As I mention in almost all of my articles, 97% of
Internet marketers never make a cent online. I mention this simple fact
because it has a lot of power--it has the power to completely
discourage people who are not succeeding, and it also has the power to
encourage those same people who are failing to learn, so that they can
succeed.
In this article, I will teach you exactly what it
means to build Internet capital goods--and how it relates to entering
that top 3%. When you finish reading this, you will have complete faith
that you can succeed and you will understand exactly what it will take
to do so.
So what are capital goods? You know that regular
businesses purchase capital goods to increase production. You know that
industrial businesses operate some of these capital goods to produce
goods that they can then resell for profit. You know that capital goods
can be land. They can be factories. They can be machinery. They can be
people. . .
So how does this relate to marketing your
affiliate program? It's quite simple--in order to succeed, you must
build a large pile of Internet capital goods and then use them to pull
in customers and retain them.
Most affiliates do not understand this concept.
They start out with a boilerplate gateway webpage--that everyone else
who sells the same product also uses--and then they use that page in
conjunction with paid advertisement and hope for success. In almost
every single case, they never make more than a couple sales, give up
after 3 months at the absolute most, and then move on to the next
opportunity.
If you do a simple analysis of successful
affiliate program marketers (which, for practical reasons, will be
easiest if you do it through websites), you will find that they either
a) have purchased Internet capital goods and advertisement with a lot
of money or b) have an enormous amount of Internet capital goods. (You
can test this yourself by checking the top listings in search engines
for any keyword combination).
What does this mean for you? It means that you
either a) are already rich and can purchase that land, factory,
machinery, and workers immediately (website, product rights,
advertisement, etc) or b) you need to start building these Internet
capital goods or you are definitely going to fail within 3 months.
So how do you know what is and isn't an Internet
capital good? An Internet capital good is an item that, once you build
or purchase it, will constantly add or create value for your business.
This includes links, content, dynamic scripts, free tools that your
targeted audience can use, and mailing lists that you can consistently
offer your products to.
If you are not making an effort to build these
Internet capital goods, you are the Internet equivalent of real life
business that purchases frozen pizzas from the supermarket next door,
heats them up in a microwave, and then tries to sell them. On top of
that, your store has no napkins or condiments or tables or chairs or
pizza boxes. Everyone must sit on and eat off of the floor.
Would you want to purchase pizza there? No, you
would get it at the supermarket frozen at a cheaper price, or you would
go next door, where they make it and then bake it in an oven, where you
could sit down at a table in a chair.
Take the time to understand this point: If you
want to succeed, you absolutely must either have money to buy your
land, store, table, chairs, and oven--or you must build them yourself.
Fortunately for Internet marketers, you have a
huge advantage over regular businesses--you can build all of these
Internet capital goods; you do not need to pay for any of them.
You can build every Internet capital good I have
mentioned above for no cost at all. And you will if you want to succeed
on a limited budget. So setup your links. Make quotas; reach those
quotas every week. Build content. Find legally reusable expert articles
and add them to your website. Build pages that offer free tools to your
customers. Use free advertising methods advertise this page as a useful
stand-alone (which happens to be linked to your related website). Setup
a free content ezine or marketing list that is related to your website.
Register with free directories to get customers.
All of these Internet capital goods will not only
draw customers to your business through a multitude of sources, but
they will also retain customers that come to your website through free
or paid advertisement by giving them the option to get free information
or use free products.
As every marketing study has indicated, multiple
impressions of a product increase a person's chance of buying it--and
multiple contacts with a salesperson increases the conversion rate. By
retaining customers you will both increase the impression of your
product and expose them to your sale copy, which will dramatically
increase your conversion rates.
If you get nothing else out of this article,
please remember this fact: the only way to successfully build and
expand an Internet business is by building Internet capital goods and
staying around until you have enough to constantly draw and retain
customers. If you do not have the money to purchase these capital
goods, start building them today for free or you will probably be ready
to give up in about 3 months.
Copyright 2004
Isaiah Hull
Isaiah Hull makes money online teaching other
people to build successful Internet businesses: http://www.workathomerightnow.net/pluginprofitsite.html.
Email him personally at mailto:Houolol@aol.com
to receive free, personal, step-by-step instructions to build a home
business online for an investment of $0 to $300 monthly.