with individual character and quality work. This means not only ensuring that your work sets the standard by which your competitors are compared, but also hiring only the most qualified freelancers when heading to battle.

Just because you can hire cheap labor doesn’t mean you should. Your good name is on the line, don’t exchange short-term benefits for long-term goals.

10. Be direct

A Jedi is never mealy mouthed. They say precisely what they mean and mean every word they say.

Be straight with your clients. Tell them what you can do for them and be honest when there’s something you can’t. Your clients deserve your honesty and will appreciate you more for looking past your immediate interests to help them.

If you want to be a direct response marketing Jedi and gather quality clients for the dollars you deserve, you need to train hard, constantly sharpen your skill set, and follow the rules just long enough to know when and where to break them.

Got a favorite tip for Jedi mastery as a freelancer? Let us know about it in the comments.

For much more advice about how to avoid the “Dark Side” of direct marketing, subscribe to the Copyblogger email newsletter, Internet Marketing for Smart People. It starts with a 20-lesson e-course on how to marketing online while staying on the light side of the force. Click here to get started.

About the Authors: David Wright has been told he looks like Chewbacca, while Sean Platt spent his formative years running around his back yard in a tattered Boba Fett Halloween costume. Together, they are independent publishers who also write direct response copy.


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The Force is Strong With This One: 10 Ways to be a Direct Response Jedi

+ 25 Things I’d like to See Google Fix By admin 01 December 2009 at 7:52 am and have No Comments

Post image for 25 Things I’d like to See Google Fix

While I’m well known for being critical of many of the things Google does I’m also a power user of site and many of their tools. Being a power user gives me a unique insight and see some areas these tools could be improved. This post is written in the spirit of constructive criticism, since I know my posts sometimes “get around” inside of the plex …

Goggle Apps for Domains

  • A lot of the cool and interesting things that happen in Gmail and Google Docs don’t get released for Google Apps for domains. They have definitely gotten better about this in the past few months but it’s still happening. For example want the Google Chrome Gmail Checker extension to work on your domain, be prepared to do some hacking to make it happen.

GMail

  • Filters lets expand the number of filters you can have right now it maxes out somewhere between 20 to 30 (I’ve hit the limit and had to delete and start from scratch creating multiple ones). Also let me forward a copy to more than one person. For example I wan to forward my travel receipts/itinerary to evernote and tripit.
  • If I’ve selected/highlighted the subject or body copy and click “filter” don’t start with the from field filled in, start with the field I have selected filled in.
  • Let me send scheduled emails, right now I use lettermelater, if I forget to BCC a copy to myself I forget it got sent.

Google Docs

  • With the announcement of  Google Docs becoming publicly indexable if a link from an external website points to them a lot of people became worried. All users to see which documents are linked to, or even better give them a universal “off” switch to block indexing of all of their documents. Allow Google Apps for domains customers the ability to block all documents on the domain.
  • Let me create and edit spreadsheets offline, I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve wanted to work on a spreadsheet flying from NY to Vegas or California and been unable to.
  • How about the ability to export clean HTML, right now any exports are as bad as a Microsoft word HTML document with tons of unnecessary tags adding to the “weight” of a document.
  • Let me specify a default font/size for my account. Maybe I’m just a snob but anything other than arial or verdana irritates me, the fact that you force me to start with new times roman or some other serif font every time is like an annoying roommate who leaves the toilet seat up.

Google Reader

  • Allow Google reader to work with the Google apps for domains address book not just the Google contacts address book
  • Allow me to temporarily suspend updating of all the feeds in a folder for a specified time. Maybe I’m working on a big project or going away on vacation. Some feeds I need to keep up with others not so much.
  • Allow me to connect more than one twitter account for sharing, I run multiple accounts and want to forward it to different places depending on subject matter.

Google Contacts

  • Allow Google contacts to work with Google Apps for domains, right now they are separate which means sometimes you have access to them in Google offerings sometimes you don’t.
  • If I have pictures tied to a contact and I’m using Google Sync pull in the picture and match it to the account.
  • Allow people to opt into a profile/contact sharing program. If someone changes emails, phone numbers, whatever and they change it in their centralized shared profile everyone who is one of their contacts has the information automatically updated

Google Chrome

  • Multi browser password sync – we need it. I know I’m not the only one who has a laptop and netbook, and I need my passwords to travel with me. Lastpass kinda works and Roboform wants to make it work let’s help move that forward.
  • Multi browser extension sync – allow me to move extensions, setting and customizations between browsers.
  • Copy and paste as plain text, so many things like wordpress and google docs will let the font, color, size, and style persist, I’d like to be able paste with no formatting.
  • Give me the ability to set the cache size to zero. I know you don’t to speed things up, but my ISP gets a little wonky and I’ve found that clearing the cache solves the problem 99% of the time.

Google Voice

  • OK I know you want this too, but lets figure out a way to get this thing on the iPhone, this buerocracy quagmire helps no one.

Feedburner

  • Let me specify an order for posts in the email if I’m using it, Last out First in (lifo) isn’t always optimal, give me the option for first in first out (fifo) in the email.

YouTube & Universal Search

  • I understand that you only show videos from sites that have a high reliability in universal search. However having the YouTube page rank doesn’t do much for conversions. Why not have something like rel=canonical to allow us to point to the page we really want to rank with the YouTube video.

Google Search

  • Allow me to turn off any and all new things you introduce into search, the &PWS=0 flag works to turn off personalized search but everything else is hit or miss. I know that you think all of these things are you’re POD, but sometimes I’d like to not have to see them. In fact like Matt I’d really just like clean URL’s all the time

Google Tasks

  • Let me have recurring tasks, I have some things that need to get done every week or month, and this saves me the trouble of having to reschedule them

Google Alerts

  • For any notification that’s not “as it happens” let me specify the time of day I’d like to to come. Right now if I choose once a day it comes 24 hours from the time I created or last modified/updated the filter.

Picasa Web

  • You offer the right settings to share and protect pictures as needed, but the language/terminology used to explain it doesn’t make it at all easy to understand. The only reason I figured it out was by trial and error. Pretend you are explaining it to your grandma who isn’t at all computer savvy you’ll do everyone a favor.

Comments are open feel free to drop your suggestions in as well. Meander of topic and I will purge your comments without mercy.

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This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

25 Things I’d like to See Google Fix

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+ What’s Your Blog Going to Be for Halloween? By admin 30 October 2009 at 5:56 am and have No Comments

image of a witch

It’s that time of year again . . . time to get your trick-or-treating gear ready.

Trust me, this year you’re too old to troll the neighborhood begging for miniature Twix bars. Your neighbors are wise to you and your “Eminem costume.”

Instead, how about putting a little thought into what your blog will be this Halloween?

Sure, you can go the cheap and easy way and get a Perez Hilton mask, but where’s the fun in that? Instead, look through this collection of spooky archetypes and see if you can spot your blog on the list.

The devil

Instead of a pitchfork, the devil blog sports a yellow highlighter and screaming red headlines.

The devil blog is all about setting up scams and systems so you don’t need to show up to write every day. Sure, the convoluted “blueprint” you paid for that combines scraped content, Adwords arbitrage, and finding a source for counterfeit Acai berries is going to take you about three months to build. And that’s if you don’t sleep. But one day it’s gonna pay off big, baby.

The devil blog is all about the blogger. Your needs, your income, your rewards, and to hell with your readers, or anyone else for that matter.

Double bonus points if your blog is about making money online and you have yet to make your first twenty bucks.

The angel

You’ve been blogging since 1968, back when your posts took the form of hand-embroidered manifestos passed from coffeehouse to coffeehouse via traveling folk singers. Readership really picked up once the Internet got invented.

You’ve given thousands of hours of your life to your community and never asked for anything in return. You are saintly beyond reproach.

Ok, there was that one time, back in 2002, when you asked your audience to do you a favor. They flamed you like a campfire marshmallow. You blamed Al Quaeda and global warming, and have never tried it since.

The zombie

This is the blog that actually died about 18 months ago, but somehow it just keeps limping along, looking plaintively for brains.

You keep meaning to get serious about your cornerstone content. You fully intend to get your blog moved over to your own domain name. And you’re definitely going to write a new post since that last one you did on Groundhog Day. But frankly, Farmville takes a lot of free time, and you just don’t have the bandwidth.

Our advice: Put the damned thing out of its misery and give it a decent burial already.

The sexy witch

You’re tough and smart. You’re ballsy. You’re outspoken. You swear, a lot. You’re prickly and inconvenient, and possibly a little nuts.

You’re not afraid to mock your male compatriots for having smaller/less effective testicles than you do.

You look pretty darned good in that costume, and you know it.

The trendy costume

You’re swine flu or Dead Kanye or the Public Option for U.S. healthcare.

The main thing is to get people talking, stir up lots of controversy, and get some buzz going. Six weeks after Halloween is over, even you won’t remember what exactly the point was.

To paraphrase Andy Warhol, in the future, everyone will be a trending topic on Twitter for fifteen minutes.

The power ranger

You do everything right. You have superhuman strength, agility, and you can fly. Your content is strong, your headlines are sharp, your Twitter etiquette is impeccable.

You’ve got everything going for you, except no one can tell the difference between you and the other 10,000 power rangers that showed up at their door on Saturday night. Find a little spark of something genuinely different and you’ll be ready to actually unleash that ninja storm and do some damage.

So how about you?

I was trying to think of the canonical cool costume to end with, but there really isn’t one.

Because really good costumes can be funny, weird, interesting, creative, insane. The things that make for great Halloween costumes are pretty similar to what make great blogs. But they can’t be lame me-too copies of what some other cool person is doing.

Let us know in the comments what your blog is this Halloween. We can’t wait to check you out.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


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+ 6 Reasons to Join the ProBlogger.com Community By admin 05 October 2009 at 7:06 am and have No Comments

Since I announced ProBlogger.com mid last week the ProBlogger Community Forum has grown to well over 1300 paid members (note the member numbers are reported as higher but also include people who have yet to confirm their membership with a payment).

Because it’s a private, walled community it can be a little difficult for those not on the inside to assess whether it’s something for them - so I thought today I’d highlight some of what’s going on inside:

1. Community Challenges

Something that we’re going to run this week is a ProBlogger Community Challenge. In the challenge I nominate a type of post for our members to go away and write up and then everyone shares their links to those posts over the coming days. Then members are encouraged to surf through the list, comment, give feedback and then share those links that they resonated most with their own network.

The idea is that we all do something together, there’s opportunity to learn from how others approach the task and of course there’s opportunity for extra traffic both from other members and from where they share the links that they like.

2. Blog Critiques

We’ve set up a specific area of the forum where any member can share a link to their blog and ask others to give feedback on it.

critique.png

Members putting their heads together on this means that people asking for critiques are getting a variety of responses on their blogs from a community with diverse experiences, skills and ideas. There’s also the opportunity to learn by watching critiques of other blogs.

3. Opportunities for Collaboration

The collaboration area of the community is one of the most active. This is one of the key reasons I wanted to start the forum - putting bloggers together to work together for mutual benefit can lead to wonderful outcomes.

collaboration.png

We’re still only seeing the beginnings of where these collaborations will lead but to this point we’re already seeing some creative ideas. Bloggers are hooking up with other bloggers in their niches to work together, we’re seeing bloggers working together on social media campaigns in groups, bloggers are helping one another with content creation and more.

The effectiveness of this area will only grow as more bloggers join which will open up possibilities to work together with other bloggers in similar niches and locations.

4. Secondary Connections

One of the cool things that I’ve already seen start to happen is people making connections with other bloggers outside of the community. For example in a thread where I invited members to share their Twitter ID’s we’ve had hundreds of people share them and people reporting seeing marked increases in their follower numbers.

While having more followers is nice - the real benefit of this is that these connections have the potential to build the depth of interaction between bloggers, strengthening networks and opening opportunities for fruitful interactions.

Another example of this is groups of bloggers already planning to meet in person at different blogging events. For example there’s a group going to get together at Blog World Expo and a few people asking if there are bloggers in their local areas who might like to have a meet up.

Member Tutorials

Yesterday I added a new area to ProBlogger.com - one for ‘Tutorials’.

There are two main reasons I wanted this area - firstly I’ve already seen a couple of really excellent posts by members exploring different topics. I want to highlight this type of content as I think there’s a lot we can learn from it. Secondly I’d like to give community members the opportunity to have some of their ideas featured here on ProBlogger.net occasionally as guest posts. I won’t use all tutorials submitted here on ProBlogger - but from time to time will use the best and most interesting submissions with the permission and credit to the author.

6. Our Members

1300+ members in less than a week isn’t a bad result if you’re thinking purely about numbers, but what I’m thankful for and excited about is the quality of those who’ve joined.

Members come from all parts of the world, all levels and with an amazing variety of experiences. Already there have been numerous threads where bloggers have shared different opinions on topics in a way that doesn’t tear anyone down but instead where the diversity of opinion and experiences help facilitate learning.

What our 6 of our Members Say about ProBlogger.com

On that note - let me share 6 testimonials from these very same members to finish off this post:

“After recently rebranding my blog and website, I’ve felt as if my blogging attempts have been floundering, and with no support and no one to lean on, I’ve had difficulty finding the inspiration and focus to write. Since joining the ProBlogger Community just a few days ago, I now feel like I’m part of a family who has already supported, encouraged, and helped me to get my focus and determination back! Thanks for creating this community, Darren - I’m truly excited to see it evolve in the coming months!” - Ursula Comeau from UCWebCreations.com

“Without doubt, the new home of bloggers. In less than a week it has established a community spirit that most forums can only dream of.” - Kevin Muldoon from Blogging Tips

“The thing that I’ve really gained from the forums is motivation! Most forums tend to suck up my time, I think I’m barely on ProBlogger.com for more than ten minute before I have to go and write a post, go searching for inspiration or look into a new form of monetisation. Within the first week it’s impressive to see that there’s already a strong sense of community among the members and it’s great to see everyone so willing to help other bloggers reach their goal.” - fern from Craft Blog

“After signing up for Problogger.Community I submitted Summer Tomato to the critique section. I’d never had anyone but friends and family give me their thoughts on my design, and I’ve always been curious what “real” bloggers might think. Within a couple hours of signing up I had wonderful positive and constructive advice on my blog from experienced bloggers, and even a few new readers! As far as I’m concerned this subscription has paid for itself already.” - darya from Summer Tomato

“If you want to grow your blog, you need to work with other like minded bloggers…plain and simple. Problogger.com has been an incredible avenue for blogging collaboration and it is just getting started. It is really a no-brain’er.” - Robb Sutton

“Not being much of a forum user I was a little hesitant at first to sign up at problogger.com, especially since it was going to cost a whopping $1.95 (gasp!), but I’m glad I did. Already I’ve connected with some great people and just having a more personal interaction with Darren makes the cost worth it.” - David Turnbull from Adventures of a Barefoot Geek

“I’m not the best networker in the world but problogger.com has made a massive difference. Without even asking for it, members have gone out of their way to help promote my blog further and being a member has given me so much extra motivation for blogging that my traffic has doubled in the week that I’ve been there! It’s paid for itself many times over already.” - Lee from Smash and Pees

Join us Today

If ProBlogger.com sounds like a community that you’d benefit from we’d love you to join us today. The cost is $1.95 a month (you can unsubscribe at any time) - we plan to increase this price but if you sign up at $1.95 you’ll be locked in at that price and never pay more to get access to the forum.

The process for joining is simple:

  1. just head to the registration page - this registers you as a forum member (but doesn’t give you access to threads until you’ve done the next step and paid.
  2. once you’ve registered and logged in head to the payment page where you select the $1.95 option and will be then taken to PayPal.

Once you’re paid - you’re in! If you have any problems along the way let us know via the contact form on the forum.

PS: I’ve set up a ProBlogger.com Twitter Account to keep people up to date on problogger.com specific news.

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6 Reasons to Join the ProBlogger.com Community

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+ Amazing Blogs: The 1-2-3 Plan Every Blogger Should Know By admin 05 June 2009 at 6:31 am and have No Comments

1-2-3

There are well over 100 million blogs out there. Why’s anyone going to read yours?

Every keyword phrase, every niche, every topic, every angle has been covered. The competition for attention and traffic is fierce. But there’s still room for your blog . . . if it’s amazing.

A blog is trivially simple to start, but not so easy to keep rolling. There are so many factors — traffic, social media strategy, design, monetization. If you try to absorb everything at once, you’ll be too overwhelmed to keep going.

It’s important to learn and grow, but you also want to keep your focus. You need a plan — the kind you can scribble on the back of a bar napkin. If you make sure you don’t stray too far from these three points, your best path will get a lot easier to find.

Step 1. Get Obsessed with Your Audience

Your blog isn’t an SEO blog or a mommy blog or a political humor blog.

Your blog is not about your topic at all.

Your blog is about your readers.

Whether you’ve been blogging for 1 day or 1000 days, you need to know who’s showing up to read, watch or listen to you.

What do they care about? What are they interested in? What’s worrying them? What makes them smile? Who/what do they lust after? What do they fear? What do they loathe? What do they cherish?

What do they devoutly wish someone (maybe you?) would write about? What kind of content would feed their minds, their pocketbooks, or their souls?

You never have to pander to your readers. You’re not their slave. But you do have to know them.

Step 2. Keep Yourself in the Picture

In keeping with step #1, I’ve probably said It’s not about you a million times on this blog.

But that’s not really true. It has to be about you. Because blogs are about expression, and if you don’t show up in all your glory, there’s not much point to the whole exercise.

Shoot your mouth off, ideally when you know what you’re talking about. Rant, rave, shout from the rooftops.

And when you’re totally clueless, ask a million questions. Engage, pursue, reach out, investigate.

While you’re at it, go ahead and look like an ass once in awhile. Confess all the oddity and foolishness you’ve been trying to hide since junior high school. (No one’s ever fallen for your cool kid cover anyway.) Get as naked as you dare.

You’re the prism that your readers want to look through. Don’t try to create some kind of quasi-journalistic cloak of invisibility. You’re the point.

Step 3. Stay Fast on Your Feet

Comments slowing down? It may be because your readers are tweeting you instead (which is a fine thing, since those tweets are seen by hundreds or thousands who don’t know you yet). What tools could you add that would make that even easier to do?

Hosting your blog on someone else’s domain, like Blogger or WordPress.com? Make the jump to self-hosted WordPress before you’re completely comfortable with the idea. It might be messy, although a good blog developer can usually make things reasonably painless. But it’s never going to get less messy than it is today.

Sexy new tools are being created every day. You’ll never master them all, so don’t try to. But don’t let your blog sink into the same stagnant habits, either. Try new plugins, new themes, new tools, new approaches.

Great blogs, and great bloggers, evolve.

Blogging is about challenge and mystery. It’s about never knowing who’s going to show up, or link to you, or what exactly your server will do when you hit the front page of Digg.

Blogging, like many of life’s more interesting endeavors, is all about how you take the curves.

Just make sure you have a rough plan and a few grounding principles. Then get out there and have fun. I can’t wait to see what you come up with next.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


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+ How to Get a Copyblogger Blog Consultation, Even if You Didn’t Win By admin 04 June 2009 at 10:41 am and have No Comments

So, there’s good news and bad news.

The bad news is that if you haven’t heard from me, you didn’t score one of the free blog consultations.

The good news is that Brian and I talked, and we are going to open up 10 more spots. This time though, I’m going to do things a bit differently.

You see, we always thought offering blog consultations might be popular, but we had no idea how popular. I thought we might get somewhere between 60 and 100 takers, and Brian projected a bit more. Neither of us were prepared for what happened though. We received an application almost every single minute for three straight hours. It took me almost an entire day to read them all!

The worst part is lots of people wanted in really bad. They begged. They hit me up on twitter. They offered bribes (the plate of cookies was tempting, by the way). I could’ve picked only those people, I suppose, but that wouldn’t have been fair. Besides, there still weren’t enough spots.

Figuring out how to handle it really became a problem. It was a good problem, sure, but a problem nonetheless. So, Brian and I got on the phone yesterday and talked about what to do. Here’s what we decided.

How to Get 1 of the 10 Spots

To put it simply: I’m going to charge a reasonable fee.

Not a huge amount of money, as you might expect. I’m not trying to be greedy, which would be totally against the spirit of what I was trying to do, which was to give back.

At the same time, one of the cardinal rules of marketing is to give people what they want. Get their contact info and ask them to come back later, if need be. But never, ever ignore people when they tell you they want something.

So here’s the deal. For $95, I’ll take a look at your blog and get on the phone with you for 30 minutes, giving you advice that’s specifically tailored to you. Considering a lot of e-books cost that much, and the advice isn’t nearly so personal, I figure that’s a steal and still at least somewhat in the spirit of giving back.

Of course, I’m also slammed with all of the other consultations, as well as everything else we’re doing here at Copyblogger, so I can’t do a bunch of these right now. So I’m going to limit it to only 10 people. I’ll probably do more in the future, but it’s going to be a while, and the price tag will probably be higher.

To get a spot now, shoot me an email at Jon (at) Copyblogger.com. This time, I won’t be picking anyone. The first 10 people to email me will get a spot. If you’re not in the first 10, I’ll also hold on to your contact information and give you advance notice when we decide to do something like this again.

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


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