In Your Portable Empire, by Pat O’Bryan, Pat gives some excellent advice to infoproduct creators.
“The secret to making a good living from infoproduct marketing is having multiple streams of passive income. Yes, some people make a million bucks in one day. Some gurus have five- and six-figure days consistently. Home runs are nice, but you can build a very solid business with a string of base hits.
Find a problem and sell the solution. Then find another one. Do this enough times, and you’ve got multiple streams of passive income.” – Your Portable Empire, page 130.
Posted in Infoproducts, Marketing.
Thank you Dennis Becker, your first (annual?) Earn1KADay Summit has reinvigorated me. I’m full of fire to get back to my blogging. Even more, I’m determined to get to working on not just studying marketing in order to help my clients, but to building out my own money making sites.
I always like going to the first-ever of a seminar or conference series. There’s something special about the energy that first time. This one was no exception.
One person remarked to me that she saw more networking going on in one evening than had taken place in the last two years of a local group she’d been going to. I agree, except for some reason, “networking” sounds cold to me. It was more like meeting friends.
It could be that a lot of the ease of meeting people had to do with us knowing each other from the Earn1KADay forum. But that wasn’t all of it, because there were several people who’d never been to the forum. Of course, I think most of them will be joining soon.
I followed a few simple rules of thumb to make the summit a success for me:
- Don’t just hang out with the first couple people I meet.
- Don’t be shy, walk up to people I want to meet and introduce myself. Invite myself along on outings.
- Try hard to remember and use names.
- Be helpful.
It worked. I met so many great people, and made some contacts I just know will become fast friends and business partners as we move forward.
Posted in Reviews.
Tagged with e1kad, earn1kaday, forum, seminar, summit.
By bruce
January 24, 2009
I’m continuing to read and to be inspired by Napoleon Hill’s excellent “Grow Rich!: With Peace of Mind”. My gem quote this time is about what happens when you start being successful. Interestingly, I also think it is a caution to watch out for basing your business on affiliate marketing.
Let nobody bribe you away from being yourself. You are going to make money, and as soon as you do, others are going to see you have what it takes. Fine! — but this is the point at which many a man loses himself. Having build himself from within himself, and having thus attracted attention, he yields to a “big opportunity” to stop building his own wealth and peace of mine, and ties himself to another’s business.
Technorati Tags: napoleon hill
Posted in Reviews.
As part of my preparation for launching eBookTribe, I’ve been reading the excellent book “Web Copy That Sells” by Maria Veloso.
I unreservedly recommend this book, which breaks things down so much more cleanly and in a much more organized manner than my other favorite copywriting book, “Call to Action”.
As an example of how straightforward she makes the topic, here are her:
Three Fundamental Rules for Writing Web Copy That Sells
- Rule 1. Don’t Make Your Website Look Like an Ad
“Your website should provide the solid information that your prospect is looking for, and it should have an editorial feel to it.”
- Rule 2. Stop Readers Dead in their Tracks
“Fact: If your website is little more than an online brochure for your business, then your website is a very weak selling tool.”
- Rule 3. Capture Email Addresses.
“The odds are low that people will buy from you the first time they visit your website. After all, they don’t even know you.”
Technorati Tags: marketing, Maria Veloso
Posted in Copywriting, Reviews.
Todays gem is from
“Never Eat Alone : And Other Secrets to Success, One Relationship at a Time” by Keith Ferrazzi and Tahl Raz.
This is the best self-marketing and networking book I’ve ever read. Actually I bought it twice. The first time was an Audible book, which I listened to with full attention for the whole unabridged 12 hours (in the car, of course). The audiobook was so good that I had to by the hardback, so that I could take notes and properly quote it for this blog.
In this gem, Ferrazzi shares his 10 tips to become a sought-after expert. I’m going to give his titles verbatim, and paraphrase the details.
- Get out in front and analyze the trends and opportunities on the cutting edge – Identify the movers and shakers, meet them of possible and take them to lunch, read their newsletters, learn from them.
- Ask seemingly stupid questions – Question the unspoken bases that people are using for their understandings. This is how breakthroughs are made.
- Know yourself and your talents – Work on your talents and let others fill in your weaknesses.
- Always learn – Read books and magazines, take classes, talk to experts. I’d add to this list, “write a blog on the topic”.
- Stay healthy – don’t burn out, take vacations, do things to nourish your spirit.
- Expose yourself to unusual experiences – Learn things out of the mainstream, to spark creativity.
- Don’t get discouraged – Passion keeps you going through inevitable hard times.
- Know the new technology – If you can’t then adopt a geek who’ll help you.
- Develop a niche – start small and expand, don’t take on the world at once.
- Follow the money – you can’t make money if there is none to be had in your chosen area.
Technorati Tags: Ferrazzi, never eat alone
Posted in Advice, Reviews.
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