Your Internet Success System 2001 Chris Ellsworth
The Internet is a wonderful marketplace with literally thousands
of new prospective customers signing on for the first time every
day. Many of these people will need what you offer. While this
presents incredible opportunity, it creates challenges as well.
One of the greatest of these challenges is managing our time.
But this type of time management has nothing to do with clocks
and calendars. It has to do with money. As Internet business
people we must manage our time to create the maximum return on
investment. While many think of "time management" in terms of
doing things faster, making to-do lists and more, time
management for the Internet marketer comes down to one concept
... automation. No matter your product or service, whether you
are selling books, vitamins, memberships, information or more,
you must have a system in order to succeed. The good news is
today there are tools that will help you perform every aspect of
your job quickly and easily. Let's look together at the five
steps to any Internet Success System and how to use automation
to increase your revenue in each area.
1. Find the Right Prospects This is a key step and requires an
important decision. Where will you find your prospective
customers? Some common forms of finding prospects include *
Buying leads * Search engine positioning * Ezine advertising *
Banner advertising * Email marketing * Producing an ezine * And
more While all of these methods can be effective, which ones
offer you the greatest return on your time investment? Many
today believe that buying leads (lists of people who have
expressed an interest in your type of product) is the best way.
My advise is to experiment with each and see what works best for
you.
2. Get Your Message Out Getting your message in the hands of
people interested in what you offer will include the use of a
web site, email, autoresponders and more. One key factor often
overlooked is the consistency of your message. If your web site
says "Trust me, I'm your friend" and your email messages scream
"Buy now or else!" you're in trouble. Make sure all of your
marketing messages are consistent. This way your prospect *will*
trust you and reward that trust with a purchase.
3. Handle Responses People are not *on* the Internet, they ARE
the Internet. In each email you send, autoresponder you write
and phone call you take remember that it's a live person who
will be reading or hearing your message. With the Internet
becoming so impersonal it pays for you to be personal in your
response. Sure, this is business. But it's the business of
dealing with people. If you do this one thing very well success
will almost certainly be yours.
4. Sift and Sort for Success Few things are more frustrating
that going to the time and expense of finding a prospective
customer, answering their questions, sending them follow up
messages and more only to discover they are really some 13 year
old kid on their Mom's computer who has nothing better to do
than waste your time. The only surefire way to prevent wasting
time on people who can't (or won't) buy is to ask them. Get them
to give you some information in exchange for further information
about what you offer. One good business practice is to ask "What
if" questions. The more of these "what if" questions you put on
your website the better. Questions like "What if there really
was a way to achieve financial security in as little as 90 days?
If that interests you, click here" Then make the 'click here'
box a signup for your autoresponder so you can stay in touch. As
mentioned above, remember you are dealing with individuals and
show the proper respect. If they ask to stop receiving
information you must respect that. If they *do* want more
information you must respect that as well. Which leads us to our
final success variable
5. The Follow Up Formula Many new marketers ask questions like
"How often should I follow up with prospects?" or "How long
should I continue to send them information?" Experience proves
that you should continue sending follow up information until the
prospect buys something or asks for the information to stop. How
many times have you bought an item the first time you considered
it? Even with supposed 'impulse' items like clothes it's not
uncommon to return to the store five, six, even seven times.
"I'm going to buy that sweater the next time I'm there" we say.
Then we forget. While the sweater store won't send an email
reminding us how great their sweaters are (although the smart
ones are starting to do so) WE must follow up with prospects and
stay at the top of their mind. The goal here is simply to be the
first name they think of when they are ready to buy what we
offer. Is success on the Internet easy? Yes and no. It CAN be
easy if you have a system that provides a great return on the
time you invest.
About the author:
C. R. Ellsworth is retired from Corporate America and living in
the 'Great North Woods'. He's been involved in On-Line & Network
Marketing since 2000. Related Information @
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