9/11/2014

If You Can Count to Four - James Breckenridge Jones, John Earl Shoeff

If You Can Count to Four - by James Breckenridge Jones

New book release:

If You Can Count to Four, by James Breckenridge Jones


Here's How to Get Everything You Want Out of Life!
  • You can be anything you've ever wanted to be.
  • You can have anything you've ever wanted to have.

Of the millions who have read Think and Grow Rich, thousands have become extremely rich - regardless of the environment they grew up in, or the economic conditions of their times.

The secret to their success was found, tested, and proved by Dr. J. B. Jones.

Jones became a lecturer for the Napoleon Hill Philosophy of Achievement part time, while attending college as a returning Vet from World War II. By 1953, he had tested Hill's approach and internalized it. Using those 17 steps, Jones was able to devise and implement several life-tests to prove its worth to himself.

What is interesting is the spectacular success he achieved and how he set the stage meanwhile for the bulk of the top names who are operating in the self-improvement field today.

This is the common thread which connects Tony Robbins, Mark Victor Hansen, Jack Canfield, Brian Tracy, T. Harv Eker, Chris Widener, Mark R. Hughes, Les Brown, Zig Ziglar, Mary Kay Ash, Bill Bailey, and many other noted millionaire motivational speakers with Napoleon Hill's work.

While Hill's book has been read by millions, the proven value of it has been found by those who Jones and his students trained. It is through their work that the consistent results show up – over and over and over.

What we have here is the actual bridge to success, one which has made and continues to help people make themselves into successes – and even millionaires, if that was one of their goals.

Now you have the entire Bridge to Success in your hands, with just these two books in one collection.

Get Your Copy Today.

Study it.

Live it.

Become and Have Everything You've Ever Dreamed of!


- - - -

eBook now available:


http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/isbn9781312403574
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MERYPJE

Trade paperback (6"x9", 173 pages) available on Lulu and soon on Amazon and all brick-and-mortar bookstores:
Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

6/25/2014

How to Master Affiliate Income - and Get More in Your Life

How to Earn More Affiliate Income

The best way to get started in any home-business is to start with someone else's products.

That's especially if you haven't run your own brick-and-mortar business before - or even if you have. Online business is its own type of beasty to master, even if most of the elements are similar to regular business ones.

You have to know these skills:

  1. How to have a product which people want enough to buy.
  2. How to market that product to the niche that is looking for it.
  3. How to price that product accurately.
  4. How to service your customer and handle any concerns.

Like regular business, you have to find out what's wanted and deliver it - then care for that customer and turn them into a regular client.

How does affiliate marketing teach you business basics?

Mainly because you're dealing with someone else's homework. They've already done the homework, worked up the product, and in many cases even provide the sales pages for your site.

This leaves you to concentrate on the key elements of content marketing and sales conversions. (Those are fancy terms for getting someone's attention and persuading them to buy.)

I've got a short set of inexpensive ebooks available just on Affiliate Marketing.

But what we want to talk to you about today is how to combine affiliate marketing, and network marketing.

It's called two-tier affiliate marketing.

To make this short, here's the links to study this in more depth. (I'm making it a record here for later research.)


Good luck with your own research. Subscribe above right and keep up to date!

4/30/2014

Kobo Screws Public Domain Self-Publishing

Kobo decided to screw with public domain republishing by forcing them into lowest royalty payments. Tara Cremin says so.
(photo: Ella's Dad)
It's not like public domain books make a lot of money - except for publishers.

Now Kobo has decided to take a huge part of this public domain pie for themselves to punish self-publishing authors.

[Update: iTunes and B&N have joined this - banning new PD books entirely. Lulu just started banning PD, which blocks access for PD books in their distribution. See note below.]

Self-publishing public domain works is was barely profitable. Because anyone can compete, and there are a lot of free versions out there. Some aggregators, like Smashwords, won't take them at all. Amazon makes you add at least 10 "original images" to any ebook. Lulu, iTunes, GooglePlay and B&N tend to just accept your derivative work without question.

So did Kobo, until just recently.

A derivative work is defined pretty well by Wikipedia. Essentially, you add some original content and claim a new copyright for yourself. Since public domain is a "who cares" scene, this isn't policed by anyone.

My tests in this showed that these books, given a new cover and description, were still in demand and sold decently. People want a good version for their smartphone or reader. And a lot of the versions out there are garbage. (If you want free quality versions, check out Feedbooks.)

So a person could locate public domain books, do some decent marketing on them and start profiting. It all looked pretty good for being able to provide a service of re-publishing classic works and adding value to these for readers.

Then someone at Kobo decided this wasn't cool.

I got an email from Tara Cremin, "coordinator" at Kobo Writing Life, which said I needed to declare my books as public domain and take the 20% royalty payment for them.

After some back and forth, my protesting that they were derivative works, etc. - she finally clarified it like this:

You’re correct, reviews or study guides of works do not need to be declared as public domain as they are reviewing the text rather than included it in its entirety.

However, you cannot just change the author name and title for works so that they’re not part of the public domain. For example, your title “Claude M. Bristol's Magic Of Believing” by Dr. Robert C. Worstell. The book still includes the entire content from Claude M. Bristol. You cannot take others work and claim them as your own. If it is in the public domain, you need to declare it as such.

This also goes for collections and derivatives of authors’ work. The works are still part of the domain and need to be declared as such. You retain the copyright to any books published through Kobo Writing Life but public domain needs to be declared.
So if you only publish an excerpt of the book, you're good. If you publish the whole book, you take the 20% penalty payment. Meaning that Kobo pockets the 80% for your work in editing and marketing this book newly.

It's just a way to discourage public domain book publishing. Simple. 

The trick is - they aren't the only distributor out there. And they aren't a huge chunk of my income such that I have to get all worried about it.

All this does is make Kobo look greedy.

There's nothing on Kobo's site which covers this. I did find a service agreement which says if a book isn't in the public domain, you have various royalty level options. But nothing laying out specifically what Tara Cremin did above.

Look, this doesn't change the fact that you have to do marketing for any book you publish. You have to find and nurture your audience.

All this says is that Kobo is now down near the bottom of the list to send books to. I'll start getting these public domain books accepted by Amazon and work their system instead. And any marketing will (reluctantly) carry a link to the books I have on Kobo.

Otherwise, I build up a platform for people who want these classics and send them everywhere I can earn more income as a self-publisher.

Who gets screwed here? Like putting one in your own foot, Kobo.

[Update: Several other books submitted via Lulu to iTunes and B&N a couple days ago just came back with this rejection:
"We cannot accept content into retail distribution that is freely available elsewhere online, including but not limited to public domain material and plagiarized content."
Lulu did accept and publish them on their own site, they just won't distribute them.

Oddly, they won't accept priced-as-free PD versions either, apparently. It's looks to be a script scene, looking for duplicate content among PD versions.

So for PD books, you can publish everywhere, but you have to do the publishing yourself - or pay aggregators fees which public domain books won't support. I'm still testing Nookpress.com (they've been down this weekend) but iTunes accepted one right off from me - when I got a MAC mini to do the uploads.

What's being discouraged by Kobo, etc. are the cheap commodity books which have the same title, author, text - and usually crappy editing and cover. It's probable that a PD book with a different title, cover and additional author will fly on Amazon - they just want unique books. While this is the subject of another post, the trick is that you would then have to generate your own reviews. Amazon lumps books together to share their reviews - so a new hardcopy version of a Kindle version gets whatever is already accumulated.

Note 2: such a derivative ebook would link to your book sale landing pages where they could get Lulu versions: epub, PDF, and hardcopy versions, plus videos, opt-in to an ecourse, etc.]

More testing

I'm not letting this sit. As posted elsewhere, I've already committed to uploading via my new MAC mini.  First book got approved for the iTunes store right off. So I don't know what was taking Lulu so long to get my books onto iTunes and Nook. (Nookpublish.com has been down all weekend, so I'm waiting on this one.)

Next up is testing Amazon to see how to get sales from books which are not free or 99-cent wonders. Looks like niche PD  books have higher prices than the literary classics.  While I've had these books selling at .99 each, on Kobo I raised them to 3.99 (getting .79 per book) and while volume has dropped off, income has increased. Go figure...
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2/18/2014

Strategies on How to Find Online Income - Become a Publisher

I've found that I will generate more income by working as a publisher than a writer.
(photocredit: theboyds)

Writing feeds the soul; publishing keeps the lights on and the refrigerator stocked.

That's a truth I've recently found which put me on the road to real financial freedom.


I've found that I will generate more income by working as a publisher than a writer. I found that there are really tons (hundreds if not thousands) of decent quality, decent value books which are not easily found because they haven't been marketed.

This includes both public domain and private-licensed-rights (PLR) books. (The term "book" is really just a decent sized collection of text, with or without images, sound, video, etc.)

For public domain books, the fact that there is competition fighting over the sales of long-dead-authors' books shows how much they are still in demand.

There are 3 things which set any public domain book you re-publish apart, which is the same for modern books: Cover, Description, Price. Practically, people ignore reviews. Only Amazon makes a big deal of these things. On all other ebook distributors, it's primarily those three points.

The fourth point is to have more books in that series or by that author - or both.

All of this is compounded with my recent, and continuing, studies of the specific skill of copywriting. I have Bob Bly to thank for setting my head straight on the basics of this. Too many others are following a handful of "Magnetic" marketers who are essentially using a partial understanding of copywriting to pitch their wares. And many of these are simply using hacks from swipe files without understanding why those headlines and phrases work.

Fortunately, we are saved.
1) Human Nature hasn't changed since it was developed. (The Internet has only sped things up.)
2) Classic bestselling books about how to influence people to buy were based on substantial studies of hundreds of successes in order to derive the basic principles. 

If you want to actually succeed in online marketing, you need to know copywriting, and you need to collect these masterworks for your own library.

A very interesting land-rush is on, where the bulk of the books out there have not been converted to quality ebooks - the epub version which is on the bulk of the smartphones and tablets out there (as well as ereaders.)

And if you really want to succeed in ebook publishing, you want to be in two certain marketplaces:


Why not Amazon?

Because these two distributors cover the lion's share of all the smartphones and tablets out there. When you go to load an app, what do you get? A suggested ebook that you'd probably like.

Amazon has started its own "app store" which does what - keep you Amazon-centric.

Go right ahead and publish everything to Amazon. I'll cry all the way to the bank as I get downloads and payments from 5 other distributors who are selling my books for me every month.

There's your secret tip for today.

OK, here's an Amazon tip: Want to sell more books? Make the printed version available as well. Since only 30% prefer ebooks, both a paperback and hardback edition of any book is vital - and makes your ebooks look like a great bargain. Just make sure these are all print-on-demand...

- - - -

Backwards from this, you create web presences for each book you publish - at least a page, if not a whole site. Classic books will give you tons to write about, since they've been around for a good while.

And each of these web-presences need to point to your own membership site, where you can create a "velvet rope" section to offer spccial discount versions to your loyal readers. This is called "building an audience."

E-mail continues to be the most trusted way to shop and get recommendations.  So you need to be building your list and giving it great value on a continuing basis.

Those web pages you build need to be properly SEO'd (meta-tags, etc.), but otherwise, you'll spend your time getting tons more content out rather than worrying about any individual site's standings.

Because if you need more clients, you simply need to create an offer you can get joint-venture affiliates to join in on. They then send your offer to their list.

I only recently found out that this was the success of "The Secret" underground DVD. It never came out as an actual movie, because it didn't have to. And then Rhonda Byrne was able to have a couple of books jump to bestseller status because of the name and brand recognition.

While you don't have to have a runaway hit, the alternate strategy is to have a ton of books available which can be easily discovered.

The above is my strategy for that - and will keep me more than busy for a couple of years by my current reckoning - just in publishing alone.

- - - -

Separately, I've worked out an organizing chart for the subjects of Internet Marketing. Once I have these classic copywriting texts edited into shape and republished, look for this to get a release of it's own.

There is a very common-sense approach you can follow - a blueprint, you might say - to learn the data you need as you customize your own route to success.

And I've talked at you long enough.

See you soon.
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2/17/2014

When "Mentors" are Really Just Celebrity Wannabe Train Wrecks Waiting to Happen

Watch the tracks ahead and be prepared to jump off if needed.

How can you tell if you have a real Mentor, or just a Celebrity Wannabe?

Are you getting incredible value or incredible promotional hype?

You want to find out if that person "helping" you is really doing this out of their own self-centered interests, rather than yours. Unless you are going to get a ton of personal good out of this, it may be that you're headed for a big de-railing at some point, with nothing to show for it except the trash left on the ruined tracks.

Too often, we find that following some of these "guru's" are no more than just another celebrity in guru's disguise.

I've experienced my fair share of these. Open-handed, helpful sharing is often stated as their motivation. But when you look deeper into the value they are delivering, you'll find that there is really nothing new in what they say. You can actually find this data in at least a dozen different books and several pages of Google search results.

The most recent profit-centered, self-promoting, self-oriented phrase I heard was "...to give without want." Sounds all noble and stuff. But you actually see how that person touts himself as an authority by stating he made all these millions within a few months and has this huge mailing list and now wants to share his special "insider information" with you.

Sounds great on paper. But it's just the same old hype. When you study how sales pages are made up, you start seeing these fakes all over the place. They are mostly all using the same "formula" to pitch you. Once you know that formula, you can spot the fake.

Here's how to work out if they are the real thing, or another glorified scam:
1. If they say they have a huge mailing list, then you know that they are already getting 1% of that to opt-in for whatever they pitch. It's a numbers racket. So that 1-million-name mailing list will give them an automatic 100,000 people signing up. Multiply that by whatever the price they give, and you'll see how much they will make from this "special insider" promotion. (Hint: they don't need your money.)
2. Does their email series contain the usual-pattern, hackneyed sales gimmicks? You know - authority, emotional appeal, limited offer, personal access, etc.? For those who know about the Product Launch Formula, you'll see a series of emails with videos only a couple days apart, spread over a week. The first is about some great data being released, the second is more about it, maybe with a survey, or survey results from the first one. The third is how it's a limited offer and why, the fourth is usually testimonials and why you need to buy now. Same format as the sales letter, only done over days with videos.
3. Real authorities don't use only a pat sales pitch or formula - they tell a story and give more valuable material than you could use before asking you for anything. Most of the time, the first video or installment will be their core data - and the extra value they give is in packaging it for you in other formats, such as DVD's and packs.  
4. Do they hype themselves up as revolutionizing an industry? All by themselves? Look - no one got there sheerly by their own genius. The really humble industry leaders will make the story all about you - not them. They'll point out who else to follow, who else to look up, whose books they studied, what other materials and authors they recommend so you can speed your results (and not make the mistakes they did.) The fakes just say "buy MY books, packs, DVD's, and especially MY monthly payment plan." (As if they are the only one with The Solution You Need.)
5. How are they getting paid from all this? How are they going to deliver it? It's been established that a single person can influence or help only about 250 people directly. If they are saying "coaching", that's the limit. And they won't be doing anything else, such as running a business empire. Keeping track of that many people - and actually helping them - is a full-time occupation. If they are getting a monthly residual payment, and just send you a course-pack and some weekly emails, they've just sold you a typical, usual offer. That's not coaching, even if it's an acceptable form of training.  
6. Do they push you on having a lifestyle with lots of *stuff* around you - like big homes, fancy cars, expensive trips? This is saying that you are a sucker for stuff you will probably never actually have, and so - like a moth to a light - are drawn forever toward them.

How did your "guru" do in this checklist?

You see, the bottom line is that it's still all about them, not you.

They are the ones who have unfilled needs: the need for approval, for personal adoration of devoted fans. It's a celebrity scene that they are stuck in.

They are exploiting your emotions and your "excess" spendable income so you can pay them for a few hours spent in front of a video camera, plus someone else creating their course packs and other materials.

The only one who is ever going to make you rich is you. The only way you're going to become successful is to change your mind and devote yourself to your own vision.

In any age on this planet, millionaires and billionaires got that way because they thought and acted differently than the rest of the million or billion people out there. (See the classic "Millionaire Next Door" by Thomas J. Stanley.) Change your mind, change your results.

Someone else's plan, blueprint, system - these won't work unless you can tailor them to your own scene. The Internet Marketing Guru's all got rich mostly by selling what used to work, using examples of a tiny handful to say that anyone can do this. Once they found how this "secret," the search engine algorithms or government laws were changed to close that loophole. That's why they are constantly coming out with new "systems" and tricks. Real mentors just keep promoting the same workable scene they've evolved based on studying reall people really applying it in real life.

Study the back-trail of these people and you can work out what they did to make their own success. Usually, it's getting a bunch of joint-venture partners with big lists who can promote their product for a hefty split of the profits (aka "commission.") Then they have all these guy's list all rolled into one massive one. (Yes, those big joint-venture guys built their own lists the same way.)

This is one reason I've taken to finding dead authors and republishing their works. This gets you out of the fads and the celebrities with their personal magnetism. The stuff that they used still works in our Internet Age. What still works is based on Natural Laws, not tricks and sleight-of-hand or an outright scam.

I've gone through a few of the Big Name types recently and found that this was their common scheme - they were wanting you to become a "supporting member" of theirs, so they could continue to live their own "lifestyle of the rich and famous." All on your back. All while you keep your day job and pay your own bills - plus your "fair share" of theirs.

Consumerism is the key way to find these guys (and gals) out. They push you into constantly wanting and buying more stuff in your life. Consumers consume things - load up their home with bookshelves of materials they can't use. Or sign up for an auto-ship of stuff to eat or use up. "For only one low monthly payment."

They aren't pushing you into changing the one thing which should be providing you with solutions to any perceived "lack" you may be experiencing - Your Mind.

Here's some people you can follow for free or nothing (note: no links here) -

Napoleon Hill - Interviewed over 500 world leaders over 20 years, and distilled their personal secrets to success into a single philosophy of success anyone can apply. You can get his book for around $4 - and even free.

Earl Nightingale - made his living researching and teaching others how to use self-help techniques in their lives. Made several fortunes just helping people. Known for his "Our Changing World" free radio program. Sure, Nightingale-Conant offers courses and packs of his content, as well as others. They're all one-shot purchases, and have proved themselves many times over.

Dale Carnegie - known for his bestseller books, which came from his World Record of critiquing more speeches than any other person in history. Boiling down what it took to train these speakers gave the common denominators which became books.

There are also Charles Haanel, Wallace Wattles, Genevieve Behrend and her mentor Thomas Troward. Also Dorothea Brande and Claude Bristol, William Walker Atkinson (and his many aliases), Robert Collier - tons of these writers, which you can get versions of their books for little or no cost (other than bandwidth.)

Yes, I am working to re-publish these and create training courses from them again, as well as ebooks for our modern smartphones, tablets, and phablets. That is just adding value. (The copies found in the Internet Wild are not always the best presentations or the most readable...)

The point is to honestly help people. The point is to tell people where to look for what they want. The point is to free people from unnecessary "wants" and "needs" - not pile more on.

The point is to give you more choice, not just harness you up in yet another chain of mules or horses pulling someone else's freight-wagon.

What do you think?

Leave a comment, either way.

P.S. The reason for this post is that I've been studying some of the long-dead copywriting Masters - and they didn't use what is in common use today, and what is giving advertising in general its well-deserved bad reputation... More about this later.

[Update: This  "guru" has 4500 surveys returned (out of his vaunted 1 million email list) and is going to give "1 year" of "unprecedented access" with him so he can "personally work" with these guys over the next year. Sorry - he's on a celebrity swing of how important he is. The trick with money is that is only makes you more of what you already are. An ass just gets bigger, for instance...]
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8/18/2013

Will App SEO Replace Conventional Web SEO? Bet on it.

Mobile Web Apps Poised to Start SEO Turf War?

The Future of Web Apps

Just doing some research recently and saw the convergence of web apps, mobile traffic, and the resulting decline of desktops, laptops, and the "usual suspect" sites as we know them.

This of course means that SEO will be turning a rather sharp corner - but then, they're used to it.