Archive for February, 2007

Affiliate Marketing - Creating Residual Income

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

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IT HAS ALREADY BEEN ESTABLISHED THAT AFFILIATE MARKETING is one of the quickest and easiest ways to make money from your own home based business.

The need for research and development are erased by the products creator. You, as the affiliate have only to deal with the marketing end. In most cases the merchant will even provide sales material for you.

This is great for fast profits, but what about the long term? (more…)

 
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Using Creativity In Your Home Based Business

Monday, February 19th, 2007

ATTEMPTING TO CREATE AND MAINTAIN A SUCCESSFUL INTERNET BUSINESS requires a firm grasp on specific marketing techniques. Many of these are unique to the marketing on the internet versus a traditional brick and mortar business. However, one constant that prevails for both is in the area of promoting, advertising and marketing your business.

In fact an essential key to being successful is promoting your business is a continuous and constant requirement. The “opportunities” are never ending and must be frequently updated and reworked.

Below are a few of the basic areas you will need to carefully consider when promoting your business and activities to ensure success in your promotions.

For each promotion activity you have underway, make sure that each one has a specific purpose and “goal”. To randomly create and put into place promotions that are unrelated to your products or ones that do not contribute in some meaningful way are a waste of resources (money and your time to put them into place). Plan the promotions carefully and follow up closely to ensure they are working as planned.

Make sure you have properly identified and targeted the audience most likely to benefit by and be interested in your product promotions. To do otherwise is again a total waste of your time and money.

Testing and measuring your efforts is vital to your success. There are numerous methods for doing this with home based business activities on the internet. These include such applications as ad tracking software/services and autoresponders. Personally, I use both of these methods and find them invaluable. Not only do they allow you to track the effectiveness of your promotions, in the case of autoresponders, they allow you to run a portion of your business on “auto pilot”.

Make sure your promotions offer solutions to audience’s problems or issues. Offering vividly clear solutions to common problems is a formula for success. Your potential clients will know the difference. You must clearly demonstrate that you understand their problems and are offering bonafide solutions.

To convince them you understand their problems you must offer clear and distinct benefits followed by clear features of your solution which will solve their problems. This may sound simple, but one does not have to read very far to find hundreds of promotional internet marketing business ads and promotions which do not follow this basic rule. Clients are interested in features that will solve their problems, period.

And lastly, persistence is a key ingredient to success. Only through persistent hard work, keeping your products and promotions for those products in front of potential “targeted” customers will ensure your success in profits and revenues.

Using the techniques above, along with a little creativity in putting them into place will go a long way towards ensuring success with home based business programs.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Stephen Wright is President & CEO of TheHomeBasedBusinessExpert.com
Articles, Information, Tools, and Techniques that are tested and proven to make any home based business successful. Get Started Today! http://www.TheHomeBasedBusinessExpert.com

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Get Your Systems In Place Now!

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

WHEN I FIRST STARTED MAKING THE TRANSITION FROM THERAPIST TO SPEAKER, Somers White offered me the opportunity to visit his office where he was running his successful speaking and consulting business. I came away from my visit with one basic rule (and a multitude of tips) firmly in mind: get your systems in place first.

Somers’ advice is as timely today as it was then. Get your systems in place first, especially if you want to automate your business.

The myth of automation says computers will solve all our problems. Not so! If we don’t have good systems before we automate, we’ll have terrible ones, unworkable systems, after we try to put them on a computer.

Good systems keep us on track. They outline all the steps of a task or project, remind you of the details, build in back ups and benchmarks.

The most important technology tools for defining a system? A pencil and a piece of paper. If you can’t sketch out the work flow for a task, project or process on paper, you’ll never be able to do it on a computer.

The most common complaint I hear from One-Person Business owners is how to take care of all the details of running the business while they are busy providing products and services to their clients. Usually this question comes after missing a deadline, not returning a crucial phone call, or bringing the wrong materials to a client meeting.  Each of these “mistakes” costs big. We look like we don’t walk our talk, aren’t truly professional or aren’t worth the investment our clients make in our services.      Good systems, keep track of details, mean we don’t have to remember to remember. Our systems do it for us.

So, get your systems in place first, before you make one of these mistakes. Or, if you’re in rehab mode, do it now.

Establishing a system is a “sharpening the ax” activity. Initially, it takes time, but quickly saves much more time than you invested.

Let’s use your new client forms as an example of getting a system up and running. This will start building your tool kit of standard forms, letters, responses, and procedures.

Collect the letters, questionnaires, invoices, agreements, you used for your last three or four new clients.

(Your fees and prices don’t matter for this activity. We’ll get to setting costs and pricing later.)

What information did you ask for from the client? What information did you miss and have to go back for? What letters did you send? Agreements? What kinds of people did you need to talk to? How did you arrange for expenses? Reproduction of materials?

New client packets represent all the details of making sure both you and the client are on the same page: you both know who is going to do what, at what cost, when and where; how you’re going to get there and what you’re going to leave behind.

My new client packet includes templates for a proposal, letter of agreement, and the cover letter that accompanies it, an inquiry response, check lists, a background questionnaire, invoices, invoice cover letters, travel itinerary, and so on and so on. I sometimes don’t use each form for each client, but I hate to start writing letters from scratch when I’ve got a lot to do.

Use your pencil and planning paper to sketch out the formats you prefer for each form you’ll use. Highlight the phrases you’ve used that you want in your standard forms.

Now, go to your word processor. Open a new file, format it like you sketched, whether a letter or a form, and “save as” a file in your New Client Packet folder in the folder called Speaking Admin.

Use place holders for information that varies with each letter i.e. name of contact, amount of fee, date of program. I use CAPITALS or a series of XXXXXX to indicate data needs to be filled in.

When you’re satisfied with a form or form letter file, “save as” instead of “save.” You’ll see a scroll window with format options, usually close to the file name box. Scroll down to stationery or template, highlight this option and then click on the save button. (When you save as stationery or template, the new file will automatically open with not file name. You are forced to save it as a new file, leaving your stationery file unchanged and ready for next time.)

Next time you need to do the paper work for a new client, just open the New Client Packet folder, chose the letter you need, fill in the specific information and send it off.

As you come on a repeating process, take a few minutes of your week to ensure you’ve documented all the steps. It makes it much easier than trying to remember to remember.

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Need to get your small business more strategic, organized, automated? Click here => http://www.1PersonBusiness.com for Pat Wiklund’s complimentary introductory course on How to Run a One-Person Business Without It Running You.

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Five Easy Ideas for a Press Release

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Copyright © 2007 A Marketing Connection

ONE OF THE LEAST EXPENSIVE WAYS TO GARNER ATTENTION for your business is by writing press releases. Having a journalist write about you and what you do is an invaluable way to promote your business. Your business is exposed to people that it otherwise would not be, and you are saving yourself the time and expensive of running an often ineffective ad.

As an entrepreneur, the key to your public relations success is to come up with things about you and your business that journalists and their readers care about. There are some basic things that many businesses routinely write press releases about, that are easily and effortlessly put in the calendar section of the paper. If you have a class or event coming up - send a press release about it. This should be a standard press release that you incorporate into the routine of running your business.

What are some other things that you, as a small business owner, can do to generate some publicity for your business that’s a little bit different - that is more likely to generate a feature article or a bigger mention than just in the calendar or what’s happening section?

Here are five easy ideas to get you thinking…

If you are interviewing someone, doing a teleclass (especially a free one), a webinar, or other free something for your clients or subscribers, tell the press about it. Invite the general public to come or invite the journalist.

Partner with an unlikely business and teach a class together, or simply announce your joint venture and how that benefits people in your community. An example could be a chiropractor offering free health and wellness classes together with the city or county nutritionist or health office. The chiropractor is giving back to the community and the city is educating the community on health issues - something they just looooove to do.

Agree to write a short column for your local paper - for free. If you are a copywriter this could be on marketing tips to grow your business. If you are a dentist you could provide tips on oral hygiene. A tip - keep your tips educational in nature and besides your byline there should be no selling involved. This tip may not involve a journalist writing about you, but it does get you in the paper on a regular basis and it is an article rather than an ad - so it is much more likely to be read. It’s very similar to an advertorial.

Have an open house or annual party. If you work from home and don’t have a place to hold an open house, consider doing an open house over a teleconference line and you can give away prizes or gifts over the course of an hour. Another option is to partner with another business and hold your open house together. Both of you can do promotions to both of your clients and to the press individually. Another angle to the story is WHY you are holding the open house together.

Write a press release every time you have a new product, a new client (may not apply to all of you), a new volunteer position, a new award - anything you can think of. Read the papers and trade journals and get ideas from what other people do. Can you put a twist on what you read and write your own press release too?

Make a commitment to yourself to write a press release every two weeks or once a month. This will make you keep looking for ideas and have getting free publicity at the forefront of your marketing efforts. And just think how impressed your clients will when you show them your press clippings!

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Author of Healthcare Copywriting Secrets Revealed, Kelly Robbins is an award winning copywriter and marketing coach/consultant. She also publishes The Healthcare Marketing Connection (http://www.healthcaremarketingconnection.com), a free e-zine on healthcare marketing tips. Contact Kelly to receive her free report, “5 critical things you must know when writing for the healthcare industry” - info@KellyRobbinsLLC.com or (00 1) 303-460-0285.

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