The Writer Runs This Show

We have the technology. We have the business skills. We have virtual ink by the barrel . The writer runs this show. We’re the ones who command the attention. We’re the ones who create the engagement. We’re the ones who influence what people think and do. The writer runs this show. We won’t toil in obscurity waiting for a green-light . We won’t submit to “creativity” by committee. We won’t accept meager pay while others cash in our copyright. The writer runs this show. If you won’t read until your eyes blur. If you won’t write more to write well . If you won’t invest the blood, sweat, and tears . . . Then you’ll have to work with real writers. And pay those writers exceptionally well. If they have the time, that is. Because the writer runs this show. About the Author : Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and co-founder of Thesis , Scribe , Premise , Third Tribe , Lateral Action and Teaching Sells .

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The Writer Runs This Show

Johnny’s Copyblogger Wrap-Up: Week of May 24, 2010

I decided this week that social media has jumped the shark. It happened when I tweeted from the dentist’s chair to announce I was in the dentist’s chair. I thought, “This is something the world needs to know about.” Strangely, the world was apathetic, and no conversations ensued. The system failed. My tweet did not bring me closer to people who were also in dentist’s chairs, or people who enjoy dentistry, or people who remember Bill Cosby’s “loose lips” bit about trying to talk with a mouth full of novocaine. Online marketing’s demise can’t be far behind, which kind of renders this week’s Wrap-up pointless. Why should any of us read or write about copy or business when the New World Paradigm doesn’t work for oral hygiene? But on the off chance that someone feels there’s a difference between teeth and business, here’s what happened this week on Copyblogger: Monday: How to Overcome Your Three Greatest Blogging Challenges This is the post wherein Sonia Simone teaches us how to climb Mt. Everest and relates it to blogging. Specifically, she claims both take more than gumption and flowery thoughts. Both benefit from specific instruction, and it’s inadvisable to just kind of start walking and hope for the best. Pshaw. Next she’ll be saying that prep for competing in the Ironman Triathlon is more than “keepin’ on keepin’ on” and “good-old-fashioned sticktoitiveness.” Honestly, when you think about it, Sonia’s real message isn’t really that you shouldn’t wing it. It’s that that there are three main areas where you could get stuck… and then how to get past those stuck places. So basically: Wing it, but don’t get stuck. So it’s totally okay to go ahead and climb Everest without preparation, but have this post printed out in case you get stuck. You know, if you can still hold it after losing fingers to frostbite. Read the full post here . Tuesday: Get a Great Deal When You Join Third Tribe Before June 1, 2010 Looks like the price of membership in the Third Tribe will be going up on June 1st. That means that if you want to join but don’t do so until after June 1st, you’re either not thinking clearly or have a strange concept of economics. What’s interesting about this post is that Brian has given everyone the suggestion to totally rip off the Third Tribe. When you join, you’ll get instant access to everything that’s up there now for one payment of $47, and then you could split and cancel your membership if you wanted. It’s almost like that “Gone until Monday – Alarm code is 3449″ sign that Brian puts in his yard every time he goes on a weekend trip. So you should check it out. Be sure to bring your burglars’ tools and canvas bags with giant dollar signs on them. Read the full post here . Wednesday: How to Monetize Your Site Without Causing an Audience Revolt You know that phenomenon where someone is blogging about spleens and kidneys, and then is like, “Dude, I have black market organs for sale” and then his readership turns on him, telling him that they didn’t come here to have to pay for spleens, and that were just there for the spleen chat and free samples? I hate that. I ran into this with my first three spleen blogs. You try to make a buck by selling something on your blog — and if you do it in the wrong way, your audience turns on you like a bunch of rioting free-organ hippies. David Risley has the answer. He’s got some very specific tips for how you can walk that line where you draw people in with content, operate in a friendly, Third Tribe mindest, but still are able to sell things without being called a sellout. Alternatively, you could do what I did. Naomi Dunford, who kind of acted as my mentor, recently told me, “You started as a sellout.” Ah, memories. Read the full post here . Thursday: Landing Page Makeover Clinic #26: iGrowKids.com.au The latest installment of Roberta Rosenberg’s Landing Page Makeover series addresses iGrowKids.com.au, which I will note is NOT some sort of Matrix-style farm where humans are grown. The site suffers from the age-old marketing problem: great idea (easy-on clothes for babies; if you aren’t a parent, you won’t know how BADLY this stuff is needed) but slow sales. So in typical fashion, the Maven does her thing to explain how the site could convert better. I’d only add that perhaps adding hilarious baby do’s and don’ts might help with sales. Read the full post here . Thursday Part 2: Who is the Copyblogger Internet Marketing Newsletter for? You should check out the free Copyblogger newsletter, Internet Marketing for Smart People. I mean, if you don’t, you’ve essentially said that you’re dumb. Who would do that? Why are you beating yourself up that way? I joined because Sonia badgered me until I did, but I’m glad I signed up because I keep getting these cool nuggets in my inbox. Not chicken nuggets, though. Informational nuggets. If you think your inbox is a mess now, try letting a few chicken nuggets in there. Check it out and get your free stuff here . Friday: Is F.E.A.R. Holding You Back? To close the week, Brian wrote up a really important post about what F.E.A.R. is and how it’s different from fear . (Fear is instructional and usually good whereas F.E.A.R. is annoying and stupid — exactly like “learning your ABCs” and the 90s hip-hop kid band “ABC.”) Basically, pay attention to this one if you’re not down with being immobilized and stuck in everything you do. You might also want to read it if you don’t enjoy being freaked out for no reason. If none of that applies, then stop reading and head over to Engrish.com because there’s clearly something wrong with you. ( NOTE : Go to Engrish.com anyway.) Read the full post here . Friday Part 2: 7 Quick-Start Techniques for Fighting the Fear to Write Hey gang, Brian here. Apparently Johnny turned in his homework early and left town before realizing we published two posts on Friday. Who knew there was a weekend swap meet dedicated entirely to black market organs? Anyway, following up on my F.E.A.R post, Catherine Caine gives you 7 specific strategies when writing is giving you the willies. So, you should, like, read it right away. How’s that for a Johnny imitation? Oh, and by the way . . . if you’d like to see your name in the headline of these Copyblogger weekly wrap-ups, we’re now accepting applications. Just kidding, Johnny! (No really, send ‘em in. This guy’s an unbelievable prima donna. What’s worse, he thinks that term relates to the time period before Lucky Star became a top-five hit). Read the full post here . About the Author: Johnny B. Truant has a dumb blog at JohnnyBTruant.com and is one of the guys behind Question the Rules . You should also really check out his Jam Sessions with Charlie Gilkey, because they’re filled with tasty informational nuggets that will make your business better.

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How to Monetize Your Site Without Causing an Audience Revolt

If you haven’t experienced it, you’ve seen it. Whether you’re a blogger or a marketer — or both — you’ve seen an audience rise up in revolt the moment someone tries to make a buck. You’ve sold out! You didn’t disclose! Whatever the contention, one thing is clear. Something backfired and backfired hard. Nobody likes having to tip-toe around the fact that you’re in this to make money. Many bloggers end up groveling to their readers by low-balling prices for any product they release. It is a real shame, too, because there are so many bloggers out there with very large audiences who find themselves incapable or unwilling to monetize by launching a product. So, this raises a few questions: How do you avoid this issue altogether? How do you prepare your audience for your prices? How can you charge higher prices for your products? Reciprocity — with a cap All experienced marketers know about the power of reciprocity . Give a bunch of stuff away and the prospect feels more obliged to give back. Sounds great. You can, however, take it too far. As a young father, I’ve learned that you lead by example. If I go around cursing in front of my little girl, all of a sudden she’s going to think that’s normal. Then other parents look at me weird and that’s not much fun. The same goes for our blog audience. It’s about establishing a pattern. If your pattern is nothing but free-free-free, then the minute you try to make a buck, it’s like a rock thrown into a cool, calm pond. It disrupts the pattern. On the flip side, no content marketer can pull off a steady diet of sell-sell-sell. We members of the Third Tribe know that we need to do both. We’re always looking for that perfect balance. We play in the middle ground. With your blog audience, it is important to show that you’re here to sell as well as to provide valuable free content. That means getting out in front of your audience with an offer of some kind. Establish a pattern of free-free-free-sell, free-free-free-sell. Many bloggers have asked me when the right time to monetize is. I always tell them: early. It doesn’t matter if your audience is small. You want to establish a pattern and you want to do it early in the game. The Starbucks lesson If all you ever offer are $7 e-books, you position yourself as a person with low-end products. In other words, you’re Wal-Mart. And high-end stuff doesn’t usually do well in a Wal-Mart aisle. So, should you just increase your prices? Well, yeah! However, you’ll be able to give a powerful “ reason why ” if you get out in front of the objection and provide a point of positioning. How does Starbucks get away with charging $3 for a cup of coffee? They did it by re-defining the coffee experience. Instead of walking into a fast-food joint, they’ve provided a nice communal atmosphere with music. They don’t even have small, medium and large sizes. That’s too similar to fast-food chains and would defeat their positioning. So they borrowed words from the Italian language, and now we routinely ask for “venti” coffees, even at other coffee shops. How can you change your positioning on your blog? Good design and professional graphics will help provide the right atmosphere. But you can do more. Offer consulting. Almost anybody in any niche can offer some kind of consulting option on their blog. Even if you’re into underwater basketweaving, you can offer 1-on-1 help to pick just the right pond to dive into for your next basket. Set your price a bit on the high side. Right now, you’re not really interested if anybody takes you up on it. You just want that offer out there so that (a) it shows people that not all of your expertise is free, and (b) it gives a point of comparison for determining prices for your other offers. If you charge $100/hour for consulting, then offering a product for $97 starts to look like a bargain. After all, the buyer gets all that information for less than the cost of an hour of time. And the value is real. Blogging with a strategy in mind If you want to make money, you need to establish your value. Many bloggers are great at building up traffic, but establishing their own value seems to fall by the wayside. So do all the good social media stuff. Provide seriously awesome content . Help people like crazy. Connect with them. Interact. But . . . While you’re making all those connections, establish your value. Let them know you’re there to do business, and that you aren’t cheap. Do it with confidence and without apology. When you do that, you set the stage for them to know, like, and trust you. And then the game is yours to win. Looking for that balance between connection and doing business? That’s what the Third Tribe is all about. If the idea intrigues you, check it out today , because the price goes up on June 1. About the Author: David Risley is a full-time blogger who confesses regularly on his blog, Confessions of a Six-Figure Blogger . Tech blogger turned blog marketer, David now shows other bloggers have to turn their blogs into real businesses .

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Get a Great Deal When You Join Third Tribe Before June 1, 2010

Are you stuck in the middle with your online marketing? Too much integrity to be an Internet marketing huckster, and too much respect for cash flow to be a social media idealist? What if I told you the middle is exactly the place to be? And what if I also told you can get a ton of Internet marketing education for pennies on the dollar, all while meeting up with like-minded people who can help take your business to the next level? All at no obligation? What Is Third Tribe? Third Tribe is the educational community for online marketers started by Darren Rowse, Chris Brogan, Sonia, and yours truly. It’s grown way beyond the four of us, thanks to thousands of smart marketers who’ve come together to share information, form relationships, and give each other a helping hand. There’s an entire story behind how Third Tribe came into existence, but I’ll save that for when you visit the site. Let’s get to the brass tacks. Try Out Third Tribe, Keep Over 10 Hours of Seminar Content Members who sign up before June 1 get instant access to over 10 hours of in-depth audio seminars, along with transcripts and next-action worksheets: Product Launch Strategies: What Always Works and What’s Working in 2010 Jeff Walker & Sonia Simone How to Get Your Customers to Do Your Best Marketing for You John Jantsch & Chris Brogan Email Marketing Strategies that Work Sonia Simone & Brian Clark Action Email: Copywriting Tips for Insanely Effective Email Marketing Dave Navarro & Sonia Simone Internet Business Models: Part One – the Problogger model Darren Rowse & Brian Clark Internet Business Models: Part Two – the Chris Brogan model Chris Brogan & Sonia Simone Internet Business Models: Part Three – the Copyblogger model Brian Clark & Sonia Simone Internet Business Models: Part Four – the Zen Habits model Leo Babauta & Darren Rowse The Quick Start Guide to Making Money Online Johnny Truant & Sonia Simone Advanced Affiliate Marketing with Social Media and SEO Brian Clark & Glenn Allsopp There are full seminar descriptions on the Third Tribe site, so check them out . Join for the Content, Stay for the Connection Ask any Third Tribe member what they value most, and they’ll tell you it’s the community and the connections, even with all the great content. We don’t blame you if you’re skeptical, because it’s something you have to experience for yourself. So rather than “sell” you on the Third Tribe community, we’re offering you a ton of education for a nominal fee so you’ll check things out for yourself. You can head over to the Third Tribe site to find out about the interactive aspects and see what some of our members have to say about it. Price Goes Up June 1, 2010 Based on what quality online marketing educational content goes for (usually $97 to $127 for a single seminar), we’re basically giving away the farm. You get access to over 10 hours of seminar content for one payment of only $47, with no obligation to stay on board. Why do it? Because we want the community to grow even stronger, and we’re confident that once you get inside Third Tribe, you’ll see that the monthly fee is a drop in the bucket compared with the ongoing value you receive. But we’re only offering this deal until June 1, at which point the price to grab all that valuable content is going up. Check out Third Tribe for all the details . About the Author : Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and co-founder of Inside the Third Tribe . Get more from Brian on Twitter .

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Five “Old School” Tactics That Could Ruin Your Sales Page

Do you despise long sales letters, yellow highlighters and blood-red, hype-laden headlines? These tried and true copywriting tactics are proven winners at converting “cold” traffic into paying customers – and $10,000-a-page copywriters use them without hesitation because they appeal to the baser instincts of the easily swayed. They may be embarrassing to look at, but historically, they’ve just plain worked. But if you’re a Third Tribe type of marketer , you’re in a quandary because you know these push-comes-to-shove sales page tactics just won’t work in your case. They won’t work for you because you won’t be able to sleep at night. They won’t work for your audience either, because they’re smart and savvy, and they’ll lose faith in you and go off in search of someone more professional. But these cheesy tactics are tempting nonetheless, because you’ve seen them on pages that you know are converting a lot of customers. Against your better instincts, you might feel a pull to use just one or two of them to stack the deck in your favor – especially if your current page isn’t converting as well as you’d hope. There’s good news, though – you don’t have to sell your integrity to sell more of your products. All you need to do is learn how to use some semantic aikido to harness the power of these psychologically effective strategies – all the while saying “hold the cheese.” Let’s take a look at 5 “hard sell” tactics and apply some Third Tribe magic to make them feel better for you and your future customers. The “Everything Will Be Better In A Week” Tactic You see this one all the time, online or off. Online it’s usually “Give me 7 days and you’ll have a horde of customers trampling each other to give you their money!” Offline it could be more subtle, such as the SlimFast slogan “Give us a week – we’ll take off the weight.” The promise is significant (as it should be in a headline) but it’s not realistic. Sure, it works on those desperate for results, and that’s why it will never go away. But your customers are smart enough to know that they can’t really get those results, and that hurts your credibility. They know they’re not going to go from zero to $20,000 in a week or go from a complete unknown to A-list blogger in 7 days, no matter what people tell you. But it still works on the easily swayed, because they’re desperate for results. Your audience may be desperate as well, but they’re just too darned smart to fall for the idea of an “instant solution.” So what can you do? Take The Third Tribe Approach : Instead of promising instant victory over a situation, promise them immediate progress instead. For example, “Give me 7 days, and you’ll have a detailed and doable plan of action for getting more customers in the door this month.” You’re still making the implicit promise of getting more customers, but you’re explicitly promising something more realistic in the short term – a sense of certainty about what actions to take next. That’s what gets product sold while protecting your credibility. The “Set It On Autopilot” Tactic I’m seeing this more and more online, and I’m sure you are too – phrases like “The Lazy Marketer’s Guide To Building an Email List” or “(result happens) automatically while you sleep!” Again, this tactic works on the easily swayed, because they are likely to, well, be pretty lazy people. They don’t want to do the work. They want to push that big red magic button and get their results. But when you’re pitching to a more savvy, successful audience, this tactic backfires almost immediately. They know that success takes hard work (because they worked hard to be successful!) and that there’s very, very little in life that falls into the “set it and forget it” realm. And beyond that, they know if something seems “too easy” it’s either not legit or something that’s bound to be ineffective. But in reality, there may be things about your product or service that for the most part have a “hands-off” aspect (for example, building a fantastic landing page that brings opt-in subscribers to your list day in and day out). How do you position these types of things without resorting to cheesy language? Take The Third Tribe Approach : Instead of using words like “lazy way,” “autopilot,” or “does the work for you,” focus on how this aspect of your offer is truly something that streamlines a process that your reader knows is time or effort-intensive. Then follow up with the measurable benefit they receive. For example, an email autoresponder service that “pulls in new subscribers like clockwork” sounds corny. But a service that automates opt-in form creation and has reporting statistics frees you from coding so you can spend that time tweaking forms for higher conversion. Now you’re talking about automating one aspect so you can redirect time to higher-value activities … and that kind of benefit-driven description makes for a stronger selling point. The “You’re Lucky I’m Talking To You” Tactic This off-putting tactic is a staple of someone following the heavy-handed marketing techniques that by and large, have worked on the easily swayed in the past. You’ll see it in phrases like “At my normal hourly rate of $2,000/hour (if you could even get me!) …” and implies authority (based on the price) and a tension-inducing scarcity of the marketer’s time. Now, there’s nothing wrong with stating your rates – mine are fairly high, and I use them as a selling point – but when you use it as the predominant selling point, it can work against you. This is especially true if you bring it all up before you’ve made your other, more significant selling points. And talking about how you don’t have time for clients can come off as reputation-diminishing bragging. Savvy audiences don’t fall for this – they know that bragging is usually a sign of insecurity. And who wants to buy from someone who’s working so hard to try and impress you? Take The Third Tribe Approach : Instead of leading with how in-demand you are and how expensive your rates are, save this selling point until later and gently position it in terms of the overall value you’re presenting and how the delivery medium causes a change in pricing. There’s nothing pushy about saying “This workshop represents what I would cover in a ten hour, $2,500 one-on-one consulting package. But since I can only offer a large package like that to so many people, I’ve distilled those ten hours of consulting into a self-paced workshop that you can purchase for $197.” With this approach, you’re not making a in-your-face statement that can turn off savvy customers, but you are effectively communicating the true value of what you’re offering in a way they can respect. The “You’re Dead Meat If You Don’t Buy” Tactic Since fear-based selling can be such an effective tactic, marketers often paint a post-apocalyptic picture of what will happen if you don’t buy their products. You may be told your business will fail, your competitors will eat your lunch and your spouse will leave you for a smarter, younger version of you who knows these “insider secrets.” The idea is that if the sense of panic can be cranked up, the urgent need to find a solution will appear. And in 99 cases out of 100, you’ll find that same marketer telling you that only their product can save you from certain doom. You’re too smart for this “Chicken Little” sales tactic, and since your customers are too, you need an approach that can boost the feelings of urgency and desire without resorting to panic. Take The Third Tribe Approach : Instead of saying “all is lost” and pulling out the melodrama, paint a picture of how a particular product will be harder to solve without your product (and easier with it). For example, you could say “It’s certainly possible to network with other savvy online business owners simply by participating in blog comments and using Twitter, but that can be a slow process with uncertain results. Being in the Third Tribe forums, however, means you’re immersed in the highest concentration of willing-to-network entrepreneurs you’re likely to find on the Internet – and that can take your business to the next level much faster.” Could you write an effective sales letter without this tactic? You could, but you’d have to work a lot harder. (Get it?) The “There’s No Good Reason Not To Buy” Tactic I recently read a sales letter with this message at the bottom and shook my head, knowing that a few easily swayed individuals would fall for it. Certainly, it stands to reason that this line could work, because it’s one of those “proven” staples of a “good sales letter.” But it falls flat when selling to a savvy reader. (Which is a shame, because this marketer had a relatively savvy audience). Why is it such an off-putting phrase? For starters, it’s insulting. It implies that whatever reason you have for not buying isn’t a reasonable one, and calling your potential (and intelligent!) customers unreasonable is a sure way to lose the sale – especially since the marketer doesn’t even know the objection. And that’s where it gets embarrassing – because when readers realize they do have valid objections, it’s the marketer who looks foolish. Goodbye sale. Take The Third Tribe Approach : Instead of trying to push your customers into this kind of hard-line close, do a little up-front research and discover as many potential objections as you can. Take each one and build a pre-emptive response into your sales letter. For example, if price is an objection, remind them of how your product can pay for itself quickly. If satisfaction is an objection, re-emphasize how strong your guarantee is. The more thoroughly you defuse potential objections before the close, the less you have to work to close the sale. And instead of bullying customers into having “no good reason not to buy,” you’re reminding them of all the very good reasons they have to give your product a shot. What’s Your Sales Page Personal Pet Peeve? These are only five old-school tactics that make your sales page unattractive to the Third Tribe type of customer – and as a savvy entrepreneur you’re likely to have your own set of sales page elements that drive you crazy. Share them in the comments below – and if you don’t mind, briefly tell us what you see as the “Third Tribe” alternative. About the Author : Dave Navarro is a product launch manager who proudly wears his Third Tribe colors – and invites you to join the thousands of people who have downloaded his free workbooks in the Launch Coach Library (no opt-in required). There’s really no good reason not to.

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Five “Old School” Tactics That Could Ruin Your Sales Page