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You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > List Building > The Money Is Not In The List - It's In The Relationship |
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Member You - The Money Is Not In The List - It's In The Relationship
Making More With Existing Clients or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really dHave you ever put on a jacket you haven’t worn in a while and found a twenty-dollar bill in one of the pockets? You'd forgotten all about it, so discovering it is like getting a gift. If you've been in business for a year or longer, you may have gifts in forgotten pockets — sources of additional revenue waiting to be discovered and tapped.There are four ways to increase your net profits: reduce costs, increase prices, attract more cl Using Your eBay Store Categories You hear and read it so much, it is like a mantra. "The Money Is In The List!" Well, sort of. But it takes more than just having a list. There is something else that is very important and without it, you won't have a list for long.Few things are more frustrating than visiting an eBay store and be presented only with a mile long list of items that one has to scroll through. It is very difficult to find items in a long list if you are looking for a particular type or genre of item.What many eBay store owners do not seem to realize is that eBay buyers are not desperate to find and buy their particular items. There are so many auctions going on at any particular p You see, if you build a list and all you ever do is hit them with one offer after another, they will leave. Why? Because they don't know you and they don't trust you. Building a list is great but a list is nothing without the relationship. It is the relationship that is going to make or break your list and, ultimately, your success in business. Put yourself in the place of a customer. Who are you mostly going to buy from? Someone you don't know anything about or someone you know and trust. Pretty simple decision really, don't you think? So building a good relationship with your list is crucial to making a profit from the list. You need to start building that relationship right from the start. Beginning with your squeeze page or sign-up form. You need to let the prospective subscriber to your list know that their privacy will be protected and you will not give away or sell their contact information ever. And hold to that! Put yourself in the subscriber's place. Would you sign up to something if you thought your name and contact information was going to be given away or sold? The next step in building a relationship with your list is the very first email you send. It should be personable and a self-introduction. Don't use this or the first few emails to 'sell' to your list. In the first email, give some information about yourself and an outline of what is coming in future emails, such as tips, advice, an occasional quality freebie and recommendations when you come across products that will benefit them. Keep it short so your readers stay interested. One very important thing to remember starting with the first email is to always provide an easy, readily visible way for them to opt out of your emails. Besides being the law, it is also part of building trust. If you know you can leave without a problem any time you chose, you would be more likely to stay, wouldn't you? Also give you readers your contact information so they feel you are a real person who is approachable. People are more willing to trust someone they feel is going to be there for them if they have questions. In the first two or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really do Will a Domain Search Lead to Someone Else Stealing My Domain Name? urself in the place of a customer. Who are you mostly going to buy from? Someone you don't know anything about or someone you know and trust. Pretty simple decision really, don't you think? So building a good relationship with your list is crucial to making a profit from the list.Over the years I have come across a few people who believe that if they search for domain names using any of the domain registrars on the internet there are people ready to steal their domain name ideas. This thinking believes that if you are going to search for a domain name for your new venture, you better be ready to register that domain name on the spot or risk having someone else see that you looked up the domain name and register it You need to start building that relationship right from the start. Beginning with your squeeze page or sign-up form. You need to let the prospective subscriber to your list know that their privacy will be protected and you will not give away or sell their contact information ever. And hold to that! Put yourself in the subscriber's place. Would you sign up to something if you thought your name and contact information was going to be given away or sold? The next step in building a relationship with your list is the very first email you send. It should be personable and a self-introduction. Don't use this or the first few emails to 'sell' to your list. In the first email, give some information about yourself and an outline of what is coming in future emails, such as tips, advice, an occasional quality freebie and recommendations when you come across products that will benefit them. Keep it short so your readers stay interested. One very important thing to remember starting with the first email is to always provide an easy, readily visible way for them to opt out of your emails. Besides being the law, it is also part of building trust. If you know you can leave without a problem any time you chose, you would be more likely to stay, wouldn't you? Also give you readers your contact information so they feel you are a real person who is approachable. People are more willing to trust someone they feel is going to be there for them if they have questions. In the first two or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really d The Dark Side of Help Desk SLAs elf in the subscriber's place. Would you sign up to something if you thought your name and contact information was going to be given away or sold?You just signed a Help Desk Service Level Agreement (SLA) and now think things will get easier. However, you may soon be falling into one of these traps:1) COVERING THE TRUTH WITH METRICSIn some companies, those under the radar of SLA compliance may resort to doing the minimum instead of really solving the problem. This includes closing or reassigning customer tickets just to meet the ticket queue deadline. While a review of S The next step in building a relationship with your list is the very first email you send. It should be personable and a self-introduction. Don't use this or the first few emails to 'sell' to your list. In the first email, give some information about yourself and an outline of what is coming in future emails, such as tips, advice, an occasional quality freebie and recommendations when you come across products that will benefit them. Keep it short so your readers stay interested. One very important thing to remember starting with the first email is to always provide an easy, readily visible way for them to opt out of your emails. Besides being the law, it is also part of building trust. If you know you can leave without a problem any time you chose, you would be more likely to stay, wouldn't you? Also give you readers your contact information so they feel you are a real person who is approachable. People are more willing to trust someone they feel is going to be there for them if they have questions. In the first two or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really d Six Sigma vs. Total Quality Management short so your readers stay interested.Six Sigma is a relatively new concept as compared to Total Quality Management (TQM). However, when it was conceptualized, it was not intended to be a replacement for TQM. Both Six Sigma and TQM have many similarities and are compatible in varied business environments, including manufacturing and service industries. While TQM has helped many companies in improving the quality of manufactured goods or services rendered, Six Sigma has the pote One very important thing to remember starting with the first email is to always provide an easy, readily visible way for them to opt out of your emails. Besides being the law, it is also part of building trust. If you know you can leave without a problem any time you chose, you would be more likely to stay, wouldn't you? Also give you readers your contact information so they feel you are a real person who is approachable. People are more willing to trust someone they feel is going to be there for them if they have questions. In the first two or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really d Podcasting, Vodcasting, Streaming and Vlogging or three emails, give some valuable tips and advice. Maybe give them a freebie for being on your list. Make sure it is a good quality product, though, and not junk. That would be a trust killer. When you do start sending offers, always make sure you can truthfully recommend the product and know what you are talking about. The members of your list will lose confidence in your judgment and truthfulness if you recommend they buy something that you have not tested and/or don't use yourself. In other words, don't push stuff at them just to make sales. Recommend only products that you really do believe will benefit them.Streaming Audio began back in 1995 when 28.8k and 14.4k dial up speeds were the norm. The reason it was invented by a company called Real Networks was because if you wanted to download an audio file off the net it could take hours. Streaming got around that by compressing the file more and then as it was being downloaded it would play. The trick to this was called buffering, which was the process of always having 5 or 10 seconds of data dow Once you have built a relationship of trust with your list, you need to maintain it. Establish creditability, trust and confidence with your list and no matter how many offers they might see for the same products you recommend to them, they will buy through you links. That is what spending the time building a good relationship will do for you. You won't even need all the gimmicks that some use like adding mountains of bonuses to get them to buy. They will buy because they trust your judgment and believe in your truthfulness.
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