Create Your Own DVDs

April 7, 2008

It’s easy to create your own DVDs when you’re using the right tools.

You can easily put together your own DVDs to sell on your website, on Amazon, and even eBay.

The software I use for video editing and DVD creation is Sony Vegas Movie Studio (direct link to Amazon – not an affiliate link).

Here’s a video showing how easy it is to use Sony Architect (which comes with the platinum version of Vegas Movie Studio) to build a DVD menu for your DVDs.

Please note that this video is an excerpt from one of my upcoming DVDs on this topic. It just shows working in Architect. Before you export your video over to Architect, you’re going to need to create chapters in Vegas Movie Studio. The upcoming DVD set will show you how to choose topics, edit the video in Sony Vegas, output it on DVD, and get it duplicated. It also shows you how to improve your sales conversions and start generating traffic.

Look for it to be available in 2 weeks when I will be having a very special limited time deal on this blog for it.

Becoming a Market Mind Reader

April 4, 2008

If you want to increase your sales and your ROI in any market, get to know your customer better.

What are your customer’s thinking?

- What are their hopes and dreams?
- What do they lie in bed worrying about at night?
- Who do they love?
- Who do they hate?
- How do they feel about your competitors?
- How do they feel about you and your business?
- What causes them to buy?
- What keeps them from buying?
- What do they most want when they buy?

Do you truly and honestly know your customers? The better you get to know them, the easier it will be to deliver them the value they’re really looking for…and the easier it will be to grow your business.

There is an old statement that says…

People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.

Read that last sentence a few times to understand the full meaning.

Early on in my business I learned just how important copywriting was so I sought out the best teachers I could find on the subject. I studied all the materials I could get my hands on by Ted Nicolas, Gary Halbert, Jay Abraham, John Carlton, Brian Keith Voiles, and many others. And the one theme that continued through every single one of them was: EMPATHY.

I remember quite well going through John Carlton’s course and him telling the story how he had to keep writing a promotional for a weight loss product over and over again. He was writing as an assistant to Gary Halbert…and he kept having it handed back to him because he needed to put some EMPATHY in the letter.

Go over to Wikipedia and you’ll find quite a few definitions for empathy. Scan through them and you’ll see they all point back to a very similar definition.

To empathize means to share, to experience the feelings of another person.”

Do you really empathize with your customers?

If you’ve ever really gotten into the zone in writing a letter to your customers, you can “feel” while you’re writing when they’re going to stumble over something. You can sense where they’re going to have issues in the letter, because you’ve gotten to know them. You know when they’re going to bring up objections so you can deal with them. And it’s that trait that the greatest copywriters have mastered for the markets they write in. They know their customers, how they feel, and what they’re thinking at each point in the sales process.

How do we start reading the minds of our customers?

This is a deep subject, but I’ll give you a few strategies to help you get started on the right path. This only covers the tip of the iceberg, but you can use many of these techniques immediately…

Method #1: Surveys

You’ll notice I did a survey this past week where I asked you as one of my readers what were you thinking. Why did I do this?

I wanted you to tell me what was most important to you. I didn’t want to take for granted what you wanted to read about. I had you tell me.

In addition I wanted to know how YOU saw this blog from your viewpoint. I’m using all the feedback to prepare an upcoming change to the overall blog design and layout. It won’t be based on how I think about what I do. It’s going to be based on my reader’s opinions.

One of the first things I do when I enter a new market is put up a survey about the market. I ask them what they most want to know about the subject along with other questions to determine as much as I can about the audience I’m attracting.

This new market survey serves two purposes. Often the product itself can be developed right out of the questions they ask. In other words, the survey results create the basic outline for my product. Is it nice of them to write my outline for me?

I also can compare different potential markets by how much I’m paying per survey. A very rough estimate is I expect to pay 10 times as much for a sale as I pay to get a survey filled out. So if I’m paying $3.50 to get each survey filled out through Google Adwords, I’m expecting a cost of $35 per sale from that same advertising.

In a couple of cases I found just through doing the survey that the market was going to be more expensive to enter than I was willing to pay. Those projects when on the back burner to focus on the ones which had a much greater chance of immediate success. If you’re like me, it’s not a question of not having enough project ideas. It’s the problem of having too many and not knowing which ones to focus on. Try a survey…

What about when you have a project that isn’t selling like you expected? You of course start testing the page, but what else can you do? You can add a popover on exit survey to ASK your customer why they choose not to respond. A percentage of them will tell you! So instead of guessing your way in the dark, let them light your path by telling you what you need to change to get and hold their interest.

Method #2: Direct Feedback

Have you considered actually talking to your customers?

I know this might sound a little outrageous, but most of them probably won’t bite. You can talk to them and ask them what they like about your product or what they don’t like. You can ask them why they chose to buy from you. You can ask them what their biggest concern in buying from you was. You can even ask them what else they’d like to have available.

Call up a few of your customers on the phone and thank them for their order. Ask them if there is anything else you can do for them. Then ask them a few of the questions above. Then SHUT UP and listen.

I’ve also always found seminars to be an awesome opportunity for this. I often make my way around the room before the event or early on in the event to ask everyone why they’re there. What is it that they came to learn? What caused them to choose this seminar over the other options? What other seminars have they attended and how did they feel about them? How could I best serve their needs as a speaker at the event?

They’re tell you what they came for and why. Everyone you talk to is another step closer to really understanding your market.

Method #3: Examine How Successful Competitors Approach the Market

Who are the most successful people in the market? Find out…and then print out all their websites and sales copy. Examine it. What hot buttons are they hitting on? How are they identifying themselves with the market? What tone do they write in?

I shared Jay Abraham’s system for using Amazon for the same purpose recently. Go through all the top books in your category and write down their titles. Read through all the feedback people leave on these books. And look for the emotional comments both for and against the book. What emotions are driving people in the market?

They’ve already tapped into the dominant emotions of the marketplace for you. Become a marketplace detective and look at all the evidence. Who are the most recognizable names? How did they get there? What are people saying about them? How could you put together all this material and do an even better job?

Method #4: Real Test Results

This is the strongest test of the audience’s reaction. Survey information is valuable, but real test results are even more valuable. You might run a survey and people agree yes they would be willing to pay for X. Then you offer them a product about X and nobody buys it. When the money meets the road, they weren’t willing to whip out their credit card. It’s the same issue with taking a survey of the “price” people are willing to pay. You’re almost always going to have the survey say people are willing to pay less than they really are for the product…when they’re faced with a real solution to their problems staring them in the face.

For example, with the survey I recently did I asked people what kinds of articles they most wanted to read. I’m going to combine this with looking at my traffic stats from previous articles. So I have in hand what people say they want more information on and I also know what they have responded to best in the past. My future articles will be a combination of information from BOTH these sources. The good news is that in this cases the two sources are agreeing.

If you’re not testing in your business, you’re not learning. Make a commitment to test SOMETHING this week. Test a new headline. Test a new type of blog post. Test a video. Do something different that you can track the results of. Some will work. Some won’t work. Either way, you’re learning. There are no failures in testing…only new information.

Unique Article Marketing Software

April 2, 2008

Steven Lohrenz released a article marketing software program in the past few days.

I own several article marketing software programs and have mentioned them in the past. But my biggest complaint with all the programs I own has been the fact they have to run from my own computer. If I want to email out articles to specific publishers it is running on my system through my ISP.

As you may already know, many ISPs don’t like you sending a large volume of email from your computer.

Steven finally came up with a solution that allows you to send out your articles from your web server. There are two other features I really love about his program.

It allows you to submit unique articles to thousands of publishers. You can load in all the publishers you want to contact. Then load in several variations of your article. It will automatically create unique articles out of your variations to avoid the duplicate content filters on some of the search engines.

In addition, you can automatically schedule when your articles will be sent out. For example, you could login to the system and schedule for one article to be sent out each week for the next month. Set it up today and they will automatically go out on the schedule you created. It’s set and forget.

OK…what’s the price for this software?

Right now other article submission programs that don’t do as much cost $19.95 up to $347, but Steven is doing something special.

For now, the software is free. But who knows how long it will stay that way?

Why is he giving it away free? The first reason he’s doing this is because the basic foundation of what he created came from an open source program which he modified to add in his additional code for creating unique articles. In addition, he sells other software programs and training tools (including an online video series on how to get the most from article submissions) which he knows you’ll be interested in once you see what this does for free.

I should mention also that I found the software to have one major weakness. It can be a little difficult to install. If you’re a non-techie you’re going to want to hire someone else to install it for you. So that adds a cost to using this program.

Here’s where you can pick up this software for free (and check out his other offers):
http://www.uniquearticlemarketing.com

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