Posts Tagged ‘Profit’

PLR Products – Announcing 3 Lucrative Ways to Profit From PLR Products

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Online promotion offers a vast selection of revenue generating opportunities, and one such way is from Private Label Rights products, or PLR. These packages present opportunities to Internet marketing businesses which can be useful in several ways. In fact the single restriction is your imagination. This article gives a brief introduction to being a writer, Ebay opportunities, and joint venturing.

Here are 3 lucrative ways to profit using Private Label Rights products:

1. Are you good at writing, do you enjoy writing, does writing facilitate an opening for your creative talents? If you can answer yes to one or more of those questions, there could be a lucrative business opportunity for you. Internet marketers are constantly looking for top quality PLR product re-writers, and will pay handsomely to subcontract them to people like you to re-write for them. Using your creative instincts, re-craft the texts into something else completely. It is important that you can create individuality using what is in essence, just a template. You will find a good idea of what to accomplish since your customer will precisely outline their expectations to you, plus be open to any questions you have.

2. Offer your regenerated PLR product on eBay as a low priced “how to” manual. All through your manual, you should embed links to your website, further products, or affiliate products. As a bonus you can as well package and add further private label rights ebooks, into which you can as well insert your links. You ought to focus on receiving the ultimate in viral publicity for your work. Offer your own Resell criteria within your creations too.

3. An additional rewarding option for consideration is using a list. If you own a list of subscribers, you can contact list-owners in a closely related niche and ask if they’d be willing to recommend your manual to their customers, in exchange for a similar offer of their product to your list. It is best if you both possess a list of at least 1000 subscribers, to make it a valuable undertaking. You may not get the best benefit otherwise; indeed some list owners might not even be willing to talk to you if your list is fewer than 1000 subscribers.

Help Your Web Site Pass The Profit Test

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

It’s a proven fact simple and user friendly websites generate more sales. To improve your sales, look for ways to simplify and make it easier for your visitors. Test your ordering process. Remove the clutter, broken links and anything that distracts or confuses. Here’s a quick checklist to help your site pass inspection with your visitors and convert more of them to customers:

1. Sizzle Your Headlines.
Headlines are the most important marketing element of your website and your web marketing in general. Think about it a minute. What makes someone click your email out of the scores of emails in their ebox? Why do people choose your article out of a list of 20 or so on the page. They click because of your headline.

Invest time into crafting a sizzling headline. Seek to capture the interest of your visitor when they first arrive at your site. Using your headline make them want to know more about your product or services. Develop your headline to grab your prospect by the hand and lead them throughout your site emphasizing what your product/service can do for them.

One more thing, after developing a heated headline, make it stand out from the rest of your copy. Use bold type, large font sizes and even a different color according to the style of your web page.

2. Write Sizzling Sales Copy.
If the headline is the most important marketing element of your website, the second most important element is your sales copy. Turn the key to your profits by using benefits. After capturing your visitor’s interest with a sizzling headline let them know immediately what’s in it for them-benefits. Make the most of your direct contact with your prospect. They have arrived at your site looking for something. If you have targeted your visitors well they are looking for your information, product or service. Include the basic elements every sales letter should have. There’s lots of good sales letter writing software, templates and advice around the internet. Don’t know where to start?

3. Create Simple Navigation
Make your site easy to navigate. Place your links or buttons in a prominent place and keep them in the same place on every page. Your design should guide visitors through the information you want them to read. Make your colors, layout, links, and buttons consistent. Title every page so visitors will always know where they are. Place your buy buttons or contact information in same place from page to page. Provide links on every page back to the homepage.

4. Develop a Clear Call to Action
Many website’s lose countless opportunities to make a sale or capture a lead because they fail to ask something of their visitors. Call your visitors to a specific action. At the end of every page use the power of the direct command whether it’s simply directing them to contact you for further information or a directive to browse further into your site. For example, instead of “If you would like this beautiful travel brochure, we will be happy to send it” use “Sit down right now and fill out this form to start planning your vacation.” Or instead of “Call us to purchase your very own widget” use “Dial this number 877-846-9908 to purchase your widget today.”

5. Use Harmonic Images
Unseasoned site owners will sometimes use graphics or photos that do nothing to help illustrate their message. For example, they choose cutesy stars and flowers on a site selling accounting services. Look for clipart and photos that will support your important message.

Select graphics or design elements that will harmonize and illustrate your site’s message. Web Wit Tip: For non-techies like the author invest in inexpensive clipart/photo sets that will enhance and help illustrate your communications. Additionally, unless you are training to become a graphic artist look for graphic programs with templates to shorten your learning curve.

Profit From Your Knowledge – Become Your Own Craft Book Publisher!

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

If you’ve been a crafts person for some time – regardless of the level you think you’re at – you have valuable knowledge. Knowledge that other people will gladly pay for. All you need to do is write it down and become your own craft book publisher!

Before you think that’s too simplistic an answer, or even a bit sarcastic, let me assure you that is not my intention at all.

You see the age-old barriers to publishing your own craft book are gone. Not only can you use the hugely profitable method of digitally publishing and delivering online but even if you chose to go the traditional printed soft or hardcover route there are print-on-demand specialists who will happily produce just one or two copies of your craft book at very reasonable rates.

Not so long ago if you wanted to publish a craft book you’d have to jump through many, many hops – and for not a lot of reward. First you would have to find an agent (approaching publishers direct was usually unsuccessful). After convincing your agent that the book had merit you’d then have to trust that the agent could find a publisher.

Traditional publishers are notoriously difficult to convince, and not surprisingly. They would have to make a serious investment in pre-production and advertising before they had any chance of showing a profit. Many, many good craft books ended up not getting to press simply because the numbers didn’t add up.

If you managed to survive the cull then twelve months or so later you might start seeing some royalties. Around ten to fifteen percent of the cover price.

Very few people got rich writing a craft book.

Now all that has changed. Digital craft book publishing is a reality and dozens of craft books that might never have seen the light of day are now being published by the craftspeople themselves. You don’t need an agent, you don’t need a publisher, there are ways of marketing your craft book that are zero cost.

The result is not a paltry 10 or 15% but profit levels as high as 90% of the cover price.

Of course there are bound to be other barriers, aren’t there? Surely it can’t really be that easy to become your own craft book publisher?

Well the only possible thing that some craftspeople might consider a challenge would be creating some sort of website from which to sell their craft book. To be frank, with the ease of publishing that some website systems offer, and the alternative of running a craft blog, there really is nothing to stop you.

You might have to learn a few things you don’t know at the moment but as a craftsperson, learning is part of what you do pretty much continually so that shouldn’t hold you back.