Subject: High School Drop Out Strikes Gold On The Internet
A former high school drop out from N. Ireland,
Andrew Fox left high school with no qualification's
or prospects for the future.
With nothing but raw determination and an un
relinquishing desire to succeed he was able
to turn the tables.
After working as a movie store assistant and
car washer, Andrew started his own Internet
Company back in 1999.
After a string of successes and failures Andrew's
business really exploded when he was invited
to speak alongside several millionaire business
owners at Car Galletti's 'Internet Marketing
Super Event' held in Treasure Island Hotel, Las
Vegas.
Andrew, just 21 years old shocked the crowd
with his powerful speech.
His latest product shows how the ordinary
person can start an instant internet business
selling products they don't even need to
create. For anyone on a shoe string budget
it the perfect entry model.
It's presented in a video tutorial format for
easy learning.
http://dominatingclickbankvideo.com/
Andrew said "I find video teaching much better
than a standard ebook or even audio. I'm glad
it's helping so many people out there'
For more information on Andrew Fox and his
latest products visit his website here
http://dominatingclickbankvideo.com/
Monday, June 22, 2009
Saturday, June 20, 2009
How to How To Break The $10,000 Sales Barrier, Take Things To The Next Level, Get Things On Auto Pilot And Discover The Internet Lifestyle
"How to How To Break The $10,000 Sales Barrier,
Take Things To The Next Level, Get Things On
Auto Pilot And Discover The Internet Lifestyle
Is Alive and Well In Spite of Naysayers"
By Marlon Sanders
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It's exciting to see those first sales come in online.
I'll never forget.
I lived out of a 600 square foot apartment. Anthony
Robbins and I would have been tight back then. Actually,
though, I was quite proud of where I lived at the time.
I had a little white, wooden desk my friend Kelli had
given me.
I started out pre-www on AOL and Compuserve. I've told
some of those stories elsewhere. You didn't have affiliate
programs back then but you did have "dropship"
arrangements where people would dropship books for you.
Anyway, the FIRST time I broke the $10,000 a year barrier
was when I was buying ads in these little freebie penny
shopper newspapers with classified ads in them.
People would call from the ad into an answering machine.
You didn't have voice mail then. So I ran 4 or 5 answering
machines with the sales pitch and an offer to send the
book C.O.D.
I ran ads in 72 cities and grossed $12,000 or more.
I had no back end or repeat business, although I did try
sending along a catalog. It just wasn't related enough to
make sales.
The lessons I learned were:
1. You have to promote in volume.
You need a lot of ads out there. Or resellers and
affiliate running ads. Emails being sent out to lists. Or
links on web sites. You need quite a bit of SOMETHING
working on your behalf.
2. You need a back end related to the front end
My initial sale (front end) was about buying cars dirt
cheap. That would have made for a logical back end. So
here's what's fascinating about that.
The late, great Corey Rudl sold $500,000 a year or
something like that of his car secrets book. And he
devised an email he sent 4 days after the sale
automagically that referred people to a few resources.
He made quite a bit of money on that follow up email.
It's my belief that Corey created the demand for what
later became known as autoresponders. They didn't exist at
the time. Corey had custom programming that would send
that email 4 days after the sale.
But when people read his course, everyone wanted to do it.
Thus, autoresponders were born.
The point here is that Corey experimented and found
something AFTER the initial sale that people WOULD buy and
it amounted to quite a bit of money.
My little $12,000 a year business would have been a
$50,000 or $100,000 a year business if I had a few things
that sold on the back end.
Here's a really FASCINATING idea to test out that I heard
on a seminar from Agora master marketer Porter Stansberry.
Porter says to sell people on the back end more of what
they just bought.
In other words, the ONLY thing you know they want to buy
is what they just bought. So sell 'em more of the same,
just at a higher price with more value.
That's something I've never experimented with. Not in that
precise manner.
Now, since I am the King of Step-By-Step Internet
marketing with all my Dashboards and so forth, it'd just
be wrong to not give you a step-by-step gameplan for going
beyond $10,000 in sales.

==================================
Marlon's Step-By-Step
Gameplan To Break $10,000 In Sales
==================================
1. Think in terms of multiples
I ran ads in 72 cities. Not one city.
I have thousands of resellers. Not one reseller.
Now, since $10,000 isn't that much money, you probably
only need 5-10 decent affiliates promoting for you.
2. Get a front-end product that converts
Your affiliates (the best traffic source) are going to
need a product to promote that sells better than ice in
100+ temperatures.
The way you GET your offer to that point is by split
testing. To start with, you can use Google Website
Optimizer to do your testing. When you get more
sophisticated you can do true Taguchi testing, which is an
advanced topic for another day.
If your offer doesn't convert well, you have a few
options:
a. Try juicing up the offer
-- Add new or different bonuses -- Experiment with your
deadlines and scarcity -- Try a different guarantee
b. Try a new product
Dead ducks don't quack.
3. Test the living daylights out of your front-end email
sequence
People go to your squeeze page and fork over their email
and possibly their name and email. The current trend is to
ask for email only, since at the moment this gives your
squeeze page success rate a significant bump.
The idea is that you're going to turn that autoresponder
series into what the oldtimers called a "greased chute."
You know, people enter your series and you pull out EVERY
trick in the book to get 'em to buy.
You know, you got flying pigs, dancing cows, offers that
make the eyeballs pop. That sort of thing. This isn't a
time to be subtle about your USP, your credibility or
other things.
4. Don't just hammer. Mix in content.
Some people would disagree with this point. They feel it's
best to send all offers and no content.
Based on my current experience, I recommend mixing in a
good dose of content or quasi content because you'll
extend the period of time in which people read your
emails.
The question is whether you mix in true content or the
illusion of content. Do you tell Matt Furey style stories?
Do you do your best imitation of John Alanis? Or do you
send "what to do" but not "how to do it" emails?
I mix in good content.
But this is open for experimentation.
By the way, if you don't know who Matt Furey is or John
Alanis, you've not been reading my ezine long and enough
and you don't own enough of my products! Or you'd know who
they are.
So just hang in there and I'll get you up to speed.
5. Get at least one back-end offer that converts.
You're going to need at least one solid back-end offer.
You've got to find a way to make it convert. That might
mean doing webinars or teleseminars, either live or
pre-recorded.
It might mean a really long sales letter. In spite of the
common myth that people don't read long letters, they DO
if they're buyers. And do you really care about the non
buyers?
If they aren't in the market for a more extensive solution
to their problem or want, they aren't going to read the
copy. If they are, they probably will.
6. Look at the back-end offers successfully promoted by
competitors for ideas.
What do they sell? How do they sell it? What are the price
points? You don't need to reinvent the wheel on this. Do
what you know works and put your own spin on it.
-- Do they have a continuity, membership-type program? --
Do they sell a workshop, seminar or some other form of big
ticket? -- How do they sell it?
These are things inquiring minds wanna know.
7. Run the numbers
Let's see, you need to sell 100 products at $100 to bring
in $10,000. That is 8.33 products a month and 2 products a
week.
Just having your offer on ONE marketer's thank you page
could give you those numbers, or better.
After you get those 100 sales, look at making 100 in 6
months, 3 months or a month by duplicating what already
worked for you.
Now, you need to get 10% of those 100 buyers to upgrade to
a $300-$500 something or the other. $500 x 10 = $5,000.
Then get one or two of those to spend $2,000 for another
$4,000.
8, Stop pre-judging and ACT
One of the biggest obstacles you'll have is the paralysis
of analysis and just analyzing everything to DEATH! What
you need is more action and less analysis.
Analysis is great. But those who take action rule the
world. Get busy. Create products. Promote. And make bank.
THEN put it on autopilot. See, you put the whole sequence
in the autoresponder and kick back in the Bahamas. Highly
credible naysayers will TRY to convince you the Internet
lifestyle is b.s.
But realize that they have their own agenda, products,
courses and programs to sell.
Autoresponder marketing worked soon as Corey Rudl invented
the basis for it and it STILL works on auto pilot today,
just like it did back then. We all owe more to Corey
Freaking Rudl than hardly anyone knows.
Gurus today don't even know that because they weren't in
the Game back then. They don't know what they don't know.
Follow the above 8 steps and you WILL crack the $10,000
barrier.
Have fun and go do it.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Marlon Sanders is the author of "The Amazing Formula That
Sells Products Like Crazy." Check Out the New Amazing Formula that Sells Products Like Crazy Click Here
To get on his killer ezine list, to get cheat sheets and all kinds
of other goodies every Saturday and during the week, to get simple,
to-the-point Internet marketing know that works real world without
all the hype, go to: FreeOnlineMarketingEbook.com Click Here and subscribe. Marlon Can Predict Your Future! Click Here
Take Things To The Next Level, Get Things On
Auto Pilot And Discover The Internet Lifestyle
Is Alive and Well In Spite of Naysayers"
By Marlon Sanders
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It's exciting to see those first sales come in online.
I'll never forget.
I lived out of a 600 square foot apartment. Anthony
Robbins and I would have been tight back then. Actually,
though, I was quite proud of where I lived at the time.
I had a little white, wooden desk my friend Kelli had
given me.
I started out pre-www on AOL and Compuserve. I've told
some of those stories elsewhere. You didn't have affiliate
programs back then but you did have "dropship"
arrangements where people would dropship books for you.
Anyway, the FIRST time I broke the $10,000 a year barrier
was when I was buying ads in these little freebie penny
shopper newspapers with classified ads in them.
People would call from the ad into an answering machine.
You didn't have voice mail then. So I ran 4 or 5 answering
machines with the sales pitch and an offer to send the
book C.O.D.
I ran ads in 72 cities and grossed $12,000 or more.
I had no back end or repeat business, although I did try
sending along a catalog. It just wasn't related enough to
make sales.
The lessons I learned were:
1. You have to promote in volume.
You need a lot of ads out there. Or resellers and
affiliate running ads. Emails being sent out to lists. Or
links on web sites. You need quite a bit of SOMETHING
working on your behalf.
2. You need a back end related to the front end
My initial sale (front end) was about buying cars dirt
cheap. That would have made for a logical back end. So
here's what's fascinating about that.
The late, great Corey Rudl sold $500,000 a year or
something like that of his car secrets book. And he
devised an email he sent 4 days after the sale
automagically that referred people to a few resources.
He made quite a bit of money on that follow up email.
It's my belief that Corey created the demand for what
later became known as autoresponders. They didn't exist at
the time. Corey had custom programming that would send
that email 4 days after the sale.
But when people read his course, everyone wanted to do it.
Thus, autoresponders were born.
The point here is that Corey experimented and found
something AFTER the initial sale that people WOULD buy and
it amounted to quite a bit of money.
My little $12,000 a year business would have been a
$50,000 or $100,000 a year business if I had a few things
that sold on the back end.
Here's a really FASCINATING idea to test out that I heard
on a seminar from Agora master marketer Porter Stansberry.
Porter says to sell people on the back end more of what
they just bought.
In other words, the ONLY thing you know they want to buy
is what they just bought. So sell 'em more of the same,
just at a higher price with more value.
That's something I've never experimented with. Not in that
precise manner.
Now, since I am the King of Step-By-Step Internet
marketing with all my Dashboards and so forth, it'd just
be wrong to not give you a step-by-step gameplan for going
beyond $10,000 in sales.
==================================
Marlon's Step-By-Step
Gameplan To Break $10,000 In Sales
==================================
1. Think in terms of multiples
I ran ads in 72 cities. Not one city.
I have thousands of resellers. Not one reseller.
Now, since $10,000 isn't that much money, you probably
only need 5-10 decent affiliates promoting for you.
2. Get a front-end product that converts
Your affiliates (the best traffic source) are going to
need a product to promote that sells better than ice in
100+ temperatures.
The way you GET your offer to that point is by split
testing. To start with, you can use Google Website
Optimizer to do your testing. When you get more
sophisticated you can do true Taguchi testing, which is an
advanced topic for another day.
If your offer doesn't convert well, you have a few
options:
a. Try juicing up the offer
-- Add new or different bonuses -- Experiment with your
deadlines and scarcity -- Try a different guarantee
b. Try a new product
Dead ducks don't quack.
3. Test the living daylights out of your front-end email
sequence
People go to your squeeze page and fork over their email
and possibly their name and email. The current trend is to
ask for email only, since at the moment this gives your
squeeze page success rate a significant bump.
The idea is that you're going to turn that autoresponder
series into what the oldtimers called a "greased chute."
You know, people enter your series and you pull out EVERY
trick in the book to get 'em to buy.
You know, you got flying pigs, dancing cows, offers that
make the eyeballs pop. That sort of thing. This isn't a
time to be subtle about your USP, your credibility or
other things.
4. Don't just hammer. Mix in content.
Some people would disagree with this point. They feel it's
best to send all offers and no content.
Based on my current experience, I recommend mixing in a
good dose of content or quasi content because you'll
extend the period of time in which people read your
emails.
The question is whether you mix in true content or the
illusion of content. Do you tell Matt Furey style stories?
Do you do your best imitation of John Alanis? Or do you
send "what to do" but not "how to do it" emails?
I mix in good content.
But this is open for experimentation.
By the way, if you don't know who Matt Furey is or John
Alanis, you've not been reading my ezine long and enough
and you don't own enough of my products! Or you'd know who
they are.
So just hang in there and I'll get you up to speed.
5. Get at least one back-end offer that converts.
You're going to need at least one solid back-end offer.
You've got to find a way to make it convert. That might
mean doing webinars or teleseminars, either live or
pre-recorded.
It might mean a really long sales letter. In spite of the
common myth that people don't read long letters, they DO
if they're buyers. And do you really care about the non
buyers?
If they aren't in the market for a more extensive solution
to their problem or want, they aren't going to read the
copy. If they are, they probably will.
6. Look at the back-end offers successfully promoted by
competitors for ideas.
What do they sell? How do they sell it? What are the price
points? You don't need to reinvent the wheel on this. Do
what you know works and put your own spin on it.
-- Do they have a continuity, membership-type program? --
Do they sell a workshop, seminar or some other form of big
ticket? -- How do they sell it?
These are things inquiring minds wanna know.
7. Run the numbers
Let's see, you need to sell 100 products at $100 to bring
in $10,000. That is 8.33 products a month and 2 products a
week.
Just having your offer on ONE marketer's thank you page
could give you those numbers, or better.
After you get those 100 sales, look at making 100 in 6
months, 3 months or a month by duplicating what already
worked for you.
Now, you need to get 10% of those 100 buyers to upgrade to
a $300-$500 something or the other. $500 x 10 = $5,000.
Then get one or two of those to spend $2,000 for another
$4,000.
8, Stop pre-judging and ACT
One of the biggest obstacles you'll have is the paralysis
of analysis and just analyzing everything to DEATH! What
you need is more action and less analysis.
Analysis is great. But those who take action rule the
world. Get busy. Create products. Promote. And make bank.
THEN put it on autopilot. See, you put the whole sequence
in the autoresponder and kick back in the Bahamas. Highly
credible naysayers will TRY to convince you the Internet
lifestyle is b.s.
But realize that they have their own agenda, products,
courses and programs to sell.
Autoresponder marketing worked soon as Corey Rudl invented
the basis for it and it STILL works on auto pilot today,
just like it did back then. We all owe more to Corey
Freaking Rudl than hardly anyone knows.
Gurus today don't even know that because they weren't in
the Game back then. They don't know what they don't know.
Follow the above 8 steps and you WILL crack the $10,000
barrier.
Have fun and go do it.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Marlon Sanders is the author of "The Amazing Formula That
Sells Products Like Crazy." Check Out the New Amazing Formula that Sells Products Like Crazy Click Here
To get on his killer ezine list, to get cheat sheets and all kinds
of other goodies every Saturday and during the week, to get simple,
to-the-point Internet marketing know that works real world without
all the hype, go to: FreeOnlineMarketingEbook.com Click Here and subscribe. Marlon Can Predict Your Future! Click Here
Saturday, May 23, 2009
How A Little Short Guy, Terrified of Selling, Started A Business From Scratch At Home And Made $78 Million

How A Little Short Guy, Terrified of Selling, Started
A Business From Scratch At Home And Made $78 Million
By Marlon Sanders
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"So Marlon, how did you like the swimming pool?" he
asked me.
"Walter, what swimming pool?" I whipped back.
He said, "You open the door in my bedroom and it
goes into a room with an Olympic-sized swimming
pool that belonged to FDR."
FDR stood for Franklin D. Roosevelt, the famed
President that got America out of the great
depression, according to many historians.
Anyway, I opened the little side door in Walter's
bedroom and sure enough. After you walked through
the spa room, there was another room with this
olympic-sized swimming pool in it. And you could
see the steps and the rail FDR used to lower
himself out of his wheelchair into the pool.
You know you're doing OK on money when you have an
ex-President's pool in your bedroom.
Walter had built a new house. So I was staying
in his bedroom in the old one. My purpose there
was to write sales letters for him.
Back in the day, I charged per page.
Copywriter's today would make fun of charging per
page.
But they don't get it.
Back in the day, there were precious FEW copywriters.
You could charge however you wanted. My fees at the
time were in the top 5% or 10% of all copywriters.
Not that I had a LOT to compete with.
So here was this little short guy. Walter "Itsy
Bitsy" Hailey. He started out as a failure in selling
and ended up making 600 million via a few businesses.
His FIRST successful business sold for $78 million,
even though the actual "earnings" of the business were
only a few million. He always told me he started it at
home from scratch. Of course, he quickly outgrew his home
and moved to offices and all that jazz.
Why? Because a really large company stood to make a
small fortune from the lead generation system he'd
assembled. THAT is how valuable a lead generation
system is. In essence, this company paid $78 million
for not much more than a lead generation system!
Was it worth it to them? Sure was. They stood to
make many more millions from it on a yearly basis.
But all his success boiled down to one thing --
having a SYSTEM for selling stuff, whatever it was.
Notice I didn't just say "being a great sales person."
You don't build billion dollar businesses by selling
everything yourself. You create a SYSTEM for selling
that's a whole process.
Once you get that System down pat, you can bring in
sales people on salary or commission (or both) to
do the selling for you.
Lead generation on a consistent basis separated Walter
from everyone else. He created Systems that generated
tons of leads. All sales people want qualified, warm
leads more than anything else.
If you have warm, qualified leads (interested people)
then the sales people will come.
One time Walter and I took a walk outside his ranch
home up the somewhat steep hill there. I fired question
after question about his lead generation System.
I could write a book or two on what I learned from
Walter.
But the main thing is that a sales machine does NOT
run without a steady flow of leads.
Here are a few common mistakes people make in putting
together their lead generation System:
1. Failing to identify the hot buttons of the target
audience.
You can't get people into your marketing funnel unless
and until you know what turns them on. Walter knew
the hot buttons of his audience inside and out. This
is step one.
Just as an example, when Walter spoke at conventions
for dentists, he offered a freebie report on a super
hot topic if they'd just give him their business card.
Almost everyone did because he KNEW their hot buttons.
2. Failing to know in advance the OUTCOME you want
when someone enters your marketing funnel.
Walter had a clearly defined path his prospects would
go through.
Where are they going? What actions are they going to
take? How are you going to get them to buy progressively
larger amounts over and over?
3. Trying once or twice to get people into your marketing
funnel and then giving up.
Success results from testing and tracking a variety of
possibilities over and over. Walter used inbound sales
people for this. But in other businesses, he used outside
commission sales people.
4. Not knowing in advance the "marketing play" you're
running.
Are you targeting people who are underserved? Overserved?
Non consumers? Are you playing offense? Flanking moves?
Guerrilla tactics?
5. Using feast or famine lead generation techniques
that leave you high and dry after "the big event" is over.
Walter lived and breathed lead generation, just as you
should. You just can't set up too many lead generation
systems.
One thing Walter did in his seminar business for dentists
was tons of public speaking. This crude lead generation
method takes a lot of work but he did it all the time
because he knew how critical a constant flow of leads was
to that particular business.
6. Failing to split test many variations of your name
capture "squeeze" page until you get 50% or more to join
your list on a consistent, routine basis.
7. Failing to have a pre-planned, tested follow up
sequence in place.
Now, that may sound like a daunting task. But a friend of
mine just totally rebuilt his marketing funnel since January
of this year. He anticipates doing $70,000 this month, all
from consistent, steady lead generation, without product
launch mania.
He anticipates being able to ramp up his funnel to $100,000
a month within 6 months. And this guy has been involved
in Internet marketing for only 2 years, more or less.
What's his secret?
Focus on lead generation, Systems and the marketing process.
Just consistent, steady, routine Systems in place.
Who do you want to target?
Why do you want to target them?
Do they have money to buy?
What will you offer them as a freebie to GET them into your
marketing funnel?
What marketing sequence will you follow up with to get them
to buy?
What are YOU focusing on?
Have you been focusing on finding places your target audience
hangs? Creating offers that get them on your list? And then
a sales process or sequence that gets them to buy progressively
larger dollar amounts from you?
Some people hesitate to sell larger dollar amounts.
I can tell you from a great deal of personal experience that
people will benefit VERY LITTLE from things they pay little
for. Psychologically, they don't value or respect the information.
It's why I'll be drastically increasing the price (and value) of
my Ateam calls shortly. At the stupid cheap price of $37, I can't
even get my members to show up on the calls.
Why?
Flat out I'm charging too little. You don't value what you don't
pay much for. You need to realize this and get bold about charging
your customers what your products and services are worth -- without
guilt.
If you don't value what you sell, how is anyone else going to value
it? I'm NOT saying charge for shoddy products. It's a given that
you sell quality products and services.
But don't be shy about charging for what you sell. Of course, you
have to learn the marketing SKILLS that allow you to GET PAID for
the great value you offer.
One of my friends used to sell a seminar. He had to raise the
price to $5,000 before he could actually get people to DO what they
learned. Any price less than that and they didn't value the info
enough to actually do it. They just viewed it as something
interesting to think about.
Again, people don't respect and value what they don't pay for. Mark
it down. Repeat it as your mantra. You know that whole thing about
"move the free line?" Yeah, it's true -- on your initial marketing
funnel. You gotta do whatever it takes to get people INTO your
funnel.
Once they're there? Charge 'em. Seriously. If you don't "get
that" then you really don't understand how the human brain works and
you've got a lot of learning about marketing, psychology and the
human brain to do. Now, if you don't care what people do, or if you
don't care if they benefit, then yeah, sell your stuff for a song
and a dance and be done with it. You won't help that many people
but you'll get lots of compliments on how cheap you are.
So what secret did Walter have others didn't?
1. He built lead generation machines.
His Systems generated thousands and thousands of leads from hot,
interested prospective buyers (what we in the biz call "prospects).
2. He charged a fair but substantial price for what he sold.
There's a saying that the trick to having money is to get people
to buy from you, or something like that.
I think it was Zig Ziglar who said poor sales people have skinny
kids.
3. Walter had a passion for learning
There's this odd balance between buying information and doing.
If all you do is buy, buy, buy and you never DO, then you're on
the wrong path.
At the same time, you'll find out that Charlie T. Jones spoke
the truth when he said, "Leaders are readers."
You gotta balance learning and doing. You need BOTH wheels on
your marketing machine.
ACTION STEPS
1. Find out who you want to target with your offer.
2. Make an enticing offer to get people into your marketing funnel.
3. Create a lead generation machine to send lots of people into
that marketing funnel.
4. Assemble your follow up system to get people to buy from you.
5. Charge for the value you create. Don't undersell yourself.
6. Split test the living daylights out of your lead capture page!
7. Sell progressively higher-priced products with matching greater
value and service.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Marlon Sanders is the author of "The Amazing Formula That
Sells Products Like Crazy."
Get more details on the Amazing Formula that Sells
Product Like Crazy: Click Here
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
“Striving for success without hard work is like trying to harvest where you haven't planted” -David Bly quotes
Monday, May 18, 2009
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