More and more people are realizing that the Internet offers great
potential to set up a healthy business for pennies on the dollar.
This is good news for internet marketers - but it also means that
they need to lift their game.
Why? Because the would-be "netpreneur" has access to way more
training than ever before. It's possible to get up to speed very
quickly on what is needed to get started online. This, in turn,
means that people quickly recognize what offers true value and
what does not. They see so many sales letters that they become,
to a certain degree, immune to the typical hype. They're willing
to spend - but they want value for money. They want to be treated
like intelligent and discerning adults.
So here's a message to all 'gurus' (and aspiring gurus) who are
keen to get their share of the dollars waiting to be sent flying
their way via cyberspace.
1) What does it take to make people want to buy "you" rather than
some other internet marketer?
2) What might make people want to unsubscribe from your list?
3) And what pushes them into asking for a refund?
What Makes People Want to Buy?
- They buy if they can see that a product will give them new
knowledge and understanding.
- They buy if the purchase will speed up business growth.
- They buy if a product will automate a task that eats into their
time. (People quickly learn to spend their time on marketing and
product creation, rather than repetitive tasks.)
Tip: Once newbies have been exposed to a few sales pages, it's
not long before they learn to look beyond the sales hype. They
study a sales letter carefully to work out what the product will
"really" offer them. (Do they need this? Or will it duplicate
something else they own?)
They also learn to look for value for money. Some higher-priced
products are worth every cent. Some cheaper products add very
little to what they already know.
(Note: Savvy internet marketers already realize that if they put
together online interviews offering truly valuable information,
they are far more likely to attract and keep new customers. A
quick example: Jane Smith listens to a one-hour audio interview
on search engine optimization and traffic. She finds out some
really useful information she has not so far heard anywhere else.
She decides that this guy knows what he's talking about and
shells out a couple of hundred dollars for his products.)
What Makes People Want to Unsubscribe from a List?
- Getting four identical emails trying to sell them the same
product, because the sender hasn't figured out how to move them
from one list to another after they buy.
- Getting a 'canned' email sounding full of excitement about a
new product or service - which turns out to be a duplicate of the
email they get from six other marketers who are affiliates for
the same product.
- Getting email from a product creator about anything under the
sun because you bought XXX product from them. If your customers
sign up for a newsletter, they expect mailings.
What Makes People Want to Ask for a Refund?
In the past, buyers tended to shrug and write off a bad purchase.
But increasingly, people are prepared to stand up for their
rights. If they feel they have not received value for money, they
will ask for a refund.
So what makes them decide to ask for their money back?
- Software that doesn't work as it is supposed to.
- Physical products (CDs, DVDs) that don't work on their
systems.
- An e-book that is full of content easily found in an hour's
net-surfing.
- An e-book that has skimped on content or that has been poorly
written.
- An e-book that not only skimps on content but is full of links
to up-sells to get the 'really valuable' information, or is full
of affiliate links.
The last case, an e-book full of affiliate links or links to an
up-sell...is something you should be giving away free as part of
your viral marketing campaign. Charge for it and you risk your
reputation for being a source of quality information.
Other things that bite into your customer's valuable time.
- MP3's that are streamed from a website rather than being
downloadable.
- e-books that are in ".exe" format only, so the customer can't
print them out in one 'hit' (and can't access them on a Mac
computer).
Give your clients anything that they can listen to or read away
from the computer. Most of them spend enough hours a day at the
keyboard already. They'd rather load an audio interview
into their MP3 players and listen while they go for a walk or
relax in the sun. They'd prefer to print out an e-book and read
it or mark it up while sitting in an easy chair.
Please, please don't tether them to the computer!
And finally, about those "name squeeze" pages. People are very
quickly getting tired of having to give up their email addresses
just to get to a sales page. Do you want them to buy or not?
These days, unless there's a huge buzz around the Net and they
want to see what it's all about, prospective customers are just
as likely to click the 'back' button on their browser, or close
the window and leave.
So if you are collecting email addresses, make sure you are
giving them something valuable in return. Something that they
want and can use. Not just another sales page.
After all, there's always another internet marketer waiting to
sell them a product. Probably one very similar to yours.
Marketers who respect their client's time and intelligence are
the ones who will get their loyalty - and their cash.
Megan Mart, Publisher and Webmaster.
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