Posts Tagged ‘Simple Answer’

Pay Per Click The Struggle Goes On

Monday, June 28th, 2010

In this article you will see a few items about the system of Pay Per Click or PPC. What is pay per click used for and how does it fit into our society today. What is a PPC bid and how should you start with PPC as far as how much money you should spend. Last but not least you will see the biggest mistake that most PPC clients do and and then sadly do again. What is Google Pay Per Click used for, well that is the most simple answer you will get today.

This is the spot for Internet Marketers or you to make money on the internet using a simple way to reach millions of people about the product that they are promoting. Simply put for advertising, you can make a lot of money with this system or you can lose a lot of money if you are not careful. There are a lot of good and profitable affiliates that are making a good living with PPC most have been doing it for a while. You can do this system as well if you pay attention and listen to what people are attempting to teach you.

The first thing we are going to go over is the pay per click bid, this could actually be any figure depending on your projected income and your ability to find good key words. The most important thing I can tell you is the term relevancy. The term relevancy is simply put that the key words that you are putting down should pertain to your product. What do I mean by this? Well if you are advertising for a dog product such and a pet food company like Purina Dog Food.

Then you should use terms which apply to the product such as Purina, or other items that may be in the link page. Yes you are going to have to research products before you sell them if you want to make money. If you just use dog food as a key word then you are going to get a lot of clicks and maybe even a view or two but no paying customers. The main trick to a low bid on PPC is relevancy.

The biggest mistake that Affiliate Marketers make is advertising for a product that is not a good one or has a high refund rate. If you are just starting in the field you should also be checking the history stats of a product. You can get such items such as weather the product is on the rise, are people making money with this product, how much money will you have to give back to the customer if they want a refund.

Yes that falls back on you if the customer gets a refund you will be loosing money. So as well as researching to find out what good key words are you also have to investigate the product for what they refer to as Earn%, Earn$, Refund, Momentum, and etc. There is a lot of work to do naturally before you put your market out on the internet.

Access realistic knowledge in the sphere of internet marketing – study the web page. The times have come when proper info is really only one click of your mouse, use this opportunity.

Large White Lies In Email Subject Lines

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Something is bugging me bad, no actually, I am feeling very angry about it. During my studies of how people write emails to make money, and use autoresponders in their business, I have discovered a trend that is disturbing. subject lines in emails are becoming very deceptive. Inappropriately using specific subject lines to grab the reader’s attention and misleading, or misleading the readers.

Capturing the attention of your prospects can be a difficult challenge, and a good subject lines always get the desired attention. Subject lines such as; discover The Secrets of Making a Residual Income, The Guru’s Are Trying to Ban This Report, Must Read Controversial Report Exposing Email Tricks. Headlines like these do get readers attention.

Why do they get the email list attention? Simple answer they are feeding into human desires discover secrets, find out what guru’s want hidden, or controversy always seems to peek prospects attention.

But, I have read many very misleading subject lines that misleading the readers, and are taken out of context, or just a plain old lie.

Subject lines that are not acceptable to use especially when trying to give away free reports, software, ebooks recordings, or videos. Subject lines that infer that a reader has purchased an item, and is available for example; your order confirmation. If the reader has not ordered anything and the marketer is trying to give something away to get names, and email addresses. The marketer is deceptive the readers with a misleading subject line.

Here are some other examples of misleading and deceptive subject lines that are not appropriate for building an leads list. Subject lines that are misleading can be damaging to your business are for examples are; Here’s your free download, your order confirmation,
Thanks here’s your download link, First name your requested download, and Download you requested.

The headlines mentioned are all appropriate if email list have ordered something, requested a free download, or have given their name and email address to receive something from the marketer, then and only then are these headline appropriate.

If you as the reader has experience these types of deceptive and deceptive headlines, and been very disappointed that all the marketer wants is your name and email address; you are not alone.

My personal solution, and a recommended solution to these deceptive and deceptive subjects lines; opt out of the leads list. Click on the link at the bottom of the page that reads; if you no longer wish to receive emails from me, or some similar statement click the link. If you are asked to give feedback, report a problem, write in the box you feel there is deceptive and deceptive subject lines being used in their autoresponder email.

I believe that as a marketer I should have integrity and not mislead or deceive my leads list members, or anyone else. I feel it is of the utmost importance to hold other marketers to those same standards. You can do the same thing by holding marketers to higher standards because we have given them trust, and they have violated that trust. If any marketer is willing to be deceptive or misleading what else are they being deceptive or misleading about?

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Why Having Business Insurance Is A Very Good Idea

Friday, April 30th, 2010

There is quite a simple answer to this question really. If you dont have business insurance then you really could get into serious money problems if someone tries to bring something against the company. If you are a small company then the first claim put against you could well be the last making the business cease to exist altogether.As soon as the first claim has been put against you it is going to be a lot more difficult to even approach insurance companies let alone get them to listen to what you need insurance for. (more…)

Email Newsletter Software and Open Rate Tips

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

Do you know the best day of the week and time to do your business email marketing and send your email newsletter? Have you ever wondered if your fellow newsletter marketers are all sending at the same time you do? Convinced your open rate is too low or even too high?

Some recent stats may help you answer these questions: What Kind of open rates Are email newsletter marketers getting and what kind of email newsletter software are they using. If you are sending HTML emails, you probably use your open rate to help rank your success. Even though its not a perfect gauge of whether people are actually opening and reading your emails, its useful as a relative measure: If it goes up over a small period of time, more people are probably reading If it falls over a short period of time, its almost certain fewer people are reading.

Plus, all other things being equal, it can give you some motivation (if your open rates are lower than other senders) or satisfaction (if your rates are higher). So, here goes Average Open Rate Last Month: 13.6% So when is the best day to send?

You will often hear that Tuesday is the best day to send, because on Monday people are busy from the weekend, and that on Tuesday morning you will have their undivided attention before they start into their work for the upcoming week. Do the numbers back up that?

The rate of opens by day of the week: Monday 13.78% Tuesday 13.32% Wednesday 14.18% Thursday 14.61% Friday 13.36% Saturday 12.18% Sunday 13.46%. Just last month, Tuesday was the second worst day to send. I should point out this, too, the hour of the day that got the best open rate was not 9-10AM or during the morning at all, but in fact 2-3PM Eastern Time ” email newsletters sent during that hour last month enjoyed a 19.3% open rate. Does This mean I should switch my campaigns to Thursdays?

Simple answer, no. if you already are sending to a contact list. Do not break with your readers expectations just to try to follow the latest day of the week stats. You might actually reduce your open rate. In both March and February, Thursday newsletters got the 3rd-worst opens vs. the rest of that week.

I hesitated a little to release these stats, because I realize that people may start sending their newsletters at the day or time that happened to get the best results lately. Please, do not drastically change your sending schedule because you see that the average last month, happened to be higher on a different day. Yes, you might eventually be able to shift your sending schedule, or split test some campaigns, but if you up and move everything, you may throw off your subscribers who are used to hearing from you at the usual time.

To get at the other reason for not changing your sending based on these stats. If everyone switches their sending schedule to send on say, Thursday, then recipients will start getting a ton of email that day, and start paying less attention to each individual email and you still have a lower conversion. One possible reason for Thursdays success last month may be that it wasnt as popular as say, Tuesday or Wednesday for sending email: Percentage of Newsletters Sent by Day Monday 16.1% Tuesday 17.8% Wednesday 16.8% Thursday 16.7% Friday 15.3% Saturday 8.9% Sunday 8.9%

Higher-volume days mean more emails in readers in boxes, which might contribute to reducing open rates. Following that reasoning, some people may look at the lesser weekend volume and see an opportunity to get their audiences undivided attention.

My main point in showing these stats is to point out that our assumptions about what works are often quite wrong, and that you ultimately have to test for yourself to see what best suits your audience. Some Inspiration And Some Help. Are you getting better open rates than this? Give yourself a pat on the back, but dont get complacent. Open rates arent the be all, end all of email metrics and email newsletter software can play a roll in actual conversions. They do not guarantee that people are reading your emails, only that they have images turned on and that they probably saw your email for at least a moment.

Some ideas that can help you raise your open rates: Ask people to add you to their contact list. Some business email marketing platforms will display images from senders who are in the recipients contact list. If you are putting pictures in your emails, use the ALT text for those images to pique readers interest in what the picture is, so that they enable images. Or directly ask readers to turn on images! Add a picture of yourself to your emails, near/next to your signature. People like seeing your smiling face, and if they see it in one of your emails, they may be more likely to turn on images to see it again later.

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