Yes I do -- I don’t do anything with it offline at all.
Okay. So how do you do that. How did you get started with it, and how did you build it up.
This is pretty much how I promote any program but it seemed to work better with Life Force that any
other program ... actually we started with Concorde Group ... I signed up for
Life Force International
under Jeff West, I signed up under his front line, then the next day I signed up for Concorde, waited
until I got my real ID ... I didn’t want to do anything with a temporary ID. So I waited that extra day
until I got my real ID. I think they’re giving real ID’s to members within a few hours now.
Basically I set up an ad-tracking link, I wrote a real nice ad, and I sent it to my list ... I sent a real
personal ad, like "I’m leaving for Orlando on a TV commercial shoot, in the mean time this Concorde
thing is rocking ... join it ... it’s the easiest program I’ve ever promoted ...".
Actually the first email I put out I said "It’s the easiest program I’ve ever seen because of the
pre-enrollee system" and I talked in depth about the pre-enrollee system.
And what happened was I ended up getting probably sixty to seventy signups within three or four
days, and listen to this -- I made Platinum in two weeks. You’ve heard people in Life Force working
five or six months to go Platinum.
I think I heard the average was about a year or two.
Exactly. I was Platinum in two weeks. All from my list. I sent one blast to my list.
That’s quite a testament to who’s on your list.
That’s the thing. I don’t have a list of a million so called names. I have 40,000, but those are 40,000
of the right people. I’m sure I’ve tire-kickers on my list too, I can guarantee you I have a percentage
of people that don’t do anything, except spy on me, or sit around looking for my contents or read the
ads and delete them or something.
But I do have tons of paying customers also. I would say a good solid 1% of my list buys almost
everything that I put out. I would say that’s a fair statement.
And the opt-in email names were created through a popup box ... so they’re real names. They’re not
fabricated names.
Very few
Hotmail
addresses...
Exactly. No
Yahoo’s
, no
Hotmail’s
... well there are some because they’re configured in their
primary email client browser but they’re not flooded with them like a lot of lists, but there’s no FFA’s
or any weird stuff.
That’s a point I was going to come to in a bit ... I’ve played around with a service
World Wide
Lists
where you buy subscribers ... and it’s a pretty good service and if you deal with your
subscribers right, they don’t get upset, because obviously like everything they forget they’ve
subscribed because they subscribe to maybe ten ezines at the same time.
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