Some people will tell you that the answer is segmentation. Ramit Sethi says that’s a load of codswallop. Daniel Throssell agrees with him after testing with his email subscribers. Tony Shepherd has been doing it successfully for years. Funnily enough I have been doing the same thing for years as well.
The answer is a definite maybe. If they were all from a particular niche and your page was relevant to that niche, the chances are that you would make a lot of sales. If your page was not relevant to those niche visitors, the odds are against you. You still might make a few sales, but not many.
If they were all from a particular niche and your page was relevant to that niche, the chances are that you would make a lot of sales.
If your page was not relevant to those niche visitors, the odds are against you.
You still might make a few sales, but not many.
You might have gathered from the above that it’s not the number of visitors that counts, but the quality of those visitors and the relevance of your page to them.
There is a way to gather large numbers of visitors to your page who are related to your niche and let them self-filter to more relevant pages where you’ll have better conversions.
Not only that, but you can run links from your generic page to multiple specific pages that can make you money.
Ranking low-competition non-specific pages is relatively easy because most marketers want to fight for the money keywords.
Not you because you’re smarter than that.
Your money keywords are the links inside your long-form blog post that are on the generic page.
You’ll know how to do that if you watched the video in yesterday’s email.
This is something that anyone can do, and you can make money almost as fast. No, you don’t need AI to do this, but it will help. I’m not going to tell you about it because Marcus can do it so much better. https://www.youtube.com/live/Nyhcy2cOfXc?si=IMCqwaEq7H63nrD5
With most methods, paid tools can offer enhanced performance and speed, but if you’re not in a position to invest in those tools, rest assured, there are free tools that can still get the job done effectively.
Not as well, but free always has its own limitations.
That’s why most of what you were taught at school is useless. There we learned what answers to give to the questions asked. Essentially, modern schooling was invented in the Industrial Revolution to teach children to follow instructions and become better workers.
That’s why most of what you were taught at school is useless.
There we learned what answers to give to the questions asked.
Essentially, modern schooling was invented in the Industrial Revolution to teach children to follow instructions and become better workers.
Schooling hasn’t changed much in the interim.
The problem is that school does not teach you critical thinking.
University is supposed to correct that, but more and more they are centres of indoctrination rather than learning.
When it comes to making money that is never taught in schools.
They don’t even teach you how to budget effectively.
The reason for that is the lecturers and teachers don’t know; if they did, they would be doing it instead of screwing up kids’ lives with misinformation.
You may be interested to know that 60% of the millionaires in the USA have a college degree, but none of the billionaires did until the colleges began handing out honorary degrees in exchange for funding.
No matter what you read, watch, or listen to, you haven’t learned anything until you’ve put it into practice.
Even then you’ll only understand it when you can teach it to another person.
That’s why collecting all the training and software to prepare for success will not move the financial needle one bit.
You’ve got to take action on those learnings.
Then, and only then, will your income improve.
Regards, Brent.
P.S. Grab this for $1 and take action on the information provided.
We all know what we should do every day, but mostly we don’t. Even the simple stuff, like doing the work that moves the needle before you hit Facebook or read your emails. I do that some days, but mostly not. Even this almost daily email gets written at various times throughout the day.
What’s the difference? Beginners know nothing or very little, so you’ll be able to help them more easily, but they’ll frustrate the crap out of you because they are always looking for the “easy button”, and there isn’t one. Anything related to marketing, health, fishing, basketball, or any business, sport, or hobby has steps that
Beginners know nothing or very little, so you’ll be able to help them more easily, but they’ll frustrate the crap out of you because they are always looking for the “easy button”, and there isn’t one.
Anything related to marketing, health, fishing, basketball, or any business, sport, or hobby has steps that you must complete and gain some proficiency in before you can do it smoothly.
Beginners always want a shortcut.
Beginners always want free or low-cost options and tools.
Once people get beyond the beginner stage, they realise that progress will require investment in knowledge.
That might come from a mentor, coach, better training courses, masterminds, etc.
None of those will be cheap or push-button simple.
All of them will pay off and help those people gain much bigger benefits than the cost.
The costs increase as those people progress from the intermediate stage to the expert stage, as do their returns.
One highly experienced marketer I know paid $1,000 to a mentor for a one-hour phone consultation.
There was a nugget of information dropped in the first 15 minutes that paid that $1k back in the first month and has increased the earnings every month since.
That’s what you get when you pay for information from someone who is making more money than you.
What you get for free or at a low cost is usually generalist information.
You can use that to get started.
What you get when you pay for information are specifics that push your business forward.
Warrior Plus, JVZoo, YouTube, and ClickBank are not the places to get that expert knowledge.
Most of what you’ll get there is generalist information, that might be out of date, regardless of the cost.
It’s not a very good one, I’m blaming being in too much of a rush. Some of you will have noticed that there wasn’t an email yesterday. I was thinking that it would have been due to free camping, but it wasn’t. It was really due to me forgetting to bring my mobile internet modem with me.
Let’s assume that you have a great title and bullets for your squeeze page. You get a 55% subscriber rate, but your promise is greater than your delivery. Your subscribers are underwhelmed. They’ll take one of three possible actions at this stage. They unsubscribe.
Let’s assume that you have a great title and bullets for your squeeze page.
You get a 55% subscriber rate, but your promise is greater than your delivery.
Your subscribers are underwhelmed.
They’ll take one of three possible actions at this stage.
They unsubscribe.
They don’t unsubscribe, but they don’t open your emails.
They flag your emails as spam.
None of those steps helps you.
Some of them will actively impede your progress.
All because you couldn’t be arsed to make sure you delivered more value than you promised.
We both know that value is in the eye of the beholder so even when you deliver great value, there will be some who don’t hold it in the same high esteem that you do.
However, if what you’ve produced is not the best you can deliver an even greater percentage of your subscribers will think it’s sub-standard.
I’ve also been guilty of this, so don’t think I’m picking on you.
There is nothing worse for a potential subscriber than clicking a link that fails. It’s just happened to me and it annoys me. Now I have to delete an app and unsubscribe all because the link loaded a page with nothing on it. I don’t know why it didn’t work, but this is for an Australia-wide promotion, so how do you think it will go?
There is nothing worse for a potential subscriber than clicking a link that fails.
It’s just happened to me and it annoys me.
Now I have to delete an app and unsubscribe all because the link loaded a page with nothing on it.
I don’t know why it didn’t work, but this is for an Australia-wide promotion, so how do you think it will go?
I suspect that this whole promotion costs thousands of dollars when you include the printed cards with the QR code on them and the app in the app store.
You might have come across this before as well.
You sign up for something, you download the PDF, and the links in the PDF don’t work.
Either the website no longer exists, you get a 404 page, the videos don’t load, etc.
Always check your links.
Always check your funnel.
When you have an email sequence, sign up for it with a unique email address and make sure the autoresponder is working.
Once you have tested everything you can, you’ll have an excellent chance of building an email list that will respond to your emails.
Disappointed people unsubscribe or, worse, mark your emails as spam.
A simple step that is neglected by even experienced marketers, if you believe the emails that say, “link fixed”, which I don’t.
Pro tip: You can always go back to their previous email where the link didn’t work and test it.
I usually don’t bother though.
If I didn’t open the email before, there is no compelling reason to open their subsequent email.
Check your links, funnels, and autoresponder work.
The knowledge you’ll gain can be used over and over to build tiny little businesses that run on autopilot to generate small passive profits every month.
You’ll even discover a brick-simple way to generate free traffic that keeps flowing.
Do you play games? Not just video games but any sort of game. The thing about games is most of them have a beginning and a defined end. It might be time-based, score-based, or some other criteria, but they are nearly all finite in scope. So how would you turn traffic generation into a game?
So how would you turn traffic generation into a game?
You create challenges for yourself.
For 30 days you challenge yourself to create two videos a day and upload them to YouTube.
Or, for 30 days, you challenge yourself to post one 1,000-word article to your blog every day.
Or, for 30 days you challenge yourself to create and launch a product every day.
You get the idea.
Your challenge is personal.
You set the challenge, the rules, and the time frame.
If you miss a day you have to catch up.
You might have a schedule like this.
1 hour research.
1 hour creation.
1 hour launch/post/upload.
Done beats perfect.
Doing the work will teach you how to get better.
Consistency will always beat any competition.
After 30 days you’ll have an audience.
You’ll probably have made some money.
You’ll be set to make a lot more, and you’ll know exactly how to do that.
I’m prepared to bet that fewer than one in ten of those who read this email will do this.
Prove me wrong.
Regards, Brent.
P.S. When you follow the instructions and method in this, https://go.wm-tips.com/diamond, you’ll short-cut the research and product creation from hours to minutes.