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Casual Articles - How To Sell That Thing You Sell
Cold Calling Fear - Rather Not Have It? eir needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves!Fears and Other Things That Stop UsThere is nothing wrong with having self-doubt. Self-doubt can be highly appropriate if we’re weighing up our skill to perform a certain task, or wondering if we can do something in a better way than what we have in the past, or if we’re considering some feedback we’ve been given and wishing to determine whether we did indeed make a mistake of judgement or behave in a less than glorious way! If we lost our ability to doubt ourselves, to make judgements on our thoughts or actions, we’d find it difficult to function as a competent adult!So that type of self-doubt is not a problem. That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar Discover The Affiliate Marketing Network Program That Will Give You A Better Chance To Make Money On The other day I went to a local seminar on "internet marketing". I honestly didn't expect a whole lot; it was one of those "how to make money on the internet" things, which promised to tell you tips on how to use the search engines to your advantage, yada, yada, yada. But I have to say I was surprised, at least from the first 30 minutes of the 90 minute seminar.You should aspire to join an affiliate marketing network program that brings in a steady stream of online income. Do you have an online business idea but as yet, you don’t have your own product that you can sell? I was in a situation similar to this. An affiliate program, or more specifically an affiliate income program that is residual, provided me with a workable answer.Without doubt, it would be advantageous to have a website. Your website contents should be intimately related to the products that you intend to promote. It’s usually free to join an affiliate program. You can begin to make money online almost immediately.< What surprised me was that the seminar on "how to make money on the internet" that was really nothing more than a sales pitch for an all day seminar they would be holding several weeks later. And boy, did they have that pitch down! I left after the first 30 minutes. It felt like we were still in the introduction stage of the presentation. Kind of like they kept making promises of all the things they'll be covering but never really covering them. I think that was just the point. This presentation wasn't about providing information on how to make money from the internet, it was about how you can learn everything you need to know about how to make money from the internet by coming to the NEXT seminar. The presenter was professional and he didn't come off as a hack. He was actually very engaging. And interestingly they covered the "get rich quick schemes are a scheme" ground too. It was a very effective 30 minutes. I almost wanted to sign up for the next seminar. Maybe I would had if I had not left! Pre-Selling Is A Legitimate (And Effective) Sales Technique While I don't care for this type of pre-sales schtick, it got me thinking about how we go about selling those things that we sell. In fact, any good website uses some kind pre-selling technique regularly. Think about it, rarely does our home page actually sell the products or service we offer. That page is just an overview, an introduction, a flowery summary of what we or our products are all about. As we click further into the site we get closer and closer to the actual selling, but depending on the breadth and depth of the site, we are often just pre-selling as visitors click deeper and deeper in. This pre-selling, regardless of what page it is on, does the job of routing each visitor closer to the destination which is the sales page while continuing to build expectations as they move through the site. And how does all this pre-selling happen? Text. Content. Words. The Product Should Not Have To Sell Itself Many sites, especially e-commerce sites, feel that words are unnecessary and that the product should sell it self. They'll throw the specifications onto the product page and believe that tells the visitor all they they'll ever want or need to know. Okay, fine, lets say the product does sell itself. But what about the pages that lead to the product? Surely you have pages that lead to the product pages, no? If your site has any kind of depth visitors generally hit the home page first (provided they didn't enter via a search that dropped them right on the product page). From there they have to (want) to click to a category of their choosing, and then they can click on individual products. That's two whole pages before the "sales" page, at best. For some sites there are more. So let's analyze those pages. What makes a visitor want to click past the home page? Is it pictures? Maybe. But I'd bet there is (or should be) some text on that page that gives comfort to the visitor and assures them that they came to the right place to find what they are looking for. Pictures are pretty and all but you got to make them want to click through. If you've done your job on the home page then the user will click into a category that suits their needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves! That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar i 6 Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Resume Writer ey from the internet, it was about how you can learn everything you need to know about how to make money from the internet by coming to the NEXT seminar.Question #1 – How many years of experience do you have as a full-time resume writer?While tons of experience by no means guarantees that a resume writer has the “write stuff,” significant lack of experience (two years or less) generally indicates a lack of breadth in the types of knowledge that you would want to see in someone summarizing your career into a polished document. A less experienced writer who works closely with a more experienced mentor, however, should be just fine.Question #2 – Are you a Certified Resume Writer?There are at least four major organizations that certify resume writers. If a resume writer The presenter was professional and he didn't come off as a hack. He was actually very engaging. And interestingly they covered the "get rich quick schemes are a scheme" ground too. It was a very effective 30 minutes. I almost wanted to sign up for the next seminar. Maybe I would had if I had not left! Pre-Selling Is A Legitimate (And Effective) Sales Technique While I don't care for this type of pre-sales schtick, it got me thinking about how we go about selling those things that we sell. In fact, any good website uses some kind pre-selling technique regularly. Think about it, rarely does our home page actually sell the products or service we offer. That page is just an overview, an introduction, a flowery summary of what we or our products are all about. As we click further into the site we get closer and closer to the actual selling, but depending on the breadth and depth of the site, we are often just pre-selling as visitors click deeper and deeper in. This pre-selling, regardless of what page it is on, does the job of routing each visitor closer to the destination which is the sales page while continuing to build expectations as they move through the site. And how does all this pre-selling happen? Text. Content. Words. The Product Should Not Have To Sell Itself Many sites, especially e-commerce sites, feel that words are unnecessary and that the product should sell it self. They'll throw the specifications onto the product page and believe that tells the visitor all they they'll ever want or need to know. Okay, fine, lets say the product does sell itself. But what about the pages that lead to the product? Surely you have pages that lead to the product pages, no? If your site has any kind of depth visitors generally hit the home page first (provided they didn't enter via a search that dropped them right on the product page). From there they have to (want) to click to a category of their choosing, and then they can click on individual products. That's two whole pages before the "sales" page, at best. For some sites there are more. So let's analyze those pages. What makes a visitor want to click past the home page? Is it pictures? Maybe. But I'd bet there is (or should be) some text on that page that gives comfort to the visitor and assures them that they came to the right place to find what they are looking for. Pictures are pretty and all but you got to make them want to click through. If you've done your job on the home page then the user will click into a category that suits their needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves! That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar Corporate Values - Before You Get Them Out in The Open... roducts are all about.Defining corporate values is a useful exercise. It is part of the communication process where you invest in alignment of teams. Even though different teams or departments will each have their own tasks and responsibilities, you want them to share some same principles. For example;“We are ...to please our customers...without them nothing else matters.” Corporate values should be balanced yet communicate a certain direction, so they should be selective. You should select four to six of such corporate values. Three would be a minimum to be able to balance attention; more than six would mean that your company As we click further into the site we get closer and closer to the actual selling, but depending on the breadth and depth of the site, we are often just pre-selling as visitors click deeper and deeper in. This pre-selling, regardless of what page it is on, does the job of routing each visitor closer to the destination which is the sales page while continuing to build expectations as they move through the site. And how does all this pre-selling happen? Text. Content. Words. The Product Should Not Have To Sell Itself Many sites, especially e-commerce sites, feel that words are unnecessary and that the product should sell it self. They'll throw the specifications onto the product page and believe that tells the visitor all they they'll ever want or need to know. Okay, fine, lets say the product does sell itself. But what about the pages that lead to the product? Surely you have pages that lead to the product pages, no? If your site has any kind of depth visitors generally hit the home page first (provided they didn't enter via a search that dropped them right on the product page). From there they have to (want) to click to a category of their choosing, and then they can click on individual products. That's two whole pages before the "sales" page, at best. For some sites there are more. So let's analyze those pages. What makes a visitor want to click past the home page? Is it pictures? Maybe. But I'd bet there is (or should be) some text on that page that gives comfort to the visitor and assures them that they came to the right place to find what they are looking for. Pictures are pretty and all but you got to make them want to click through. If you've done your job on the home page then the user will click into a category that suits their needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves! That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar List Building – How is the Internet Different Now? t? Surely you have pages that lead to the product pages, no? If your site has any kind of depth visitors generally hit the home page first (provided they didn't enter via a search that dropped them right on the product page). From there they have to (want) to click to a category of their choosing, and then they can click on individual products. That's two whole pages before the "sales" page, at best. For some sites there are more.Back in the beginning of the internet, you could send people to your web page, and with some decent copy it might convert. But that has really changed now. Now, you have lots of competition. You have lots of competition from everyone – people who don’t know what they are doing, people who do know what they are doing – and unless you are firmly established on the search engines, you aren’t getting much free traffic.You see, now there are many choices, and in addition, sales pages load quickly. If someone is looking for something specific, they simply type it into a search engine, and scroll down through all the web pages they So let's analyze those pages. What makes a visitor want to click past the home page? Is it pictures? Maybe. But I'd bet there is (or should be) some text on that page that gives comfort to the visitor and assures them that they came to the right place to find what they are looking for. Pictures are pretty and all but you got to make them want to click through. If you've done your job on the home page then the user will click into a category that suits their needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves! That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar Training / Presentations: How to Teach using Lecture vs. Discussion eir needs. What does this page tell them? Is it just a list of products or have you taken the time to fill the visitor with more information specific to the products in this category? Surely you can say something compelling about your battery chargers that is different from your batteries, or have content describing your snowboards in a way that doesn't sound like you're selling ski gloves!WHEN ONLY A LECTURE WILL DO: Under certain circumstances, of course, the lecture is the only workable format. For instance, when it is necessary to reach a large audience in a short time frame, or when the attendees have no knowledge of the subject whatsoever, there is really no choice. But whenever possible, alternative methods should be investigated. If you choose to rely solely on lectures, be aware that you do so for your own convenience and comfort, rather than for the effectiveness of the training. Abandoning the lecture format for that of group discussion requires that the trainer step back from leadership and take up the role of That's the pre-sell process. They are on their way t the sales page, but don't let them get distracted... keep feeding them the content that gives them the desire to keep moving through the site. Help Yourself Sell That Thing You Sell You may think that you do not need sales content on each page, but let me tell you, it helps! The people who ran that seminar probably didn't need the pre-seminar in order to get people to come to the longer one. But they knew that a free 90-minute seminar is an easier sell than a $20 all-day seminar. Once the get them in the door then they have 90 minutes to make the case for the all-day seminar to follow. In the same way, you may be able to sell your products on specifications alone, but you have your audience on your site, why not use every opportunity to you can to give them information that fills them with the desire to purchase your products... long before they ever find the product they are looking for. That's a much easier sell!
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