10 Ways To Make Your Product Look Affordable!

Written by Larry Dotson


1. Dividerepparttar price by how many benefitsrepparttar 121818 product has. For example: "You're only paying $1 for each benefit!"

2. Offer a mail in rebate. For example: "Our product costs $37, but you'll only end up paying $20 with our rebate." Most people won't mail it in anyway.

3. Give your prospects a ton of bonuses. If you can't afford to give many bonuses you could create some low or no cost e-information products.

4. Write as many benefit bullets as you possibly can. The more benefits your prospects see;repparttar 121819 easier it will be to sell your product.

5. Give your prospects an easy payment plan. Just dividerepparttar 121820 price into byrepparttar 121821 number of payments you can afford. For example: "3 Payments Of $9.95"

6. Tell your prospects they could join your affiliate program. For example: "You only need to make two sales to make uprepparttar 121822 cost of buying our product"

Fumbling on the 'Business' Goal Line

Written by Kenny Love


If you've ever watched your favorite football team in a Super Bowl game, you can readily relate torepparttar maddening frustration ofrepparttar 121817 below example with, hopefully, some exclusions contained herein...maybe...

There your team is...4th quarter, 4th and goal. The opposing team is leading with a score of 21 to your team's 20. Instead of using a bit of insurance by electing to punt forrepparttar 121818 extra point to, at least, tierepparttar 121819 ballgame and buy some "overtime," some bright idea is circulated throughout your team to, instead, runrepparttar 121820 ball intorepparttar 121821 end zone.

"No! Don't do it!" you yell.

However, your yells and screams atrepparttar 121822 television go largely unheeded. You have an instant premonition of Murphy's Law coming into full effect. In fact, Murphy's Law is now upon you.

The quarterback cries, "33! 46! 33! 27! Hut! Hut! Hu-..."

Crash! Boom! Knock!

"Ouch! Oomph! Ugh! Get off my finger!"

This sudden interruption inrepparttar 121823 quarterback's final "Hut!" was largelyrepparttar 121824 result of several very LARGE men, with even larger uniforms, piling atop him.

"Well, onrepparttar 121825 final 30 seconds, a brick wall was awaitingrepparttar 121826 quarterback,"repparttar 121827 television announcer comments.

Oops! Ye olde Quarterback Sneak just ain't what it used to be...the linemen are much smarter today.

When America's team,repparttar 121828 Dallas Cowboys, would lose in this ostentatious manner, in my house, you had better be long gone fromrepparttar 121829 room, and outrepparttar 121830 front door, lest an unexpected trip torepparttar 121831 Emergency room awaited you.

For my brother, who was a wee bit more than simply an avid fan, would literally cry, curse, slobber, break furniture, hurt innocent bystanders and, subsequently, seek a small caliber handgun for full effect (it is truly awful to witness a grown man react in this manner).

Several minutes later, about a mile downrepparttar 121832 street, and from behind a tree, I would yell back, "Mickey! They're getting millions of dollars to loserepparttar 121833 game! All YOU'RE getting is acute hypertension! Can I come home now?"

While this article isn't about football per se, it is about a game...the serious game of "Business." The goals on each end ofrepparttar 121834 field are called "online" and "offline." The main player is you. Your opponent is "publicity."

One ofrepparttar 121835 widely held misconceptions aboutrepparttar 121836 Internet, is that it is an alternative, a replacement, a "savior," fromrepparttar 121837 traditional processes ofrepparttar 121838 business industry.

I often wonder how many business owners, upon learningrepparttar 121839 'Net could be used for promotion and distribution, executedrepparttar 121840 "middle finger salute" to traditional offline processes.

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