The "Big3" Points to selling on the Web (part 2)
Ok in my last article I spoke about the "Big 3" points to
selling on the web
Point 1 develop a great product
Point 2 write a Website that SELLS with deadly effectiveness
Point 3 attract targeted customers (i.e., traffic) to the site.
We will cover point #1 "develop a great product" and how it
relates to point #2, since I only touched on this briefly in my
last article.
Before you can successfully market products on the web, you
first need to change your mindset from selling to preselling
customers. Preselling is taking a product and writing good sales
copy "from your own words" and not copy and pasting sales copy
for your products. Why? Because everyone else who promotes the
same product(s) is probably doing it too. You can not expect
your customers to click through on sales copy they have seen on
10 other sites they visited it just reinforces that being sold
feeling. Which is why I am not an advocate for using flashy ad
banners, while they do generate click through they don't put
your customers in the buying frame of mind. Just think about
this, if you did generate sales with banners, how many of the
clicks actually converted into a sale? What happened to all the
clicks that didn't convert, they most likely bought from your
competitor. Typically banners give your customer the feeling of
being sold which is not the MWR you want. MWR (Most Wanted
Response) is what you want your visitor/customer to do while on
your site. I know your saying, I want them to buy something from
me. No, that will be the second MRW response you want. The first
is, to get your customer in the proper frame of mind to get the
click through to your merchants site, purchase a product, sign
up for your newsletter etc.
You can accomplish this by:
1. Setting your MWR goal for each product(s) you have. 2. Write
good content for each of the products leading to a great closer
with your link.
You need to do this before you even start to think of putting
your products on your site. How do I create a MWR? Glade you
asked, let take for example you want to sell software priced
over $1000, that cost would be difficult to sell. Your MWR goal
might be to offer a free 30 day trial offer to use the software.
If your selling a service your MWR goal might be generating a
lead, have a sign-up form with contact information for a sales
follow up. Once you have set your MWR goal, write good content
to presell it. From the software example above, you could write
a review of the software detail the benefits to your customer,
add a testimonial, then use a good closing line, and finally
your link. Remember your customer wants information, that's why
people search the web right? So give them what they want and
they will be more open minded and trusting about buying from you.
You may view some examples on my site:
http://biz4-u.com/make-your-site-sell-review.htm
http://biz4-u.com/site-build-it-review.htm
While most experienced marketers use these techniques, many
people new to home business start up are not sure where to
begin. I must highly recomend for you to get Ken Evoy's Make Your Site
Sell book. All of what I discussed in my article is covered
step by step in Ken's book, and its guarenteed to help you learn
to sell the web with confidence.
Good luck and best wishes, Glenn Ducharme