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Do You Apply Innovative Ideas At Christmas To Help Your Business?

What kind of business do you want during the holidays?

ChristmasGetting or giving…

A combination of both?

Some internet marketers will email their list with a gift or discount on a product.

Some won’t even acknowledge the season, this time of year is the time to build relationships with your list or customers.

I’ve noticed some who continue pushing a relatively higher priced product at this time of year, when most folks have their money going towards presents for friends and family.

If most would stop and think these products would, in my opinion, be best sold at another time of year.

Sure, not everyone agrees with this thinking, but…

Anyway, Merry Christmas Everyone!

Who Else Needs A Way To Get Real Buyer Traffic To Your Web Site?

The other day I was talking with an old friend of mine who has a business selling health care products through his website.

He’s spent a lot of money developing his website and hisproduct is one of the best out there, but he just wasn’t getting enough visitors to his site to make it all worthwhile.

He told me that a couple of months ago when he searched for his site on Google it was on page six.

Page six!

Who ever looks on page six?! The amazing thing is that now he’s on page #1 for his region and things are finally picking up.

It sounded to me like he’d employed some sleazy search engine optimization company to fix up his website, but he said no — he did it all himself!

I was astonished to say the least.

Let me say this guy is NOT a webmaster extraordinaire or a marketing guru.

He’s just a ordinary guy making products in his basement.

How did he get so good at search engine optimization?
He told me that someone had put her onto a free program called Traffic Travis.

“It’s harder to explain than it is to use!” he joked.

Basically it’s a piece of software with all the tools used by these professional search engine optimization companies. It helps you find the right search terms to focus on, then it analyzes your site, analyzes your competitors’ sites, shows you your linking relationships and pulls all the information you need into one screen.

You have to remember, though, that this guy is just a work-at-home man who didn’t know his Google PR from his knee.

Fortunately the software came with tutorials that explained important concepts as well as how to use the software, AND some really comprehensive bonus material which revealed all the tricks and theory behind the search engines. “Once you start to read about it you just want to learn more. And then once you’ve learned more, you want to analyze your site down to its bones. And then you want to analyze everyone else. It’s totally addictive! I never knew that stuff was there!”
Armed with this knowledge he was able to tweak his site and within a couple of weeks he was seeing a real increase in traffic. “The site is finally starting to pay for itself! It’s my baby, it’s so nice to see it growing!”

Click here to learn more

When you consider how much you’ll learn and how much extra business you could earn, and the fact that the software is FREE… I think it’s at least worth taking a look, don’t you?

Can Creating a Great Mini-Site Mean More Sales Volume?

minisite

I hope this short tutorial helps those who are thinking about starting an online business. Creating a site for your product can be a daunting task sometimes, but is really not all that difficult with the right tools. Well here goes…

The word “minisite” can refer to a number of different things. Some people call small niche article sites minisites, but that isn’t the general use of the word. In Internet marketing, the word “minisite” is generally used to refer to very small websites that are set up to sell a product – usually an eBook or other digital download.

Most minisites are only 1-5 pages. Some of them are only a single sales pitch page, plus perhaps a thank you page for after the customer orders. Others have a contact page, a terms of service page, a frequently asked questions page, or other general pages.

For the purpose of this tutorial, we’ll just work on creating a single page minisite, and we’ll cover only the design – not the sales copy. Most minisites have several key parts. They usually have a header and footer, although some have only a header, or may have neither.

Special note:  One of the best free site editors I’ve found is here!

They also have a sales letter of some sort, which is used to sell the product. Finally, they have an order button that is clicked when a customer wants to purchase the product. Some minisites also have an eCover, which is a computer-generated image that mimics what the product might look like if it was a physical product.

For example, if the product is an eBook, the eCover might look like a hardcover or paperback book cover (sometimes a spiral notebook, too). If the product is a membership site, the eCover might be a membership card. Software products usually have a 3D software box as their eCover.

The first step in creating a minisite should be creating your eCover, if you intend to use one. Most people create their eCovers with Photoshop, because most eCover action scripts only work with Photoshop. If you don’t have Photoshop, you may need to create it from scratch, or have it made for you by a professional graphic designer.

After you have your cover design, you’ll need to create a header. Although some marketers don’t use headers, most do. A well-designed header can draw attention to your headline, and it can make your site look more professional.

The header should contain your product’s name and a tag line – like a one-sentence blurb that tells what your site’s about. It should also contain a photo that’s related to your niche, and it might also contain a small version of your ecover – all tied into a theme for your demographic.

Let’s say you’re creating a minisite to sell your dog-training eBook. Your header would potentially contain a picture of a woman pointing at a dog, and the dog sitting down. Then the text on the header might say something like the following: Dog Training 101: The Ultimate Guide to Training Your Puppy or Adult Dog!

Don’t make your header too large. If the header is so large visitors can’t see the headline without scrolling, it’s too big! It should attract attention to the headline, not hide it. Headers are generally between 700 and 800 pixels wide and 100-200 pixels in height.

The footer is usually the same width, but about half the height of the header. It may only contain the product name or logo, but may also contain an image or copyright notice. Finally, you need an order button that draws a lot of attention. Your button might contain your eCover, plus a brightly colored button and a call-to-action, such as “Click Here for Instant Access!”

If you have the money to invest, you might consider ordering a minisite package from a professional designer. For about $300, you’ll get the header, footer, eCovers, and sometimes extra banners that you can use for off-site promotions.

If you need any specific help, leave a comment and I will get back to you!

 

Does Internet Consolidation Mean Traffic Being Ruled By The Power Elite Few?

consolidationSomething is stirring in the bowels of the internet.

A “movement” so strong that only the big guys will survive.

I started seeing the change when Firefox broke the IE hold on internet browsers.

Now many sites are owned by a select few with much of the internet traffic directed to them.

In fact, the top 100 sites have more traffic than the next 900 combined.

Seth Godin made an interesting point on his blog about this traffic he labeled “the power law curve!”

I am afraid the few are going to rule… then the internet as we know it now will disappear.

You see traffic is the lifeline of every site… but you already knew… didn’t you?