Starting an internet based business when you have zero marketing experience is, to say the least, bewildering. He speaks from personal experience as he started out with no specialized knowledge. He gradually weaved my way through what seemed like hundreds of sites selling just about everything and tried to resist buying every white elephant that was offered.
In the interim, he purchased my first package which turned out to be of little practical use. While he was doing that, he somehow went off in another direction and bought another "package deal", hardly stopping to think that I did not have the requisite skill and knowledge to make this programmed work either.
To cut a direct path through the dense forest, He'll tell you now that he spent much more that he originally intended. Thankfully, he learnt a few lessons along the way.
1. Stay Focused
It is easy to become swamped and distracted trying to run several programmers at the same time, on zero experience. Leave diversification to the pros until you have garnered some experience and at least have some sales/profit (whichever you prefer) from your first venture. Needless to say, you will find yourself floundering around aimlessly, watching your money burn, having done no research before making a purchase. If you feel a burning urge to buy anyway, read the material again, do some research, sleep on it and then make a decision. For more information visit to :www.tube-pros-espects.comTwenty-four hours delay won't kill you and remember, one venture at a time.
2. Allow some "Opportunities" to pass you by
As God is my witness, he believes he became a member of at least fifty programmers that promised me anything from "massive profits" to "dramatic sales explosion, traffic, profit, and great downlines"? You get the idea. Unless you have twenty-four dedicated hours to spend on your e-business each day, you cannot market all these web sites; and without the ability to create traffic to each site (and you get one for just about every programme you join), you are back where you started. ? And, by the way, did he mention the sea of email from other members? That's right; he didn't get beyond the hype at the top of the sales page either. So then, limit yourself to a manageable number of traffic generation ventures. Better to pay for leads or hits even if on a tight budget than to try to do the impossible. Allow some opportunities to pass you by. If they are too good to be true, they are!
3. Free Information?.A hidden gold mine
! They are valuable, even if you have to wade through tons of information for a few golden nuggets. If your business is to grow, you have to be learning constantly. If all else fails, you can always rebrand the books, give them away to your subscribers or make some money from them by reselling the information. He read somewhere that a great percentage of ebooks remain unread by those who receive them. For more information visit to:www.mrx-interview.comWhat a shame! Do your best to use that information, it is there to help you get ahead.
4. Keep at it, Rome was not built in a day
If you (1) stay focused on one or two manageable ventures, (2) channel your marketing energies wisely (pay where you can and forget the freebies), (3) read the complimentary material you get and (4) develop some stick-to-itiveness, you will eventually begin to see rewards from your investment. You may never make millions, but you will at least derive a steady income from your efforts.