The
Profit Systems Report
Internet Profit Systems
In
This Issue:
The
HIDDEN Benefits Of Paid Advertising
- Putting Your Feet To The Fire
Forced
testing:
How to increase your sales
and conversion rate almost against your will
From
the desk of Timothy A. Gross
Friends,
you may be inches away from doubling or tripling the profitability
of your online business.
Whether
you have an established profitable website or are just starting
out, the difference between "failing and succeeding"
or "doing OK and doing GREAT" can be very slight.
For
most online businesses, the "Million-Dollar Question"
is this:
WHAT
IS EACH VISITOR
TO MY WEBSITE WORTH?
The
answer to that question will dictate (and limit) most of your
marketing efforts. I've spent tens of thousands of dollars in
online advertising over the last the last 3 months.
It's
been very profitable overall - But more importantly, it forced
me to change the way I was running my business! It can help
you change yours too... I'll explain in a minute.
FIRST:
A Short Refresher Course On R.O.I.
(Return On Investment
- What is each visitor worth to you?)
Let's
take an easy example and say you're selling a downloadable product
that costs $100. If it takes 100 visitors to make one sale, then
each visitor to your site is worth one dollar ($1). -That's
assuming you only have one product, and no way to make extra money
from your customers. (Which isn't true, we'll get into that in
later issues ;-)
The
next variable you need to determine is how much it costs to get
each person to your website. If you're running banner ads that
get a 1% clickthrough, that means that one out of every 100 people
who sees your banner will click on it. And we already know in
this example that it takes 100 visitors to your site to make a
sale.
So
it would take 10,000 people seeing your banner (100 x 100 = 10,000)
to make a sale - And each sale would make you $100. That means
that as long as it costs you less than $100 for 10,000 people
to see your banner, you're making money.
ON
A SIDE NOTE: The cost of banner impressions is rated by the 1,000
impressions. It's called "CPM" which stands for "cost
per thousand". If you paid $5 CPM, that would be $5 per 1,000
banner impressions, or $50 for 10,000 banner impressions. Since
we already figured out that each 10,000 banner impressions earns
us $100 in this example, we'd make back $50 profit on every $50
we spent.
Now,
I know that this entire example is a real "yawner" (boring
as heck), but the end result is *very exciting*... Because these
results can be repeated and extrapolated. These results can earn
you $1,000's in extra profits, because you can run this successful
ad over and over online.
BACK
TO MY POINT...
The
goal of this article is not to explain the mechanics of banner
advertising. It is to explain how paid advertising can become
the catalyst for increasing your profits by FORCING you to improve
your:
-
Headline
-
Guarantee
-
Website
Layout
-
Followup
System
-
Overall
Offer
HERE'S
WHY:
Someone
once said, "I wouldn't stay up one night to earn $100, but
I'd stay up for 3 nights trying to keep from losing $100."
If
your online business is currently making money, that's great.
But it's almost certain that you haven't done everything you can
to maximize your profits, and that fact is hurting everything
that you currently do.
HERE
ARE SOME EXAMPLES
*
One product that I've been involved with selling has done pretty
well with paid advertising so far. But just last week we ran an
"opt-in email" test to 100,000 people with a company
that charges no upfront cost, and only asks for a commission on
every sale that their efforts generate. (Sweet deal)
Now
here's the kicker: They'll email the offer to their entire list
(10,000,000 people) IF the results of the first 100,000 brings
them somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 sales. Even though this
particular offer I wrote has done well in other advertising mediums,
it fell short of the mark for this campaign.
The
Challenge: If I can increase the response of the ad through another
test, they'll email the offer to the rest of the 10,000,000. So
how motivated am I to increase the results? - PRETTY MOTIVATED!!
And with that motivation, I GUARANTEE that I will find a way to
increase the response to get them to email that 10,000,000 list.
Due
to the response of this one ad, here are the variables I've already
changed:
-
The
Headline
-
Length
of the ad (shortened it as a test)
-
Guarantee
- Made it even stronger, possibly a "double your money
back" guarantee
-
Number
of bonuses were increased
NECESSITY
IS THE MOTHER OF INVENTION
With
"free" traffic to your site, you're simply more complacent.
You figure that a certain number of visitors subscribe to your
newsletter, a certain number of people purchase your product,
and that's life. -You're not really that motivated to test and
adapt to increase your sales.
But
with paid advertising, it becomes a "life or death situation".
If you know you're paying 50 cents for every visitor that comes
to your site, every person who visits and does not buy and does
not subscribe to your newsletter/followup system is costing you
plenty!
It
Pretty Much Forces You To Change And Adapt
For
instance - If you don't currently have a "pop-up" exit
box that prompts your exiting visitors to enter their email to
receive a free gift of high value, paid advertising will pretty
much force you to do it.
If
you don't have an effective follow-up autoresponder sequence that
"seals the deal", this will force you to do it. You
may experiment with offering other/outside products in your follow-ups.
(I've tested that successfully as well.)
I'll
have some specific paid-advertising tips and resources for you
in future issues. In the next issue of the Profit Systems
Report: "Is following the 'guru' advice of giving the
appearance of being a big business hurting your profits?"
-Stay
tuned for this eye-opening issue!
To
your success, Timothy A. Gross
President - Internet Profit Systems
P.S.
- In response to the many emails I've received regarding the opt-in
email advertising that charges no up-front fee: Since we're still
currently working with this opt-in email company, we'd prefer
not to disclose who they are... And these are the types of sources
we share with clients only. All I can suggest is that when you
contact advertisers, *ask* about these types of arrangements.
Because of the economy being how it is, advertisers are much more
willing to try this, as long as it can be established that the
response to your offer is good. (Don't be afraid to "haggle"!)