Showing posts with label online millionaire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online millionaire. Show all posts

4/11/2008

Basics of an eBay Online Millionaire Plan

Why use eBay to as a key starting point for an Online Millionaire Plan?
Because it's an established community of buyers and sellers. Almost all the bugs have been worked out, saving those which scammers and spammers have recently flocked to.

Means you can easily and quickly get established with a profitable base, for the low entry cost and know-how every work-from-home Online Millionaire is starting out with. That's why more millionaires are being made through online or online-related venues than brick-and-mortar - low entry costs.

And, where you start with a profitable business, you can then leverage that positive cash flow into other venues. Also, this could replace your day job so that you can then spend more time (with less stress) perfecting other marketing approaches.

I "eat my own dogfood" - with relish.

This hit me when I posted a comment to someone's blog that social marketing is a oxymoron, since you can't build a market, only promote and find unqualified leads through social networks. It's the nature of the "beast". I stated there that anyone looking for sales should go where there is an active sales community, one full of buyers, like eBay.

That was a haunting comment. It was one area of making an online fortune which I hadn't investigated. A lot of that due to the other venues being exclusively concerned with making it on their own, another that auctions hadn't "been my thing," since they seemed filled with a lot of work in order to make any money - the cost-benefit ratio seemed a bit low for what I had to do in order to earn money in that area.

However, when I started looking for data in this area, I found that there was a great deal more data about this than just going to yard sales and putting stuff up for auction - hoping it would sell big. And by cursory investigation of eBay, I saw that a great deal of auctions were completing with nothing bought. You pay your 35 cents and takes your chances.

Auction basics: buy low and sell to the highest bidder - profitably.

Interestingly, I had actually started this research years ago when I stumbled upon a bootleg copy of "Deep Analysis". Like most bootleg copies, it was dated and didn't run all that well. Promising, but not ready for prime time. However, during the years, this had matured into an intensely viable research tool for finding hot areas where there were high numbers of bidders for certain items routinely. In short, you could find profitable "buzz niches" where sales were brisk and hugely profitable.

But where to get these products cheaply and in volume?

While Deep Analysis matured, another company, called WorldWide Brands, had grown from the itch that its founder, Chris Malta had to scratch. You see, Chris realized that his highest profits would be to buy in bulk and sell individually. Simple. Basic to all commerce. However, he had difficulty in finding wholesalers who wanted to work with individual eBay sellers. Either they didn't understand the market possible through affiliates selling their products directly through eBay, or didn't understand the scope of eBay - or were being represented by scam artists, who were simply out to make a buck.

What Chris did was to find the real manufacturers for these items (not the corporate brand names which are on the label) and then contacting those manufacturers for a list of wholesalers they recommended. By contacting those wholesalers, he was able to piece together a list of companies who would actually work with individual eBay sellers.

Chris's work continued, as it was personally profitable to him - but also because he had found a niche others appreciated: validated sources for bulk wholesale items. And so his company now maintains the largest database of its kind in the world - some 9,000 (yes, that's 9 thousand) companies willing to sell directly to individuals so they can re-sell them on eBay.

You might now be asking yourself, "but those pallets of goods arrived on my front step and I filled my garage with these - great. What if the market tanks? Not to mention the fact that I still have to package and ship these by hand."

Ok, we've covered that slightly above with Deep Analysis - research before your buy. But Chris also had that same problem and worked around it with a couple of solutions:
  • He found companies which would drop-ship your item directly to the customer with your name on the package. You sell it on eBay, contact the company, they ship.
  • He worked with the larger companies to create arrangements where you could buy partial pallet of goods (or just a single pallet instead of twenty). So you can start small and keep on top of the market as it changes, while your overhead (time and money) of shipping is kept low.
Chris Malta's Worldwide Brands isn't the only company like this out there - but it is by far the biggest, well worth their 0ne-time fee for access.

Ok, back to our story of the new eBay Online Millionaire:

Now, I'm going to tell you in the next few posts, of my own experience with this area. I've already published several books on becoming an online millionaire, but have also stated that all this data needed to be tested and verified. I know that the people I've studied had become millionaires through using this data - and either made their millions through the Internet, or added more millions to those they already had.

But most of these didn't really leave a viable blueprint behind them of how to make your own millions.

And that's where my own frustration (at this point, I'm still working on my first million - and still need that day job) lead to my taking a great leap of faith.

I signed up with a company to coach me on how to become a PowerSeller on eBay. Name: Bright Builders. You can check them and WorldWide Brands out on the Internet and find they are both represented far more highly than any detractor can throw mud their way.

The reason I'm blogging as I go is for several reasons:
  1. To tell you all this story as it unfolds - and a good story is worth retelling.
  2. To add to my research on An Online Millionaire Plan - and I've always blogged my research as I go.
  3. Teaching others is one of the most effective ways of learning and retaining new data.
At this juncture, my first coaching session is still over a week away. Too long for my taste.

Since I got access to their website, I started clicking away, downloading everything I could, and digesting all this stuff - comparing it to other data I'd already accumulated in my few years of research into online marketing.

Some data started dropping out immediately.

Napoleon Hill enters, stage left.

I started my whole online marketing research from the point of needing to sell my own published works. And the first of these was "Go Thunk Yourself!" self help techniques. That book boiled down the entire genre of self help into a study of a double-handful of highly successful authors. It turned out they were all running on the same underlying system of self help.


How this ties into eBay Online Millionaire planning? Hill starts out his "Think and Grow Rich" by requiring the reader develop a "BURNING DESIRE". In the coach-speak of Bright Builders, this becomes "Business Vision Statement". Same basic points. You figure out what you want to achieve, write it down in detail - in the past tense, as if you've already accomplished it - and then read this over 2 to 3 times daily so that you constantly hold this in front of you.

Get a copy of "Think and Grow Rich" and read this chapter. See if I don't speak sooth here. While you're at it, take a gander at the remaining ones and see if they don't also apply exactly to anyone starting an ecommerce business.

Reprogramming yourself for entrepreneurial success

And this brings up the next point. You have been trained through public school systems and all your family contacts to be an "employee" - all of your life up to this point. And the ads and programs on TV, radio, "news"papers and other sources all tend to confirm this view. Your highest achievement is to become a junior partner with a corner office. Right.

How about working any hours you choose, on whatever you like to do? And make money hand-over-fist at it?

Well, you're going to have to change that programming that we've all swallowed. This, again, brings up self-help books, tapes, videos, etc. to change your habitual thoughts in this area.

Now any habits, especially mental ones, can be changed in about 30 days - if you constantly re-inforce the new idea daily by repetition. Some people call this affirmation, others used to call it "auto-suggestion". Both have their roots in antiquity, but were most popular with Emile Coue' during the early 1900's. And fell out of favor because people didn't understand why they had to do what they did - and what underlying laws made this work.

While I've gone over this in some detail in my books, Napoleon Hill covers the essentials in his book above.

The simplicity is that you have to turn off sources of data which tell you constantly to remain an employee and surround yourself with new sources that tell you how competent you are as an entrepreneur. The new sources replace the old sources. In about 30 days, you'll start seeing the changes in you take hold. And you will also see some interesting synchronicities happen around you, as your life begins to change to reflect your new attitudes.

This happens because your thoughts and opinions create the world around you. As you change your chronic thought patterns, new opportunities present themselves and you start looking for them - and are prepared to take advantage of them as they show up. (Practically, a lot of these opportunities have always been around, but you never decided to pick up that magazine, or click that link.)

You are going to want to turn off the TV and start listening to MP3's or inspirational CD's on your daily commute instead of the radio or pop music. Keep a copy of an inspirational book or article to hand at the office, for times when you are put on hold or during your breaks. And if you get to listen to podcasts at work, then fill it with such recordings.

Listen to these recordings over and over. You learn with repetition, especially when you come back to it after a time away from it. Eventually, you'll find the datums in these recordings start to prompt you with solutions - even if you never learn the whole recording verbatim. Getting the concept and understanding of it is the way to really learn anything - not just the rote words.

End Notes

Ok, that's enough for today. There are a lot of technical details in this and I'll be going over these in future posts. They all relate to brick-and-mortar basics, most of which I've covered in the earlier posts on my blogs, but have also published in the first sections of An Online Millionaire Plan.

Here's to all of us creating the best luck possible! Cheers - and - Good Hunting!
Blogged with the Flock Browser

3/05/2008

Creating the Web 2.0 buzz - Is Slideshare better than YouTube video?

Recently I uploaded what I found to be a very difficult video to reproduce.

Reason was technical - I wanted to show web pages. Because of the text size, these images are compressed during video reprocessing and aren't easy to see. While the original was 720 x 480 and plays nicely on my computer, I always get nervous when someone has to reprocess it to meet their specs.

Sure enought the video is fuzzy and you can't always read words on the pages, even when blown up to full-screen.

Here's the video as YouTube Presented it:






But earlier I had been playing with SlideShare as this has some interesting Buzz factor of showing up on Google quite rapidly. All they want it a MS PowerPoint, OpenOffice Impress, or a PDF. They process the thing and post it for you.

And they also have another feature - SlideCast. This needs an MP3 audio posted somewhere online. Give them the URL and then you can match up the existing slides to our soundtrack.

But what is really nice (and I don't know how they do this) is that you can go full screen with their project and read every single word on that screenshot you used to create the slideshow and video with.

Check it out here:







If you cross-compare the two, you'll see a marked difference in quality.

(And you'll also see differences in what was produced - I added more slides when I was creating the video. You see, I was already up into the wee hours and still had to be up and feeding livestock just a few hours later - and I didn't want to go back and re-edit that Slideshare peace to make them sync. My hoarse soundtrack is the same, though...)

The question becomes: Is You Tube outmoded? My argument is that for full-motion video - not yet. Bandwidth improving may change this, however.

But, since most of the videos I've watched are composed of photos or still images with a soundtrack, I'd say that SlideShare will be pulling a great deal of traffic away from YouTube.

Your comments?

- - - -

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2/21/2008

How to write a good book review - and take over top SEO ranks

There's not much to learning How To Write A Good Book Review - in 200 words or whatever you want.

I assembled various pages on writing book reviews, as part of assembling an online press kit to promote my books and myself as a great radio guest. In doing this, I figured that all this could be rewritten/reauthored/paraphrased into an article or chapter (or both) for updating one of my books or to appear in An Online Millionaire Plan Newsletter (sign up here).

When I started researching keyword phrases for it, I found that there seemed to be limited competition for the long phrase "How to Write A Good Book Review." Just 4 sites seemed to be optimized for that phrase.

So I took my overlong article and split it up into four parts in order to make a mini-web out of it.

While I was working on that mini-web, I also took the first section of it and started submitting it to article directories, since it didn't show up as an article anywhere.

These mini-webs are getting easier as long as I learn and stick to the discipline of setting them up right to begin with. Of course, you have to have a great deal of attention to detail, but you do learn where to put what pretty quickly (after you go through the agony of spending a whole afternoon trying to figure out how you screwed it up - the editing program always only does what you tell it to...)

Now that the mini-web is up and some 50-plus articles have been posted, I decided to take a breather (as I just finished posting another major ebook promotion and my next step on that will be both articles, audio, and video - plus more social bookmarking.)

When I looked back on it, I could see that I needed to test my ideas on Web 2.0 with this little mini-web and from this blog.

My last claims to fame resulted from blogs. (At least the instant Google positions.)

The sequence of this test:
  1. Create the article.
  2. Keyword research for the title.
  3. Set up mini-web with article as text.
  4. Meanwhile, set article submitter program going to high pagerank directories first.
  5. Mini-web goes live.
  6. Blog about the whole thing.
  7. Then I'll social bookmark this blog post.
And we'll then see what we see. Stay tuned for updates.

- - - -

update 080228

The interesting thing is that I picked a heavy competition wordphrase, although my tools said it wasn't. I didn't get the articles submitted to the top directories first, but set the article being populated on the article directory "bottom feeders" - which is useful, but not anywhere near a top SEO tactic.

I did get some social bookmarking going, although this is still something I'm researching more and more. (There'll be a following post on this...)

Still some more to learn about SEO. While the term "book review" supposedly has no real competition, there are tons of sites out there which still trump my "optimized" mini-web.

The real deal? Go for lower-end, longer tail in order to "dominate" the rankings. My Digg post winds up higher than anything else - as will this post, after its been social bookmarked.

Right now, you get high on the rankings (apparently) by
1) having a lot of pages on your site which talk about the same thing (site LSI) or push your general pagerank up,
2) Web 2.0 attention via blogs and social bookmarks.

The solutions are the same:
1) Build several mini-webs each week which add to your mini-net. Main site needs to be purposed a bookstore or affiliate clearing-house.
2) Continue article marketing to those key article directories which actually do a) send you traffic, b) post active links which show up in SERP searches. (And meanwhile bulk post to a wider net of article directories to find more that will link to yours.)
3) Blog every mini-web you create, and social bookmark that blog post and that mini-web's index page.


BUT - the most efficient sequence right now:

A) Create your work and build a mini-web for it (plus your sales page and Clickbank links).
B) Blog about it
C) Social Bookmark the blog
D) Social Bookmark the mini-web index page
E) Comment Market this on key blogs and forums (back to a forward burner for research)
F) Then Article Market it to the top five directories.

These B - F steps are all done the same day - within minutes or an hour at best, after you've built and posted the mini-web.

Once you've gotten all this done, then you can put an article submitter posting to the "bottom feeders", long-tail article directories.

I'd also then recommend that you use other social-oriented sites, such as creating a video for YouTube and an MP3 for Archive.org - which will give you more exposure. And of course, you social bookmark all of these as well.

Looks like I've got some more notes to post on social bookmarking...

2/16/2008

SEO - Finding top keywords using Google Trends and Google Keyword Tool

Funny, but Google can tell you a lot about its own keywords.

The following approach gives you some rough data, but some valuable results:
  1. You type the keywords you want to know more about, one (phrase) per line, into Google's Keyword tool.
  2. Sort the result by average search volume.
  3. Grab the 2 text files you get and put them in a text editor.
  4. Take the top 10 or 15 words in each list (regular and "additional keywords to consider")
  5. Put these back into the Keyword Tool and check the results.
  6. Repeat by taking the top 10 or 15 words from the two lists several times - until you start seeing a pattern show up and the top words quit changing so much.
  7. Now, take these 20 or 30 top words and put them five at a time into Google Trends.
  8. Eliminate the ones which are separate from the others at the bottom. You want them bunched up if you can - but don't take off the top ones. (If you get "free", or some other oddball word that makes the others all go to the bottom, set it aside and just test the others for now.)
You'll wind up with 5 or 10 words which are searched for all the time - which are "short head" terms. (Different from the "long tail" niches you're looking for.) And you'll start seeing what people are looking for in general - so you can subdivide these into niches.

Differences between Services and Products

Look out for what you get, though.

I did a couple of tests yesterday (and you can/should do your own test of this idea) - one which started out "money, health, power"; the other starting with "free" ( a classic top keyword which outshines even "sex").

The first gave me back an interesting set: "jobs, business, health, power, job" - the second gave me back a different set: "free, games, hotel, dvd, game"

Now, note what you have there. Throw out "free" and you have services in the first one, products in the second. If I'd kept the top ten, I'd probably have "money" back in there, but you can see that we have intangibles in the first set and tangibles in the latter.

And if you look on those keyword trends, you'd see that the top ones are searched consistently through the year and the second are seasonal. Hotels dip in January and peak in September. DVD's peak around Christmas, as does "game" - though not so much.

The SEO guru's I've been listening to about long-tail niche marketing say that your better profits are in the tangibles - the products. People will buy a concrete, actual thing faster than they do an intellectual item. Even though it costs way more.

I'm in the intangibles category, myself, since I deal with personal development and self help books. So I'm interested in what people are looking as benefits for the information products they buy.

So there's two approaches and two sets of results.

They may cross - "free money" would be interesting, but you could never deliver it - and would look like a cheap huckster. "Health DVD" would give you a good line of products you could sell. "Health video" would be a good way to promote that DVD.

Watch for crossover keywords

I went out on left field when I started researching "personal" and "self" - because personal also means "personals" - a classified ad. And what people are looking for in the personal ads section are varied and mostly are all products. So it gave me nothing of worth as I was looking for what benefits people were looking for - not what products. That research dead-ended for me.

The key point is that you start seeing the biggest reasons people are looking for things - be they benefits or products.

With a few such tests, you'll be able to then start finding some very "searched for" niches which are then very under-represented. With those keywords in your text links,

Another oddity - synonyms

I've run into keywords that are so similar that they run tightly in the same range. Consider this Google trend "meat, beef, protein". All run in the same tight trend - except for protein dropping a bit, they show the same consistent demand. (A good thing for farmers.) When you add in "grassfed, organic", you see no real change.

Does this mean that these search terms are basically synonymous? I frankly don't know - there's probably others who have spent more research hours on this.

But my "Competition Finder" (iBizResearch.com) tells me Google has:
  • 138M pages for meat,
  • 133M pages for protein,
  • 72M pages for beef,
  • 121M pages for organic, but only
  • 73.5K pages for grassfed.
So we can start to see that there aren't many pages for grassfed anything, but about the same demand as meat/beef/protein. Google Trends won't help us break this down, as it's below their radar currently.

The next tool would be to plug those key phrases back into Google Keyword Tool so we can get an estimate of what traffic is there. And you'll get more related words as additional ideas - as well as being able to "theme" your pages.

But as you have pages on "meat", you'll have a similar demand for "beef", and "protein". From the above, you can see that chasing up long tail niches for "beef" would probably be the most profitable niche to start with. Once you have your pagerank going, then expanding over to "meat" and "protein" would be simple. ("Cooking natural beef recipes" would go over to "cooking natural meat recipes" quite easily - you could almost copy/paste the pages to another mini-web...)

- - - -

There's a lot more to do in this area - but as I was toying around with some interesting research last night, I thought to give you a heads-up on this area.

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Research into online book marketing uncovered eight major ways to market - all of which can be interlocked to result in major improvement on each individual approach. This book series was published in sections so that you can study each of these ways in turn. Each section was published in a logical sequence to build on the basics of the section before.

Written in a modern, easy-to-read style, these sections are also being converted into MP3 versions along with a study guide. Additional products (programs, ebooks, etc.) are linked to each individual section where appropriate.

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1/30/2008

Money from blogging - an old idea come to maturity

One of these sidebars I clicked through. Not on our beaten path, but something worth looking over...

Buy Reviews from SponsoredReviews.com - Blog Advertising Made Easy!

I'd head the controversy about this years ago. But here they still are, more gussified and glorified with fancy-pants graphics and everything!

The deal is that if you have a good blog that you've built traffic to, you can review some advertisers product and they will pay you for it if they think it's good enough. You bid, they agree, you blog, they pay - or not. Get good at it and you can charge higher rates.

The interesting thing is that they look your blog up on Alexa, Technorati, and a few others - so you get an instant feedback on how your blog stacks up. I was surprised to find a blog I had pretty much sidelined ranked better than the blogs I was regularly posting to (like this one).

Check it out for yourself.

- - - -

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But, really, it's free. It's only another opt-in mail list. And you get the first 7 lessons straight out of this 800-page book (until I can get around to posting the rest...)

1/28/2008

Tags and Keywords determine YouTube video findability - SEO strategies

On some sign-up in the last few days, I got a free pdf from Jeremy Burns, entitled ViralYouTubeTraffic. (If I knew where I'd got it from, I'd link it... and bless it's soul, it's all over Google.)

Here's a boil-down of what I see as vital (italics are direct quotes):

1. How do you gauge a video's popularity?

The popularity of a video can be gauged by looking at the views count and it is important to see that there are two ways that videos results are returned: By the title of the video and the ‘tags’ used to describe the video. By all appearances, the ‘tags’ are the most important keyword reference to optimize... In fact, these are probably the 2 most important optimization tools (other than making a great video) that you can use to get your video viewed many, many times. Fortunately, most YouTube users are not experts at keyword optimization and only tag their videos with a few related keywords. With a little thought and brainstorming, you can make your videos ‘findable’.

Means that keywords, like the rest of the Internet, are only used by the savvy - and that is where the money/viewers/leads are.

2. Channels, Groups, Playlists

Search Tools:
Channels: Basically, channels allow you to search for videos uploaded by a specific user. You can create your own channel
Groups: This feature allows you to search by groups using a keyword. This is important for advanced search because groups attract passionate people.
Playlists: This feature allows you to find playlists or groups of videos organized by a common theme.

...

After you’ve created a YouTube account and uploaded some videos, take the time to create a custom profile and your own custom channel information. You should also create at least one group, and you may want to create a playlist if you have more than 1 video.

This will give you a big advantage when people sort for ‘Channels’, ‘Groups’, and ‘Playlists’.

If YouTube users are so unsophisticated now that they can barely pick more than 2 or 3 decent keywords to tag their videos with, there is little doubt that few to none are actually taking the time to make customized channels, play lists and groups.

Idea here is the same as keywords. You want to make your video findable. These three are social networking tools within YouTube that facilitate people finding your video when it is associated with words they are looking for. That is really all keywords do - search shortcuts people use within search engines. (If you want a good cross-section of Internet culture, just look at Google's hot trends...) People use common terms to find stuff - and you just have to find what those terms are, plus tag your video and include those terms in your title and descriptions.

3. Characteristics of successful videos

Well, I have found that there are certain characteristics that can help make a video successful, and I’ve listed them below... Funny, Weird, Gross, Shocking, Interesting, Sexy, Inspiring, Demonstrates, Instructional, Personal

For the use of someone trying to develop a trusting relationship with a public that will opt-in to a mailing list and then continue to buy, let's narrow down to these few:

Funny, Interesting, Inspiring, Demonstrates, Instructional, Personal

Anything else is a flash in the pan. What you want is a classic that will be around (and searched for, referred) over and over.

5. Case Studies - Burns does four very clear case studies showing why each was a success as marketing tools. (Get the PDF, which has links to these videos.)

His summary says it all:

4 Important Observations About The Videos In The Case Studies

1. A video does not have to get very many views to be an absolutely amazing financial success. In the case of high-ticket items like real estate, a very simple and amateur video which got only a few hundred hits sold a house. The return on investment was awesome.

2. Video length is very important to note of. Keep in mind that people on the internet have extremely short attention spans, and there maybe much better videos waiting for them to view if your video is boring for even 5 or 10 seconds. Unless you have a very strong professionally produced, or extremely funny or engaging video, there isn’t much reason the video has to be over 2 minutes. Videos as short as 20 seconds that take 10 minutes to produce may be as powerful a professionally created video that is 5 minutes long and cost $5,000 to produce.

3. We also learn that even the most basic demonstrations of a product using YouTube can help to sell a product (unless you are showing a competitor’s product in a bad light). Keep in mind that even if a demonstrational video that doesn’t get many views from people searching YouTube, it can still be a useful marketing device --Just embed the demonstrational video in your website to help convert visitors into buyers. ...

4. If possible, put people in the videos...those people will show their friends those videos and those friends may show other friends and so on. Just be sure that if an actors release is required ... that you have one.

Length, as sales page writers have found, has more to do with maintaining interest than attention span. Trailers are short in movie theaters to take advantage of that short, emotional attention span. Marketers are saying, "Plug this into your subconscious right now and REMEMBER IT." When the video gets longer, you are engaging their analytical side as well.

For real marketing, you can't practically emotionalize trust without also delivering some goods for the Analyzer in us all. Emotional appeal only lasts so long - ask any President's PR person. While approval ratings usually go up after they left office, they are mostly in the gutter when they left (I think Truman still beats Bush at this point...). Approval ratings go up when they only have their fond memories left (and the press quits bashing them every day, on the hour, half-hour, and in-between.)

You want a viral affect that lasts. So length is optimal against how good your copy is and how well your production carries the viewer.

6. Movie Quality

Burns goes into a great deal about how to make videos. Suffice to say, the tools are cheap, plentiful, and have short learning curves. I made my first one in an afternoon when I installed the program.

But there are these recommendations:

What's the best format to upload for high quality? YouTube recommends the following settings: * MPEG4 (Divx, Xvid) format * 320x240 resolution * MP3 audio * 30 frames per second

Movie Length And File Size: Movies must be under 10 minutes, under 100 megabytes in file size. This should not be a problem, as most effective promotional videos are short.

When uploading your videos, it is important to remember that this is the time to optimize your video profile to get the most visitors from YouTube searchers. Here are some screen-shots to explain the basic functions of uploading your videos. After you have created your free YouTube Account, login and go to your account page and find the button that says ‘Upload New Video’.

This step is the most important step so take your time and make sure you get this right.
In the title box, put your best keyword, and make your title exciting if possible. Something that generates curiosity will help. You may also consider putting your website URL in the title (but not absolutely necessary).

In the description box, describe your video and BE SURE to put your website URL! You may want to put some keywords in the description.

The ‘Tags’ box is critical. Here is where you want to put all of the best keywords that you found from your research. These are the keywords that will help YouTube surfers find your videos.

Another key point he covers is to have your web address visible at all times. Like a banner behind your video action if you are recording, part of your template if you are working from a PowerPoint presentation, or as a watermark if some combination of things. The idea is that you get the person to see your web address so they can go there for more information.

As well, make sure you have a final page to that video which has your address - and is the last (and probably also the first) thing they see. "As sponsored by gothunkyourself.com" or something.

7. List Building

Now we'll see how this then ties into what we've already covered in List Building through An Online Millionaire Plan:

How To Build Your List By Offering Free Videos:

List building is a very important part of doing business online. There are a few ways you can build your list using YouTube. The first is to put up videos, and at the end of the video, instruct the users to visit your website. At your website, be sure to have an email sign up form to collect as many subscribers as you can to market to them over an over again.
You may also want to use videos as incentives for people to sign up.

For example, in exchange for a name and email address, you can send your subscribers a link to 2 sample videos which offer a sample of your product or some type of demonstration. This is especially effective if you have an information product and you can show one or two techniques to pique the prospects interest. Be sure to describe the videos and the benefits they’ll receive from watching them and you’ll likely increase your email list.


Trust Building:
If you have an email list already, you may want to create a few videos of yourself and your product to help build a personal relationship with your subscribers. This may not be appropriate for all types of businesses, but there is always some way you can increase trust with video that shows your subscribers more about what you can offer them.

Educational Videos
Educational videos also fall under the category of trust building. Educational videos can be useful if they tell potential buyers more about your product or service. For example, if you were selling a series of cooking videos on DVD, you might find it useful to do a short series of YouTube videos demonstrating a few recipes and then direct watchers to your website where they could purchase complete DVDs. You might also have the educational videos embedded in your website to help show what you do to people who find your site in the search engines.

It helps to build trust when people see a sample and see that what you are offering is good.

Here's where the rubber meets the road. If you are going to generate leads/traffic from videos, you have to generate trust. So sexy, gross (or sexy and gross) videos won't do - unless you are selling porn, but these usually get banned from YouTube quickly.

Simple educational videos, as Burns mentions, will build trust.

As well, the idea that you give away something for people who give you their email address is standard for this industry.

With videos, this can be simply an address to a page with a video that's not commonly available - or a .zip file they can download where that video is embedded into a web page as a Flash file. Or you could simply give away a PDF ebook which has video links in it. (I haven't yet worked with embedding video into PDF's, although I'm sure some one has - stay tuned...)

8. Where to from here...

Now that you have them on your list, realize that this is a visual-oriented, Web 2.0-savvy subscriber. They may not be satisfied with simple emails and PDF ebooks. So you should make special list-only videos from time to time and embed them on your blog.

And of course, all these videos you make can then build into your own funnel products, since videos make great course material. Particularly if you are making educational and how-to videos from the beginning.

Courses built with audio and video, in addition to PDF's, will give a lot greater value than a simple text or HTML-based course. Of course, you want them to buy your hardcopy version that comes with a CD or DVD.

Lulu and others enable you to create CD's and DVD's that the person can buy directly (or you could burn and print them yourself, for a little investment of personal time and money).

You can make access to these projects "direct access only", such that unless you give out the exact address, they would never be able to find it on their own. Perfect for special offers (like the pre-release paperback version of a book - or that link above on List Building where you can get a section of a larger book for a fraction of what the final book costs. But only where the author gives you the exact address - and none of the others can be searched for, since they are all given exact numbers, which are impossible to get sequentially and guess...

And... there is great crossover potential. I've mentioned embedding these in blogs. They also embed well in sales pages (though KISS still applies) and also can be linked from your articles - which will boost your credibility enormously. They also can be enabled through your RSS feed, meaning people should be able to "podcatch" them if you set it up right (More on this later as I research it).

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As a review, Jeremy Burns gives great value in this PDF, and has made it available for many to either sell or give away (as you can see on Google).

It's a great start.

But as I've been blogging lately, this is the way our modern Internet culture is heading. Burns points out that, as usual, really optimizing your videos (as people still don't do with their web pages) is how you can generate quite a bit of traffic and credibility for yourself.

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