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Happy Thanksgiving!

November 23rd, 2006 by Walter Gavurnik

Wishing everyone a VERY HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

This is the time of year where we review what we have done. Remember to not only be thankful for what you have, but what you don’t have as well! There is ALWAYS someone with less than you and worse off than you are! Being thankful you are not one of them is selfish. Rather, be thankful there are others willing to help those in a lesser position.

This weekend I will have everything completed! Make sure you return so you do not miss the FREE entry! What is the FREE entry you ask? The first 250 people to sign up will receive a lifetime subscription to my new site.

To your success
Walt

 

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Goals and Visions!

November 22nd, 2006 by Walter Gavurnik

I read an email from my friend Eric Holmlund which is Eric’s tips!
Below is an excerpt:
Having vision for your business is kind of like looking at the world from 30,000 feet. Everything looks perfect and calm. You can see the big picture. When you’re looking down from 30,000 feet you don’t see the problems. You don’t even see the obstacles. You just see the big picture and it looks beautiful. But as you get closer to the ground, you begin to see the obstacles. There are bumps, and hills, and mountains to overcome. Rivers, lakes, and valleys to cross. The biggest stumbling block is where the rubber meets the road. What happens is when we actually get started, we encounter obstacles and problems that obscure the vision and cause us to become myopic. We begin to see only what is directly in front of us and we lose sight of the big picture. Unfortunately, that’s where so many aspiring internet marketers hit the brick wall. They never progress any further. If you lose sight of your vision, you lose hope. And if you lose hope, it’s game over. That’s why it’s so important to begin with the end in mind, and KEEP that vision as a central motivating factor in your mind.I realize that I’m speaking somewhat metaphorically here, and it’s because I’m trying explain something invisible. Having VISION is an abstract concept, so the best way I know how to describe it is by painting a picture.

The successful marketers I met with in Vegas have this intangible quality that sets them apart from “everyone else”, and THAT is what I want you to understand in this.

Are they just lucky?

No, I am sure they are not. In fact, I watched several of them LOSE money on the blackjack tables. They are NOT successful due to luck.

Where they “born into it?”

No, I don’t think anyone has been born an internet marketer yet. Well maybe my kids will be, but I can assure you that these successful internet marketers did not just inherit a family business. The internet hasn’t been around long enough.

Are they smarter than everyone else?

Of course they are intelligent people, but I am sure they are not smarter than everyone else. After all, there are educators, doctors, and all sorts of extremely intelligent people reading this newsletter who are smarter than me in many ways, but who are not successful internet marketers. Therefore intelligence does not equal online success.

Is it simply a matter of prior experience?

The above is GREAT stuff. Clicking on Eric’ s name will take you to the entire post.This brings me to Vision! What IS your VISION? Is your vision not your goal? Where you want to be? The ULTIMATE destination?

You see, a GOAL, IS YOUR VISION! Without planning, your GOAL cannot be acheived! If you do not plan, you WILL fail! The analogy is something like:
If you fail to plan, you plan to fail

This is where goal setting steps in. Without a goal, you have planned to fail!
A VISION is a wonderful thing to create a business. Goals make it better!

To your success
Walt

 

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Fed Up AGAIN!

November 14th, 2006 by Walter Gavurnik

I am totally upset with what the email marketing sector has done! Here is an example:

From: Andrea XXXXXX
Subject: Andrea

From: Brunno XXXXXX
Subject: Re:

I received 175 of these emails today alone! Does ANYONE think I will open an email with the subject line as the name of the sender or the just Re: ? COME ON PEOPLE! THINK!!! Who the hell is going to open your email if you do not tell them who you are or what your email is about? How about the NO SUBJECT line?

Lesson:

  • Be creative!
    Copy and paste is not the way to go! Those premade emails you have been asked to send are good, but only for the first people using them! Don’t forget that most are filled with typo’s. VERY unprofessional!
  • Change!
    Change the subject line. Change the content. Change the message itself! If your message is the same as everyone elses, it will be deleted and never opened! TRUST ME! That is what happens with your crap!
  • Spam!
    90% of the above mentioned stuff is SPAM! Is THAT what you want to do? Do You Want your site shut down?

Please review the can-spam laws. The 90% mentioned above do not contain a return email, an unscribe link, or Name and address. In fact, the from addy is a bogus domain! More on the in the future 

 

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Fed Up

November 4th, 2006 by Walter Gavurnik

While compiling my next post, something more important came up. It has to do with Internet Marketing and where it is headed. The following is part of an email from a friend, Dr. Mani:

At 9:30 in the morning, I was examining a patient when my cellphone rang. I answered.

  “Sir, I’m calling from XYZ bank.  Would you be interested
  in a personal loan for….?”

Curtly, I ended the call and returned to work.

At 2 in the afternoon, the phone buzzed while I was in a meeting.

  “Hello?”

  “I’m calling to offer you a no-strings cr.edit card with
  enhanced limits…”

Click. At 6 that evening, as I was driving my daughter to the park, I got another call.  “Sir, I’d like to let you know about our new range of home loan options…”
   ***** THIS IS THE LIMIT! *****
While I was getting one call a week, or even every day, it wasn’t too troublesome.  Easier to ignore. At 2 per day, it started getting irritating, annoying, and I kept thinking about doing something to stop it. But when I got junk calls to my cellphone from banks THREE times in a day, I decided enough is enough - and so did MILLIONS of others.

   Today, we have a ‘Do Not Call Registry’
  
   The entire banking industry loses - big time!

Why tell YOU about this?

Because something similar is happening in the IM world.
Specifically, in the Affiliate Marketing industry.

What Dr. Mani did was to create; The Acceptable Affiliate Practices document. Here is what is in this document:

Over the last decade, Affiliate Marketing has become a specialized field of Internet marketing, spawning off multiple sub-industries, generating mega-profitable businesses and creating heroes and role models called ‘SUPER affiliates’.

More recently, as the industry matures, definitive courses covering the various tactical and strategic elements of affiliate marketing were launched that shaped the way affiliates work online. Best practices and power-tactics for raising an affiliate’s performance, maximizing profits, adding value to clients and optimizing business processes have radically altered the way affiliate marketing is practiced today.

While tactics and strategy no doubt have their value, what has been ignored until now is a definitive set of ethics or ‘acceptable behavior’ on the part of affiliate marketers. This is an effort to piece together a document that would serve as an unofficial ‘rule book’ or a set of guidelines ‘good’ affiliates would adhere to.

The concept behind ‘Acceptable Affiliate Practices’ is simple: define standards that will benefit, enhance value and boost bottomline profit to the three players in an affiliate marketing transaction - the vendor, the buyer and the affiliate.

Here are 5 rules I use to guide my thinking about affiliate promotions to an audience of interested prospects:

1. Respect the chain - both upstream and down. Vendors create products or services, process orders and handle customer support. Buyers consume what they purchase - and benefit from it. Affiliates are in the middle, playing matchmaker to bring buyer and seller together. Respect for the chain means striving for win-win deals that benefit everyone - and harm no one. A quick ‘rule of thumb’ to decide whether or not to do something is to ask oneself: “Will it harm any part of the chain?”

2. Review with empathy - It’s simple. Put yourself in your buyer’s position. Review the product or service you are promoting as an affiliate just the way you would like it to be done for you. Focus on benefits and risks, as perceived by your buyer. Don’t ’sell’ in a way you would not like to be sold to.

3. Research your recommendations - The best practice would be to personally buy (or ask to review) the thing you are recommending. Put it through the paces, see how effectively it works. Only if it passes your rigorous testing, promote it to your prospects. If this is not practical, research as much as possible about the item, the vendor, the industry, the market, and use your best judgement about the value it will provide in your affiliate recommendation - making it explicit and clear that you have not personally tested it out.

4. Add value - Focus on bringing more value to the transaction. Your buyer should ideally feel better about ordering through your recommendation than by doing it directly from the vendor. You could do this by saving your prospect time, effort or money in arriving at a buying decision.

5. Offer bonuses - within reason. Adding extra bonuses to a product, converting it into a ‘package’ is an excellent, effective affiliate marketing tactic. It is also often abused. Strive to enhance your buyer’s experience by carefully selecting the bonuses you throw in. Targeting them to your buyer’s needs is more important than the number, price or size of your bonus pack.

There are many other ‘rules’ that would likely fit into this document, as we refine and enhance the concept. Maybe there is even a role for an informal industry-specific agency that would expand on the AAP guidelines, making them increasingly better and more effective.

The above copied with Dr. Mani’s premission in the hope it will be spread and the “Honest Internet Marketers” will help enhance/modify these ‘rules’. You may view the original at: http://ezinemarketingcenter.com/warrior/

You may read the unedited email at: Dr. Mani
Please post your comments here or at the above URL.

To your success,
Walt

 

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