Showing posts with label Marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marketing. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Don't Sweat the Cost: Even cheaper ways to build a membership

You get what you pay for in building a membership site - even if it's your own sweat-equity

(photocredit: jonkeegan)

I was just about to wrap this up review of Mike Dillard's Elevation Income and publish it as a book (after being distracted by various other subjects and projects) when I found a solution to other problems which fit here.

That makes this a footnote or postscript of sorts.

As you recall, the secret to his millions was a membership site pushed by affiliates.

The trick to pulling this off is to figure out how to do it without the expensive solutions he was pushing in his video's.

A little research found this:

You can actually set up a membership on a Blogger blog.

This means your costs are already covered. No additional expense. Except your own time.

There are really just two ways -

  1. password protect the entire blog, make it private and by invite only. 
  2. add a script which password protects any whole page/post or just part of it. 

This password function has been built-in to Wordpress for years. My point with Blogger is that you can get it hosted on their servers for free, and being part of the Google+ scene will probably make your site and content rank better. (Wordpress.com has numerous fees for hosting your blog there - and simply won't let you put affiliate or sales links on their free blogs.)

I first ran across building a Blogger membership site in Blogs by Heather. She said you could either protect the whole blog, or use a script to protect a whole post or page.

However, I searched wider to see what else was available and find if anyone came up with the same conclusions.

This post from Silly Girl gives a very nice script that's found on vincentcheung.ca and is able to selectively block just some parts of the text. (With another, shorter tutorial on that script at Simple Blogger Tips.) That's probably your best bet overall, since the non-member could become enticed to see what they were missing - and you don't have to have "Pro" and "Free" sections delineated as much. (Again, they get what they pay for.)

The whole page method would give you links to pages that don't show up. (Harder to do this with posts.) However, it would be good for ecourse delivery.

Drawbacks
The drawbacks to this overall is that you can't easily run your own affiliate program, that you can't do split-testing.

The other point is that you can't drip content and then have it disappear. (One way to get people to buy the book based on the content is to have their original content go by-by after several weeks. Should have downloaded it when they had the chance. Now they have to buy the book to get your hard-won content. Of course, that has the benefit of now being readily available on their tablet or smartphone in one package...)

And finally, all these solutions have only one password. Meaning that eventually your hard-coded password will find its way onto forums. You'll need to reset it at least once a year or earlier.

That leaves our best solution being a plug-in-based Membership site built on a Linux-based Wordpress self-hosted as the best bet overall. (And you should host it on Amazon's scalable cloud, which is yet another research job I won't hold up the book for.)

Pluses
The pluses are that you can start immediately with nothing but the autoresponder and domain name you already have. External affiliate sites (as already covered) can provide you with the recurring payments you need, and will handle the refunds for you. Meaning costs are next to nothing, just a lot of work figuring out how to get it running. See the tutorials.

A side note is that even if you post on Blogger, the point is to give it a CNAME so it's not [YourNiche].blogspot.com, but rather [YourNiche].[YourOwnDomain].com - this should tell Google's bots that it's a "real" blog, not a cheapo.

The bottom line, is of course the value of the content, regardless of what hosting you use.

That's the un-stated real sweat equity in any site you put up. I've seen some otherwise well-marketed memberships fall apart when you saw how cheap the content really was. (They called it "underground." I called it "amateur.")

- - - -

Now it's back to the book. I'll put a nice link and cover-shot up when it's done, so: Stay-Tuned; Subscribe.
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Sunday, November 3, 2013

How to Build a Successful Membership - Review Notes

It's all a matter of belonging - not just avoiding pain. 

photo: Terry Johnson, on Flickr
What Mike Dillard missed on his Evolution Income launch is the belonging point. I could go on for hours on the motivation points he doesn't cover (but I'll save that for the copyrighting course I'm collating.)

People join memberships to belong to something. This is fourth in the set of approval, control, security, and belonging - the glue-points which people stick anything to themselves. (See "Get Your Self Scam Free.")

Sure, it's easy to explain marketing in terms of the simple "Seek Pleasure, Avoid Pain" mantra. 

And I'm afraid that I've gotten off on a bit of a tangent already. 

I got my Insta-Member membership plug-in downloaded and was busy going through the bonuses, extras, and resources they give. (Real value here...)

One set of videos and an accompanying transcript was particularly enlightening. And my notes (excerpts) from it are below. 

The key points:

  • People join memberships to belong.
  • Plan your work, work your plan. ("Those who fail to plan, plan to fail.")
  • Stick to your budget and your current needs. Don't invest in extra's you don't know you need.
  • Always, always give unexpected value - in addition to the promised value.
  • Your niche knows what it wants and how it wants it. Ask and deliver.
  • Track your attrition and solve by more carefully delivering what's needed and wanted.
  • 3 working methods for driving traffic: Ads (online and offline), SEO, JV affiliates. Social networks help, but not as a main line.
  • Plan out your content 6 - 12 months in advance, but just create 2 or 3 months and get started now.
- - - -

Review Notes of "Membership Site Secrets" from Insta-Member bonuses: 


This is probably PLR they found, but it's good stuff. The presentation is both video and text (which I appreciate, since text is faster to digest.) A bit dry (English, sounds like) but you'll see it covers key points you'll need to know to make your membership a success.

(If I were able to get word to Dillard & Co. about how to improve their Elevation Income course, they need a video on just what to expect when running a membership. Because that is what I'm having to fill in here.)

The real advantage of a membership site is that the buyer becomes actively involved in the sales process.

So, the basic principle of a membership site is a buyer joins a site, they become a member, and then you build your relationship with them as sort of an active buyer.

1 – A Very, Very Good Revenue Model


Membership sites are a very, very good revenue model.

The big benefit to you, as the marketer, is that the buyer becomes actively involved in the sales process.

So, not only are you earning your membership fee, your $5000, say, a month, from your 100 members at $50 at month, but if you display login offers as well - and maybe you change it every week or something like that, you put a new on one there - then of course, you can increase your income from that.

So, it's a good autopilot business model and one that you really, really should consider.

Membership sites also appeal to one of humankind's fundamental needs: we like to have a sense of belonging.

But perhaps one of the biggest benefits - and this, I think, is one of the things that a lot of marketers like - is a membership site gives you control over their access to the material.

So, membership sites are a good business model.

And one of the best reasons: affiliates love membership sites with recurring incomes, because it gives your affiliates recurring incomes.

2 – What Membership Script to Use?


One of the first choices you're going to have to make is what membership-site script do you use. There's lots and lots of them on the market, but which one's the best one for you? 

Also bear in mind that some membership-site scripts require you to purchase add-ons.

And instead of just buying the bits that they need, they buy all the things that they might need. And of course, that bumps the price right up. 

So, before you can pick a membership-site script, you need to understand how you're going to use it.

So, think about what you're going to use right now and in the immediate future.

Can you use it on as many servers as you want, or just on one domain?

Are you planning on displaying login offers and one-time offers to them?

How easy is it to use?

So, how easy is it for you to use?

Do they provide a guarantee period?

What support do you get?

Another influencing factor that again, can influence your choice of budget, is: are lifetime upgrades free or not?

Remember, before you install any upgrades, though, do you actually need it?

Another good question to ask yourself is: how long has this script been around?

One thing you may or may not want is can it drip feed content?

How easy is it for you, not for anyone else, but for you personally to install, setup, administrate, use, add products to, add new members to, etc., etc.

Can you do it yourself, or do you need to outsource it?

This is the other thing as well is can members easily upgrade their membership from between the different levels?

Can the script handle recurring billing?

Does it provide support for a free membership option?

How well does a script protect your content from theft?

Does it protect your content from sharing?

Does it plug in to other scripts you plan to use?

Perhaps one of the most important is, will it work with your web host.

3 – Membership script examples


Different scripts that you know, you may want to say, well yes that is for me, that is not for me. So, we are going to look at that now, but write out what you want from your script. Answer all the questions we have asked here, write it all out, and then look through the different scripts, and decide which one is the best one for you. 

4 – Picking a Niche


Picking a niche is actually very, very important.

Ultimately the success of your membership site relies on you being able to give your members what they want.

So, always give them plenty of value.

But, what you're after is providing the solution to the problem.

And remember, you can just use a membership site as a delivery mechanism for your product.

Don't get caught up in the fact that a membership site has to be, you know, recurring monthly products and information.

Could it become like a training course?

But sometimes, when you're picking the niche and deciding how it will work as a membership site, sometimes you need to step outside your box and have a think.

But, once you've picked your niche, your next step is to determine what format membership site you're going to create.

Whatever format you choose, it has to be suitable for your niche.

That sort of thing, a fixed time membership tends to be a bit more intense if you do it once a week because you're keeping more in contact with your members, you're more interactive with them then, and you're constantly reminding them that you're there.

You either bill a weekly, monthly for that fixed period of time.

Now obviously they're paying in advance, so you bill them now.

Now, the next option is monthly payment.

Or the final option is product delivery or training sites: how to look after your hamster, how to restore your classic Mustang whatever it might be, things like that, how to train your horse.

So, it's worth spending the time in the planning stage.

5 – Content


One of the things that destroys many membership sites before they have a chance to get off the ground is the content.

You need to be able to provide something that means they have to be a member.

I would also recommend providing regular updates.

Always deliver your updates on time.

So, you need to make sure that you give a MASSIVE value in that first month.

But it's very, very important to listen to the feedback from your members.

Now, when it comes to providing content, you can either write it yourself.

You could hire or interview experts.

Alternatively, you can hire freelancers.

One of the best forms of content is what we call user-generated content.

The other alternative, and this is my preferred option, is rewritten private-label-rights material.

Now, the format you use, whether it's going to be audio or books or video, is up to you.

It depends upon your niche, depends upon your skills, your budget, your equipment, and so on. But, you've got to make sure you provide high-value content. It's got to be ideally unique for you, it's got to be good quality, and it's got to be something that people go, "Wow, this is so worthwhile!" You don't want it to be anything where they're looking at it and going, "Yeah, whatever," because that means unsubscribed. So, make sure it's good quality. And this gives you some hints and tips on where to find the content. 

6 – Solving Attrition


Every single membership site will suffer from attrition.

Now, typically, average membership lifetimes, they vary. It could be anything from a few months. Sometimes it's three to six months, in most membership sites.

So, what you need to do is monitor your unsubscribe rate.

If you find your unsubscribe rate is too high, then you may well have a problem with your content.

If you have high-value, exclusive information, then your members are going to stay members for longer.

What you will find - and this is typical for all membership sites - is the majority of people will leave in the first month.

It means, for you, the people that stay are quality buyers.

One of my favorite tricks with a membership site is to offer random bonuses and random bits of information.

If you know what your market wants and delivers it, then it's going to help you to retain your members.

You also want to be sure that your members are clear on what they are getting.

Ensure that your content is always delivered on time, every time.

If you ensure that quality's always very high, then that also is going to help retain members.

If you can encourage feedback and interaction with your members, that also is going to help you to retain members to your site.

This sense of community is vital for people.

7 – Common Mistakes


Now, the first mistake that many people make is bad marketing.

If you can rank well and you can market your site well then, obviously, you're going to do well as a membership site.

You also need to understand where does your traffic come from?

If you're information's out of date or boring, then that's a big, big mistake.

A lot of people, as well, don't plan their membership sites in advance.

If you're active in gathering testimonies as well, that's going to help.

You have to make sure that your membership site makes it really, really obvious where to find the information that they've paid for.

Also, is the content you're adding, content that your niche wants?

If you have free members, market to them and sell them the full membership.

Also, make sure you communicate with your members regularly.

Always, as well, make sure you get feedback from your members.

And another big mistake that people make, and this is, again, a common one and it can bring down a membership site, is not delivering the content on time.

8 – How to Advance and Succeed


Now, obviously, one of the first ones is to make sure that you've planned your content in advance.

Now, ideally have your content created in advance.

What I tend to do with a membership site is I create a month or two of content, test the membership site to see how it's working. If it works well, I create pretty much the rest of the content and then it's all there and it's all being delivered over time. And that works very, very well. But, you have to think about that. 

But, with any membership site, you always have to work to get new members.

If you provide unexpected bonuses and additional content, pretty much randomly, it's going to increase the value of your site to your buyers.

You do need to understand what your target market wants.

Always provide them with the most up to date information you possibly can.

Encourage your members to contribute to your site as well.

You also need to keep an eye on your niche as well for competition.

Keep an eye on the market as well and see what the new techniques are, new developments, and so on and so forth.

This is a mistake that lots of people make. They don't step outside of their box.

Always make sure that you think about what your members want and think laterally, if you like.

The watchword, I believe, with a membership site is, "Add value."

9 – Driving Traffic


In order for you to really succeed with a membership site, you have to continually drive traffic to it.

Unless you happen to have a big waiting list for your membership site or you have a big mailing list, then traffic really is the answer for how to replace these members.

You need to also optimize your site for the search engines.

If you choose to participate in niche related forums and groups, that is going to help you to get traffic, it is going to help build your reputation.

You can also choose to advertise in newsletters and ezines.

The other option, and again this is going to cost you some money, but it is a very good option, that very few marketers actually do but one that is very effective, is to advertise offline in relevant publications.

You want to look for joint ventures as well.

You can also create social networking groups related to your niche.

Now there is a lot of things you can do to get traffic, but I really, really recommend that you make sure you rank well for your keywords because it is going to help you to maximize your revenue and your profitability, and ultimately that is what you are after.

10 – Opportunities For You


At the end of the day, a membership site is a really, really good business model, there is a lot of potential for profit in them, a lot of opportunities for you.

So, a stable source of income can make a big difference between Internet marketing being something you do a little bit of and you hope it pays the bills, to something that replaces your full-time income.

So, what you need to be able to do, is to help people really get that sense of belonging, and that is the whole point of your membership site.

Firstly, pick a niche.

Then determine which script you want to use.

Plan out six to twelve months worth of content.

You do not have to create it all, just create the first couple, but plan out the first six to twelve months, because you can use that in your marketing material, so that people know what to expect. Then set up a site, buy your script, install it, configure it, create your content, add the content to the site, start marketing it, and getting members. 

As members join, recruit them as affiliates, get them to market your product.

And then basically, keep marketing it, getting it ranking well, get traffic to it, get involved in forums and groups, and this and that and the other, and get traffic to it so you get more and more members.

So, take this step-by-step action plan, take the information you now have, go and create a membership site and enjoy the many, many benefits that it will give you.

Coming next: How to get your Insta-Member membership plug-in up and running.

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Friday, November 1, 2013

The Story Mike Dillard Never Told

...because he hasn't yet learned it.

Stage Mess + Wrong Focus


The old traveling minstrel was able to make a living and support his travel habits by  telling the same stories over and over - leaving town when he'd exhausted everyone's patience by telling them too many times, losing their entertainment value.

But - you can't tell a story you don't know.

And Mike has this problem - which is why he's searching for answers.

If you have one story to tell, you need to constantly put new decorations on the set and new costumes on the players, and a new title on the marquee - so people continue to come and pay to be amused, enthralled, and enlightened.

So it is with the Mike Dillard Show.

While you can take his stories and apply them to almost any circumstance, you'll see from any study that his success is actually built from several foundation pieces which are just tips of icebergs, repeated over and over to build something solid enough to put a play on.

In all of humanity, you'll find that mostly there are two main stories:
  • How Come
  • How To

For Dillard, the How Come is explained by direct-response psychology, and the How To is a membership site.

And these two skill-sets can be re-dressed and re-spun indefinitely.

All you have to do is to learn how to copywrite and market, and how to set up and run a membership site to get people paying your costs over and over.

(Why Dillard has had such success is that most people won't learn either. Even while Joe Sugarman says that just partially learning copywriting will improve your sales markedly, I can count the decent books available on building and running memberships using just a few fingers of one hand. Find that .0001% of people who dedicated themselves to learning how to write copy, plus maybe just as many figuring how to set up and operate a membership - and you'll see that you have a very rare individual. Even Dillard agrees he knows next to nothing about the technical end. So if you just studied these two subjects, the world would be completely open to you - just as it has for Dillard in the two outrageous successes he's already had.)

That simple formula (of getting people to pay you for the same story over and over) has been used since the times before our Histories were being written.

This old, old story is simple to make money with. Tell people you know how to save their lives and get them to pay you to take them to the Promised Land. Even Dorothy of Oz was able to persuade her three companions to set out to see this Wizard with no more than a hope based on a rumor.

You don't even have to know where you are going - you just need to be willing to lead. Somewhere. Anywhere. As long as they feel they are making progress, they'll keep following you and paying you. It hardly even matters that you're practically travelling in circles - as long as they're satisfied to continue paying you, you keep leading them.

This is the difference between a Scam and "The Real Thing(TM)." Both use marketing to spin their stories. Scammers will take you somewhere and leave you. Then they simply put new costumes and stages up and attract a new audience. Successful Marketers will keep re-dressing the scene and actors, but they leave the audience satisfied and moving from one act to the next.

Much like the old story-tellers from the "dime novel" era (as well as Shakespeare) would leave cliff-hangers from one scene to the next. The audience is always left wanting to know the answers to questions of "what's going to happen next?" and "but - what became of Little Nell?" If you've ever read Louis La'Mour, you'll know this type of writing style. He also extended his characters between stories, such as his long series about the Sackett family, many of which were made into movies.

That's entertainment.

There are far more How To's and How Come's which explain why copywriting, sales, and membership sites work. Each are actually broad subjects with many teachers.

All you need to know is that they do - unless you are curious enough to take your skill-sets to the next level, and even beyond that.

(To some degree, even in this article, I'm simply redressing the stage and actors, leaving you with a cliff-hanger.)

Your other alternative is simply turning around and doing more of the same, indefinitely. Lots of people (about 97-99%) do this for their entire lives. That's why we have jobs (both factory and cubicle) and why we ship our children off to schools where they are all taught how to keep a job.

There is a 1-3% out there who have managed to shrug off this training. (Thomas A. Edison was home-schooled, as well as Abraham Lincoln. Most of the richest people on the planet either never finished college, or went to no-name schools to get degrees.)

And these few people control the bulk of the wealth out there. I wasn't surprised to hear the other day that around 90% of the stock that changes hands on Wall Street is owned by this minority of people.  So the media saying that this or that affected the stock market is just putting new window dressing up so you'll come in and buy. Same old story, different reasons. Some government report comes out, the market moves up or down that day as a result. Oh, really?  (Of course, in this Internet age, you see that the media on both left and right are themselves just repeating the same stories of mayhem and destruction over and over, so the bulk of humanity will stay glued to their TV sets and advertisers will continue to pay. So it is with what passes for movies...)

The moral to this story - is that Mike Dillard is right. Once you have a model, then keep using it as long as it's successful. New scenery, new costumes, new acts. Keep the money flowing in.

It's a life, after all. Or so we've been trained.

The other option you have is to continue asking "how come?" and "what if?"

The trick is to get people to pay you to tell your story, regardless of what you find.

But as Dillard shows, that's really no trick at all. Any good copywriter can do it. Just pay someone to run the lights, draw the curtain, and sell the tickets out front.

See you in the movies.

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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Getting Dillard's Kit isn't even the beginning - it starts earlier than the 90 Days...

90 Days isn't just that easy - it's your prior years of hard-won knowledge and experience that  will determine if you make your business an breakthrough in actuality.

Harley Breakthrough

Breakthroughs aren't luck. They aren't won from a lottery. You earn them.

Napoleon Hill said in his Think and Grow Rich, - "You can't get without giving."

In our case, the fledgling entrepreneur must invest his or herself in the process of learning personally how to make each and every part of an online marketing campaign work - as far down into the nuts and bolts as he or she want to dive.

Mike Dillard spent several years - from graduating College up to his 27-year-old millionaire breakthrough - just getting ready to succeed. But then that first million - and an 8-figure continuing online business resulted.

Practically, it was his dogged determinism and studying everything he could lay his hands on that had to do with direct response marketing - these are the points where he prepared for building that 1 1/2 year success story that's touted.

Those results were duplicated earlier, in a Canadian fitness chain by T. Harv Eker. This was not his first million dollars - but it was the first one he kept, and this was his leveraged buy-out which gave him a chance to retire and form his second multi-million-dollar empire. The results are the same. The core principles are the same.

Mike Dillard actually got lucky that he didn't blow it all from the mistakes he made and the self-professed "Doo-Dads" he was buying. (And these stories are documented in the video lessons.) But he hired Robert Reisch and the results we now can study at our leisure.

Both Dillard and Eker cover the same point: "Begin with the end in mind." Eker wrote the book on this point, called "Speedwealth" - where you can take your business from zero to nothing rapidly.

This is the follow-up course to Elevation Income, as far as I'm concerned. (But at least it's a free download, and Eker hosts seminars on this every year...)

Through this blog, I've covered here all the shortcuts you can take - but they won't help you learn the hard-core skills that are required. This is again your "rain-making" skill. Until you have it, you won't be able to make any 90-day business wonder for yourself.

So don't cut this short. That's the real reason for the hours of professional-grade videos and 500 pages of text in Elevation Income.

I've been through some other programs before (although I've not paid this much before - I'm frugal, after all) and none really comes up to the Elevation Group level.

Not that this course is really set to make you a success. It's got some holes I've tried to punch through for you. (Like the point that you can't really start from scratch and need to pay a few hundred a month from income you haven't made yet...)

Still, the concepts are real, and solid. Most will need to be internalized before they become real - and effective.

My own breakthrough was seeing that it was simply a JV-launched membership. When you have the background of everything else (my own hard-won  years of dissecting so-called Internet Marketing) - then this starts to make everything fall into place.

The scene with IM is that there's no relative importances assigned. You're left to figure things out on your own. On top of that the usual adage, "if it sounds too good to be true" leaves you with not a lot of choices.

The trick is to find people who are honestly working to help people. Of course, they get richer in the process. Just the way things work.

Yes, the scene is that only 1 in 10,000 will really see success with this or any material. 1 in 1,000 will get some results. Everyone else buys their ticket and takes their chances. Just the way things work.

The point is to make all this available to anyone and everyone. Because without that chance, they don't have one.  And that is how the rich have always worked. That's the real scene behind how they remain rich.

It is a mindset scene. The rich just think different about money. This was Eker's point in retiring so that he could think out how this actually worked. He'd made his millions and now he needed to figure out what just happened. He started personally coaching others in marketing, finally resulting in the book and regular seminars on "Secrets of the Millionaire Mind."  He could have easily said Your Millionaire Mind.

Because that is where it really happens.

You change your mind and then you change your life. Believe it and then you'll see it. Hill covered this as "Whatever the mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve."

And that is why you should get this course, all in addition to the other studies you'll need to do.

Once you know the nuts and bolts of how online success is put together, then you'll see how simple it is to duplicate it.

And the next course in helping people with their million-dollar successes will be yours.
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