Archive for August, 2009
Next era internet…maybe
Posted by: | CommentsI was interested to read a report from Brian Clark from Copyblogger yesterday who has a new business interest called Teaching Sells. Now I don’t know Brian, have missed the blogging universe bandwagon and consider myself old-fashioned enough to check things out independently and talk about them only if something piques my interest.
Brian Clark’s report, is called “Forget Everything You Know About Making Money Online…And Start Making Some”. To get it you do need to sign up for priority notification for a new course Brian is selling, but hey, everyone needs an economic model and I was interested to find out Brian’s thoughts.
If you’re reading this you probably know that my partner, David Eedle and I did actually make really good money online from a niche content business for the arts worker market, called Arts Hub. But unlike lots of the processes and systems that are making the rounds as I write, this was a bona fide real business, with real ongoing processes and real people and as it grew, real staff. So, I get quite upset when I read posts that say you can make money without doing any real work, just by following someone else’s system. My gut tells me that by the time someone is willing to tell you how it works, it’s no longer working for them. They’re just using their results to sell the sizzle of a process that is now spent and has no real value for anyone. Read More→
Who do you trust?
Posted by: | CommentsA couple of weeks ago I was reading Kirsty Dunphey’s Blog and she put into words the exact reason why I’ve been so squeamish lately at marketing claims of internet dudes who say they are gurus and will make me very rich this very next minute.
Her blog post is called “What to look for in a coach” and whilst it is just a short and sharp post, it cracks to the point and wastes no energy on equivocation. Maybe it’s my job to do that.
New Age Research
Posted by: | CommentsI must admit, I’ve always been someone to canvas other people’s views when I want to test out an idea or find some information and I’m not sure I’m going about finding it in the most efficient way. I used to be inundated with well-meaning types taking over and telling me my quest was in vain, but thankfully there’s been some generational renewal and in more recent times I’ve found that doing a bit of action research yields me a bigger, more comprehensive view on the area I wanted to find out more about. Read More→
Context is King for Online Content
Posted by: | CommentsBack in the old days (by which my children mean BC, ‘before children’) I was manager of a regional performing arts centre for a couple of years. A key part of my job was managing all the marketing for the venue. And because the staff and resource was small, that usually meant I was literally doing everything, writing media releases, designing press advertisements, writing newspapers, giving radio interviews and, on one memorable occasion the day before a show that we’d sold precisely 10 tickets for, standing in the local shopping mall handing out flyers receiving a strong dose of reality, that the reason we’d sold ten tickets (out of 250) was because no-one was interested in the show, however fabulous we thought it.
The theatre placed a fair amount of advertising with the local newspaper, including a weekly calendar of events that chewed up quite a few column centimetres, plus display advertising for all the current and coming events. Quite often touring productions would have their own display advertising artwork pre-prepared, all we need to do was strip in our venue name and contacts. And just for the old hands, the artwork arrived as bromides (does anyone still use these?), bear in mind this was the early 1990s so we handled very little electronic artwork, although I seem to recall the newspaper starting to accept PDF artwork by email about that time. Read More→
Do you need Gay Guest House content on your site?
Posted by: | CommentsWhat has a town planning application and the biggest news story of the year on regional radio have to do with your blog or website content?
Let me tell you a story of something that happened to me in the early 1990s when I was a casual Producer with ABC Radio in a mid-sized Australian coastal country town.
Among other things, each month we would trawl through the local council minutes to try dig up issues and stories for our Morning Program – a 2 hour interview-based talk program that often required me as the Producer to come up with up to 14 unique story leads a day.
I joined this team in the midst of something that turned from a local small town controversy into a full-blown international debate on gay rights, gay tourism and the pink dollar. I wasn’t there for the first news interview that started things off, but joined the week after when a talkback caller came on air and divulged that the planning story we’d done on a guesthouse had way more to it than met the eye. The broadcaster was intrigued and probed for some time until it was established that the caller believed the guesthouse was to cater specifically for the gay market and hey presto we were away. Suddenly this issue was known as the Gay Guesthouse story. Read More→
Transcript: The Art and Science of Getting Rich Part 2
Posted by: | CommentsThis is a transcript of the video post ‘The Art and Science of Getting Rich Part 2‘.
Five Tried and Tested Tools to Improve Your Online Customer Service
Posted by: | CommentsI suspect it’s not unreasonable to suggest that everyone in the world has a story about poor customer service. And thankfully today’s technologies are improving the opportunities for both sides of the equation to take action.
I was standing in the queue at our local bank yesterday. Let’s relive my Tweets (sent from my iPhone using the Tweetie app), I’d been there around for about five or six minutes, then finally boredom ensued and I hauled my phone out:
Read More→
Feedback that excites, whatever the medium
Posted by: | CommentsYears ago I worked as a producer and broadcaster at ABC Radio and we were forever being exhorted by management to make sure the stories we chased were worth reporting and running interviews on. These days it’s called creating compelling content – Problogger has a series of posts at the moment that explore exactly what compelling content is. The edict for content to be compelling is even more urgent now in the world of choice we have all around us. Indeed many days I feel I have so much choice that somehow I’d simply prefer to sit back and wait for something new to fall out of the sky and hit me between the eyes.
Read More→
Some Membership Website Marketers Need Their Ethics Read
Posted by: | CommentsA free DVD detailing how you can make thousands of dollars from marketing on the internet sounds like the deal of the century. There’s only 5,000 DVDs available, and they’ll send it to you for just the cost of shipping – less than $10 if you are in the USA, a couple of dollars more if you live outside the USA.
That’s the offer in an email that lobbed into my Gmail overnight. One of a bunch I get each day from internet marketers around the world.
The DVD is produced by two guys who have sold more than $15,000,000 worth of products online, and will let you in on the secret of how to use email lists to unlock the wealth you want and deserve. If you don’t already have a mailing list, then don’t worry, they’ll show you how to build your own email marketing list with thousands of hot prospects. List building 101 appears to be a key part of the program, along with implementing an email marketing campaign, either with your own product (a training program maybe!) or pushing affiliate products.






