Even if it took you 6-12 months to learn how to market correctly online so you were making at least a 6-figure income for the rest of your life would you do it? Most people would answer yes. However, the truth is most people are expecting to get rich quick and lack the proper education on what it really takes to become a wealthy marketer.
Marketing Budget:
I came to it, but a significant income online, from me, in fact I think that was a huge marketing budget can not be found.
Secret #1:
The first secret to becoming a wealthy marketer is article marketing.
Free marketing techniques and strategies are so many, in fact, also, to know how to implement them correctly when there are way more effective than the sum of all payments. My own personal experience as well as from others, the richest of all marketing, attention and learning are free to implement these techniques.
Free marketing techniques, including writing press releases, articles, marketing, and participation in forums and blog.
To tell you how powerful marketing article, I wrote an article a few weeks ago, within two weeks it has spread to more than 14,000 other pages. My site began offering free transportation under water, I jumped up in the search engine rankings quickly, I would autopilot sales.
Secret #2:
The second secret to becoming a wealthy marketer is selling your values.
Market your values and your personality. Put the emphasis on yourself first and then your products second.
Questions should ask yourself is: What do you have for the value of the offer the other, how can you help others? Because people want to make sure you have the opportunity to help them, and that will be can be the solution to their problem.
Sell your honesty, your personality, the most important is your desire to help your knowledge. Your knowledge is power is the power that can be shared
Once you can establish a person's trust, they will like you, because they know that you want to ensure its success.
Combining article marketing and your values will bring more traffic and convert more sales than anything else.
If you want to increase their value to the world, and then increase your knowledge base. Once you increase the knowledge, and can really help other people get what they want, you will become a rich marketing.
November 23, 2009
2 Secrets to Become a Wealthy Marketer
October 24, 2009
Have You Inventoried Your Intellectual Capital Recently?
Many times when you’re starting out in business, or changing direction in business, you become overwhelmed with just where to start, or who you can contact for assistance. You have many contacts, have belonged to a number of associations or groups over the years, and have spoken to numerous groups and associations in your career. The overwhelm often comes from knowing many people and many things but not having any centralized method to access all that information.
What you need to do is to start to inventory your non-tangible business assets, or your intellectual capital. While this information isn’t an asset that may carry a firm price, like your real estate or office equipment investment, the value of this information in connecting you to a valued business contact or getting you in front of the group of people who comprise your target market can be priceless.
What do you need to begin this process? Start by assembling: –your contact database –all versions of your resume –proposals for all presentations you’ve conducted or of which you’ve been a part –any sales materials you’ve used in your business (brochures, speaker sheets, previous versions of websites, etc.) –copies of all mentions in the press and/or press releases you’ve submitted –copies of all articles, ebooks, books, white papers, etc. that you have authored –copies of all audio and video recordings of yourself
You’ll want to determine how to begin tracking this info for your new intellectual capital database. This may mean creating a new group/folder in ACT! or Outlook to track contacts, a new Word document to cut and paste information info, or a central online repository where you can upload this information and keep it free and clear of your other business clutter. Two great online resources for this are CentralDesktop.com and OfficeZilla.com
Now you need to start paring down the information that you have and begin to categorize it. To help you, I’ve come up with 6 categories of information for you to evaluate. For all of this intellectual capital, rank their value to you from 1-3, with 1 being the most value. These are the ones where you’ll concentrate your energy.
1. Contacts. Who do you know and where do they work? Do you have mailing addresses, email addresses, or both? Include both friends and family members, former work colleagues, current and past clients, and casual acquaintances you have met along the way. In order for them to make it to your new intellectual capital database, you have to note the value that they have for you, i.e. do they work in a company in which you want to get a foothold, can they connect you with someone of value, or are they just well-connected overall?
2. Associations/groups. To what groups have you belonged in the past or are a current member? To what groups do you have many connections but aren’t a member? Include professional, civic, volunteer, athletic, and religious groups. Don’t overlook any groups to which your child belongs where you know other parents — these groups can be as valuable as professional associations for contacts.
3. Speaking. What talks have you given and could currently deliver with only a few moment’s notice? How about presentations given to clients, or programs provided at professional conferences?
4. Writings. What articles or books have you written? How about ebooks, white papers, or other types of information products? Any writings in which you are the copyright holder should be included here. Electronic versions are the easiest to use, so if you don’t have some of these writings available to you electronically, make it a priority to get this information converted to an electronic format.
5. Recordings. Do you have audio or video recordings of yourself presenting? If not, can you obtain copies?
6. Services. What services have you provided in the past? What about your current service offerings? Are there ways to tie sets of services together?
This inventory of your intellectual won’t be completed in a day. Give yourself several weeks to gather the info that you need, record it as appropriate, and evaluate it. As you’re evaluating business growth or a change in direction, take stock of patterns that develop in your inventory or possibilities of opportunities that present themselves. This inventory may enable you to tap into a new market or determine how to best spend any initial marketing efforts.
Copyright (c) 2007 Donna Gunter