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  • Suggest You - Notes for Newbies - Part One - Your Market

    100% of Nothing
    What would it be worth to you to receive a steady stream of new customers with little or no effort on your part? Would you be willing to pay 10% of the revenue they generate? 20%? 50%? Or do you believe that you can't afford to pay anything?During a recent discussion, I was surprised that people said they could not afford to 'give up' 20% in commissions to reach new customers. If you have more work than you can handle, that makes sense. However, most of the people who take this position do so because they think it is 'not fair' that someone else get a percentage o
    rrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you hav

    Entrepreneurial Skills Secrets
    What if you knew some skills that could help grow your business faster? One may say it’s all about customer service and how happy your customers are, but there is more to it than that.There are certain skills sets that will help you in growing your business faster. What are they? How can you grow your business faster? How can you spend less time in your business?Do you spend a lot of hours in your business? Do you wish you had employees that did just a portion of the amount of work that you did? Why is it so hard to find staff that will stay in your company
    Hello again

    Today we want to talk about your market. Your choice for this part of your business is crucial to getting it off the ground and making big money for you. :-) Indeed, if you don’t get this right, your business simply won’t succeed.

    Your market
    You need to think long and hard about your target market. This decision won’t come quickly or easily, but you must take all the time you need to get it right. I can’t emphasize this enough.

    Grab your A4 pad and a pencil. Sit down in a quiet corner. Don’t get up until you are perfectly clear about who you are selling to. Forget about the ‘what’ until you have figured out the ‘who’ (this is where most people get it seriously wrong). Don’t create a product then go looking for a market, it simply won’t work (well, it will work, but it will take you years of effort and millions of pounds until you are in profit).

    The gurus – the old pros in this business – said it all long ago. ‘Find a crowd of people with lots of money and fall down in front of them.’ ‘Find a large and easy-to-reach target market.’ ‘Find out where the market is and go there.’ ‘Find a hungry audience and give them what they want.’

    Everybody who makes it big in this business does it this way.

    Before we go any further, it might be useful to think a bit about what we mean by ‘direct marketing’.

    There are two ways to sell things, through mass marketing and through direct marketing. Mass marketing is the kind of marketing you see on the telly, in newspapers and on posters along city streets. It is called mass marketing because it is directed at ‘the masses’, at everybody who happened to be watching or reading.

    Direct marketing, on the other hand, is ‘targeted’. When you get a letter through your letterbox telling you to buy some homeowner's insurance or some double-glazing, you are being targeted as a homeowner. The classified ad in the back of your woodworking magazine advertising a new and improved wood chisel is targeted at you, a woodworker.

    There are all sorts of advantages with direct marketing. We shall discuss these in more detail in later articles when we talk about fine-tuning your business to increase sales and profits.

    It’s important to be very specific about your market. Let’s look at an example. Suppose you are interested in books – you eat books, you sleep books, you dream books – you love books. Now, it would be easy to decide that your market is everybody who loves books as much as you do.

    But this won’t do – ‘everybody who loves books’ is simply too vague, too broad, too general. You need to be specific. Do you want to target readers and collectors of cookery books, football books, first editions of Agatha Christy?

    You need to narrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you hav

    Ethics in Business - Please Have Some
    Is your business ethical?What I mean is "Does your business do the right thing when faced with that decision?" It's a simple question, which many businesses struggle with. I just don't understand the struggle part?I have worked for companies that believed they were ethical, and really have no clue. Meaning the decisions they make everyday towards their customers and employees does not advocate ethics.So, what is it? When someone in business gives you their word and then reneges, that is unethical. Your word is your promise. Even if it is
    le get it seriously wrong). Don’t create a product then go looking for a market, it simply won’t work (well, it will work, but it will take you years of effort and millions of pounds until you are in profit).

    The gurus – the old pros in this business – said it all long ago. ‘Find a crowd of people with lots of money and fall down in front of them.’ ‘Find a large and easy-to-reach target market.’ ‘Find out where the market is and go there.’ ‘Find a hungry audience and give them what they want.’

    Everybody who makes it big in this business does it this way.

    Before we go any further, it might be useful to think a bit about what we mean by ‘direct marketing’.

    There are two ways to sell things, through mass marketing and through direct marketing. Mass marketing is the kind of marketing you see on the telly, in newspapers and on posters along city streets. It is called mass marketing because it is directed at ‘the masses’, at everybody who happened to be watching or reading.

    Direct marketing, on the other hand, is ‘targeted’. When you get a letter through your letterbox telling you to buy some homeowner's insurance or some double-glazing, you are being targeted as a homeowner. The classified ad in the back of your woodworking magazine advertising a new and improved wood chisel is targeted at you, a woodworker.

    There are all sorts of advantages with direct marketing. We shall discuss these in more detail in later articles when we talk about fine-tuning your business to increase sales and profits.

    It’s important to be very specific about your market. Let’s look at an example. Suppose you are interested in books – you eat books, you sleep books, you dream books – you love books. Now, it would be easy to decide that your market is everybody who loves books as much as you do.

    But this won’t do – ‘everybody who loves books’ is simply too vague, too broad, too general. You need to be specific. Do you want to target readers and collectors of cookery books, football books, first editions of Agatha Christy?

    You need to narrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you hav

    Truck Driver Jobs Are Waiting, And So Is The Florida Sun!
    The sunshine state of Florida attracts not only a bevy of tourists but it is also a great place to live and work. So much so, that there is one hotly contested job and that is the one of a truck driver. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that truck driver jobs in Florida are expected to increase some 20 to 35 percent by the end of 2008. This is in line with increases in other states, reflecting the enormous growth in the amount of freight that is carried by trucks. But just as the sun and easy lifestyle attracts holidaymakers, more and more drivers are relocating the
    re are two ways to sell things, through mass marketing and through direct marketing. Mass marketing is the kind of marketing you see on the telly, in newspapers and on posters along city streets. It is called mass marketing because it is directed at ‘the masses’, at everybody who happened to be watching or reading.

    Direct marketing, on the other hand, is ‘targeted’. When you get a letter through your letterbox telling you to buy some homeowner's insurance or some double-glazing, you are being targeted as a homeowner. The classified ad in the back of your woodworking magazine advertising a new and improved wood chisel is targeted at you, a woodworker.

    There are all sorts of advantages with direct marketing. We shall discuss these in more detail in later articles when we talk about fine-tuning your business to increase sales and profits.

    It’s important to be very specific about your market. Let’s look at an example. Suppose you are interested in books – you eat books, you sleep books, you dream books – you love books. Now, it would be easy to decide that your market is everybody who loves books as much as you do.

    But this won’t do – ‘everybody who loves books’ is simply too vague, too broad, too general. You need to be specific. Do you want to target readers and collectors of cookery books, football books, first editions of Agatha Christy?

    You need to narrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you hav

    Dead Body Stinks from the Head
    A key reason for companies’ downhill slide is undoubtedly the quality of CEO. Most turnaround situations arise because of the CEO’s incompetence, ineptness, carelessness, ego and /or inexperience. It is simply too much to ask or expect the incumbent management to be objective in evaluating its past performance when the CEO is probably the same person whose mismanagement caused the company’s financial health to deteriorate in the first place. The problem is that some CEOs may lack training even though they may think they know it all.Sir John Harvey Jone
    ith direct marketing. We shall discuss these in more detail in later articles when we talk about fine-tuning your business to increase sales and profits.

    It’s important to be very specific about your market. Let’s look at an example. Suppose you are interested in books – you eat books, you sleep books, you dream books – you love books. Now, it would be easy to decide that your market is everybody who loves books as much as you do.

    But this won’t do – ‘everybody who loves books’ is simply too vague, too broad, too general. You need to be specific. Do you want to target readers and collectors of cookery books, football books, first editions of Agatha Christy?

    You need to narrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you hav

    The Business Plan - How To Write It Correctly & Get Results!
    Today’s business plan is an indispensable document for any company or individual who is in business and needs, for one reason or another, to raise money, find investors, justify their actions, or simply to chart his own course of action in an intelligent and businesslike manner.Write your business plan correctly and you will present a great image and get what you want.Before Starting OutBefore you start out writing a business plan you will need to assemble as much information as you can regarding the business itself.The object of the business,
    rrow your target market so you can focus your energies on becoming an expert. The advantage of this is that although your market is now smaller, it is more highly targeted.

    This means your conversion rate, the number of people who buy as a percentage of total people who see your ad or sales letter, is much, much higher. If you do a mail shot for an ebook about Agatha Christy to a list of people who love books, your conversion may be 0.5% (1/2%). If you do a mail shot to people who love Agatha Christy, you conversion may be as high as 20%. :-)

    The gurus sometimes have conversions as high as 50%. Think about that!

    So, between now and next time, do nothing else until you have identified your target market. Remember, it’s not people looking for ‘business opportunities’, it’s people looking to make serious money through ‘marketing ebooks about weight loss’. It’s not people interested in ‘music’, it’s people interested in ‘vinyl records and glass audio systems’.

    Keep in mind everything we are talking about has to do with just this first project. After your business is up and running and earning you loads of money, you’ll probably want to start another, equally profitable business, then another, then another. People do this all the time. We pundits call it ‘multiple income streams’.

    That’s all for this time. See you soon.

    Next time we shall talk about the next most important thing you must do to build a profitable direct marketing business. This is your product.

    Thanks for listening :-)

    William Rice-Johnston

    Copyright © 2006 Mary Rice-Johnston & Golden Goose Direct. All rights reserved.

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