Tips for Getting the Most Out of Your List | Part 2 of 2
In part two of this two-part blog post, we will continue our look at the problem that almost every email marketer faces when they first set out to make money from their lists: how to convert the names on the list into paying customers.
#7 - Give Valuable Advice
Maintain a good relationship with your list by supplying them with regular good-quality advice. That is paramount to having a successful and profitable list.
Another great way of interacting with your list is to ask questions when you send out an email. Always make sure that your members can contact you. Remember, it’s a two-way process; it’s all about establishing a warm relationship.
#8 - Offer Freebies
You can help keep this relationship warm by giving free ebooks and courses.
With some of these, offer your members paid upgrades. If your members like what you are giving them, they will be happy to upgrade.
Initially, keep the price low. By offering an upgrade at something like $7.00, you can establish more trust. Also, this will help confirm that you have a list that doesn’t mind spending money online.
#9 - Don’t Cross-Sell
One thing that is vitally important is that your list needs to be kept on topic. Don’t be tempted to cross-sell to a list.
For example, you may have a list that contains people interested in photography. You may also have a second list whose members are interested in weight loss. Don’t be tempted to sell a weight-loss product to your photography list. The photography list must get photography-related emails, and the weight loss list must have only weight-loss-related content.
However, there is nothing stopping you from casually cross-promoting your ezines. For example, you could get some of your photography list to sign up for your weight-loss list by mentioning something about weight loss in a conversational manner.
Then mention that, if they’re interested, they can sign up for your newsletter or free weight-loss ebook. Be sure to make this promotion an aside or a postscript, not a main part of the email.
#10 – Avoid the Internet Marketing Sector
When starting out with email marketing, I would strongly advise you to avoid the Internet marketing sector. There is nothing worse than generating a list and then marketing a product to them, only to find that 20 other people have marketed the same product to them.
To work effectively in the Internet marketing niche, you need to have good email marketing skills and access to excellent bonuses. You need to be able to offer your members something that all the other marketers can’t. So, until you can develop these additional components to compete successfully, avoid it.
#11 - Seek a Niche You Know About
It is far easier to hone your skills in a sector on which you have excellent knowledge. Having knowledge of a sector will allow you to quickly establish yourself as an expert. And people are much more likely to follow the advice and recommendations of an expert, so selling to that list will be easier.
Never be tempted to bluff your list, though. It’s almost a certainty that there will be people on your list who know more than you!
#12 - Getting Started
So how do you get to the stage where you can sell to your list? The first thing you should do is to write 10 or more newsletters\emails giving general advice and tips on the subject. Then add them to your autoresponder.
#13 - Establish a Schedule, and Keep Them Interested
Decide how often you want these sent out to members and configure your autoresponder to send these out. I would recommend once a week as a good frequency to start with. In these initial emails, give as much help and advice as you can. If you keep your subscribers interested at this stage, then they should remain members of the list for a long time.
So, now we are up to about week 10. You can now start to send out weekly newsletters that you’ve just written. You can talk about recent developments in the sector and give more up-to-date advice.
Now might also be a good time to give your a list a good, related CPA (cost per action) offer, ideally one that gives your list something for free. For example, if you had a golf list, you could look for a CPA offer where your members would get free golf balls. Give them the details of this offer and your affiliate link.
Such CPA freebie offers are a win-win. Your subscribers get free golf balls, and you earn income. Plus you’ve just proved the value of your ezine to your members, and you are on your way to maintaining a profitable list.
#14 - The End Result: Sales
We’ve seen that by keeping a good relationship with your list, you can ensure that your list is responsive to your offers when you make them. Remember, don’t treat your list as “pockets to be picked,” but rather as friends to whom you give good advice. If you do, you will continue making sales for many years to come.
Many affiliate marketers’ first taste of email marketing is when they themselves get on the list of some Internet marketing guru. They then get the impression that email marketing is about sending out three or four emails a week, offering every new product that comes out.
Hopefully, after reading this two-part blog post, you now know that email marketing is not necessarily like that. Email marketing for the rest of us is about building relationships based on trust.
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