Home Business Tip of the Day: There’s Always A ‘What’s Next?’
There’s Always A ‘What’s Next?’ For The Information-Marketing Client
By Dan Kennedy
Let me tell you about a long-time client of mine. Because he is a multi-faceted information marketer, it’s not easy to accurately describe his business. It’ll take a few minutes.
He publishes a book and a home-study course about earning finder’s fees in the real estate investment world – the finder’s fee idea of my invention. These information products are sold via direct-mail letters, magalogs, booklets, and postcards, as well as websites and tele-seminars and through affiliates.
To get that far, he required copywriting for a collection of sales letters, magalogs, booklets, postcards, and websites, then, as soon as that was working, a series of ‘back-end’ letters to stop refunds and help retention; to get the buyers to attend follow-up training conference calls and tele-seminars where other courses are sold; and a letter to recruit affiliates to let him promote his products to their lists.
Next, all these course buyers needed to be sold into coaching programs – requiring another wave of sales letters, booklets, audio CD scripts, websites, email campaigns. Now that all that’s working, campaigns are needed for three different boot camps and an annual conference.
Next, we’re in discussion to have me (a) re-create all that for a different personality with a different kind of opportunity likely to appeal to these same customers and to the much larger number of unconverted leads, and (b) re-create the original system to be aimed at a higher level, more affluent, more sophisticated target audience.
Each successful step in the evolutionary growth and expansion of his business provides the next copywriting project I’m needed for. It should be noted he is also using other freelance copywriters and content writers for less critical and difficult project work.
This guy runs his business with his wife, two employees, works part-time, generates over $5-million a year with high net profits, and pays me well for my contributions – and better yet, is zero hassle. We speak once a month during a pre-scheduled phone call, otherwise communicate by fax. As soon as I finish one thing, we contract for the next.
He is not at all unusual.
As a matter of fact, there are thousands just like him, in hundreds of different product and business categories but all marketing "how-to" information, published offline and online, delivered in training programs, in coaching programs, by one-to-one coaches, and on and on.
Many have ascension processes for their customers, so that, with coaching as an example, the same information marketer may have programs priced at $3,000, $15,000, and $30,000 a year. They have insatiable need for new and better "front-end" marketing to bring in new buyers plus even more insatiable need for "back-end" marketing to ascend their buyers, bring buyers to conferences, and otherwise monetize buyers. They also have need for content, for everything delivered to buyers that gets created "fresh" week to week, month to month.
This is but one very good kind of information-marketer client, who I’ll call "Steady Eddie."
Another is the client who only periodically, even sporadically comes out of the woodwork to create and run a big but short-term promotion, for a product or event. I have clients like this I do a project for once a year and never hear from them until the next year.
There are other types of clients, too. The information-marketing industry is huge and diverse and blossoming thanks to proliferation of new media yet very much reliant on old media as well, and most importantly, in constant need for more copywriters and writers willing to learn how they operate, why their customers buy, what they sell, and then serve their needs.
Any such client’s successful campaign for something automatically births an endless series of Next’s, creating an endless series of assignments for the capable copywriter.
This is very important to understand. Like most businesses, a typical information-marketing business has, as its floor, one or several on-going, chug-chug-chug means of getting customers and making sales that get little or no tinkering for months or even years on end.
The client I spoke about at the start of this article is heavily reliant on a single direct-mail campaign I wrote 26 months ago, that has not needed change since.
But, good news about these information-marketing businesses: they are a bit like movie studios, in that they are very much about their next "release" and the marketing to make it a hit, and their next "release" and the marketing to make it a hit.
To their own lists of customers and unconverted leads, in their own media like websites and newsletters, they are rolling out one entirely new, built-from-scratch promotion after another after another all year long; as one is happening, the next is being readied, and the next to follow it is being conceptualized. A few months ago, when we saw the marketing of The Green Lantern movie, with fast food company, toy, comic book and magazine, video game, and online promotion. What we don’t see is all the work in progress for the marketing for the new Superman, the Flash, Wonder Woman, and Justice League of America films to follow, each in varying degrees of planning and development, for 2012, 2013, and 2014.
These information marketers work in much the same way, so there is also more than one to many new products, events, coaching programs, and services being readied for launch, and advertising, marketing, and promotion campaigns as well as content being written, on cycles of months to six months to even further out.
Few other industries or types of clients function like this. That’s why learning to write for information marketers can be so beneficial to the freelancer. Here, not only is there an abundance of available clients and opportunities and assignments, there is a way to eliminate the roller-coaster effect of getting an assignment and making money, but then being unemployed and having no income when you finish that assignment, then hunting for another gig. Here, there is a way to lock in steady work and income through a series of Next’s.
Dan Kennedy Will Personally Help You Succeed
In his Writing for Info-Marketers Training and Certification Program, Dan Kennedy gives a comprehensive guide to how the information-marketing industry works and how to break into this niche as a copywriter.
As a Carefree Entrepreneur, you can benefit from this knowledge in two ways. First, you’ll get to know the industry – which is ideal for Carefree Businesses – inside and out. Second, by learning to write copy, you’ll master a skill vital to your own business success. Even better, you’ll make extra money… maybe even discover you like it enough to make it a career.
For a limited time, Dan’s program is available at $500 off the regular price. But, this is a strictly limited time offer.
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