Posts Tagged ‘ONLINE MARKETING’

How To Post A Blog + The 4 important parts of a blog post

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

OK FMP’s

Itʼs Mandatory to blog EVERY DAY, 7 days a week, Act free to write about

whatever you want – youʼll get better, and inner leader members

are going to have a private pass to a course called ʻBlogging Basicsʼ that weʼre

almost finished with now…) 

1. The Title: This is easy – just blog what your post is about – make it a

short sentence. Your first one could be as easy as Why I got involved with Sotero Garcia in  The Empower Network or “My Ultimate Plan To Get Money” – leave the

quotations out of it.

2. The Body: Simply write a 500-700 word article. Mix up the body with

short paragraphs, quotes, and feel free to pop a video in there from

YouTube that will help you illustrate your point, or gives some

inspiration. If you ever take content from someone elseʼs blog posts or

articles – make sure to reference the source and post a link to the

original authorʼs article.

You can Get Your FREE blog here: http://empowernetwork.com/sotero

3. The Call To Action: The ʻcall to actionʼ is the most important part of your article where

you tell your subscribers what to do next. Depending on your post -

this could be in the middle of your post, what I prefer to do is put it in a

P.S. line. Foremost – you want people clicking on the images on your

blog to the capture pages, and then watching the video presentation to

sell them on the basic $25 Empower Network membership. I like to put

that in the P.S. line, because after 2 years of blogging and getting

a ton of visitors per month on my personal site, Iʼve noticed that if I list

a call to action in the Mid section of a post, that people donʼt comment,

because they donʼt want their members to see something ʻsalesyʼ. I also

notice I get higher conversions if I make it more subtle – because better

content attracts more repeat subscribers .

4. The Tags: This is in the lower right of the posting area, and most

readers who are newbie miss it, and donʼt put any tags in. Basically, tags

are one or two word groups that describe what a post is about, and

they help sort information from Search Engines. Honestly, theyʼre less

important than they used to be – just write 5-7 paragraphs about what your

blog post is about, and weʼll get more involved in how to do it more efficient in the

ʻblogging basicsʼ course in the Inner Circle membership.

If youʼre creating a post about the Empower Network, for example, it might

look like this:

network marketing , join, make money online, blog daily, online marketing, easy

While that may be overly simplistic – I really want you to just have enough

info to write your first post and get started for the next 30 days.

 

Get You FREE Blog and Four Step Secret To Blogging For Money Online

How To Market Like Nine Inch Nails And Other Huge Indie Artist

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Some of you know me as an international artist/Producer/DJ. With that in mind i just had to share this next post…. Enjoy!

You can Thank me Later?  ~Sotero Garcia~

Original Post by Amanda Gagnon (Amanda Really Hits It On The Head Here. I Just Had To Share)

 

Photo: Jennifer Vecellio

Trent Reznor, frontman for industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails, has earned a reputation as a marketing maverick. He engages fans, building loyalty and watching sales naturally follow.

In the Nine Inch Nails online forum, Reznor tells musicians they can be their own best marketers:

“If you are young and use the Internet, you know more about your audience than [labels] do – for sure. This is a revolution and you can be a part of it. The old guard is dying; if you have good ideas – try them.”

Email marketing is the perfect medium to try out these new ideas. With the following game plan, we’ll show you how.

 

Your Music + AWeber = Marketing In Tune

In 2007, the band began marketing independently when its contract with Interscope Records ended. Reznor organized an online scavenger hunt to entertain fans. He even scattered free, shareable USB keys loaded with their music at a few concerts.

While these strategies are specific to musicians and bands, the underlying principles hold true for all email campaigns.

“If you have nothing in common with American Idol and you don’t want to be the Pussycat Dolls, then you don’t really want to be on a label.”

To a label, Reznor points out, your vision and your longevity won’t be important. He suggests using new media and modern communication – such as email marketing – instead.

For example, you could use your email list to rally street teams. Segment your list by location and contact your fans in the cities you’ll be playing in.

Offer them free music, show tickets, or band paraphernalia in exchange for promoting you. Email lets you market remotely so the city is ready when you roll in.

“The role of an independent musician these days requires a mastery of first hand use of these tools,” Reznor says.

“Give your music away as high-quality DRM-free MP3s. Collect people’s email info in exchange (which means having the infrastructure to do so) and start building your database of potential customers.”

Nine Inch Nails The Slip

Nine Inch Nails The Slip art direction by Rob Sheridan and Trent Reznor.

 

In 2008, Reznor gave away NIN’s album The Slip in exchange for fans’ email addresses. Coldplay did the same with their album Left Right Left Right Left in 2009.

A new full-length album costs about $14.99. The average fan email address is worth $110 yearly. So these groups scored not only a higher return on their investment, but also invitations into their fans’ inboxes, which are priceless.

To try this with your own tracks, post offers with web forms on your website, to your Facebook profile, in your blog – and link to them everywhere. Deliver the MP3s upon confirmation by including the link on a web page or in a follow-up message.

“Offer a variety of premium packages for sale and make them limited editions/scarce goods. Base the price and amount available on what you think you can sell. Make the packages special – make them by hand, sign them, make them unique, make them something YOU would want to have as a fan.”

Ghosts I – IV, a 36-track album, was offered in a variety of packages. Although the attribution license let fans digitally share the album for free without penalty, the packages grossed $1.6 million within one week of their release.

These packages can also help if you are interested in growing your email list. Announce beforehand that your subscribers will get first dibs – and make sure to link to or embed your sign-up form!

“There are a lot more bands today, a lot more clutter. Try to identify what it is you’re trying to do. Play up your strengths and present them.”

Your look, your sound, your attitude – what makes you stand out? What resonates with your fans? What kind of an impact are you making with them?

You don’t have to guess what these things are. Your email reports show what attracts your subscribers. Open rates, click through rates and sales tracking all tell a story. Read that story, and follow its advice.

“Engage your fans. …Make cheap videos. Film yourself talking. Play shows. Make interesting things. …Be interesting. Be real.”

Though common in social media outlets, these ideas translate nicely to email.

Pearl Jam’s official fan group, Ten Club, rewards their fans with ticket upgrades, member giveaways and a community forum. To top things off, they send members a vinyl single of a live or unreleased track every spring.

Make your email list your official fan club. Include exclusive content: slice-of-life video clips, backstage passes, presale concert tickets.

And when you create this content, remember: be transparent. Stay relevant to your fans’ interests. Be yourself, and have fun building relationships with your followers.

We’re In This Together

We enjoy when you share your feedback with us and each other, so let us know:

Have you seen bands market in these ways? Has your own band used any of these strategies? What other ways have you seen musicians market?

If you are not musically inclined, do you still find this advice useful? What ideas will you take away with you?

Share your thoughts below.

Note: all images in this post are Creative Commons-licensed. Click on the images or photo credit lines.

10 checks. Under 6 months. One Website. AND NO PREVIOUS ONLINE MARKETING EXPERIENCE

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Back in 2009…

This guy was able to collect 10+ checks
per month EVERY SINGLE MONTH…

He built these checks in under 6 months…

These checks allowed him to feed his family
of 5 beautiful children…

And he did it driving traffic to only ONE website!

Seriously?!

I asked him how he did it… and he said,
“Positioning.”

That’s all I’m going to tell you right now…

 to get the juicy details
about how he managed to pull this off, you’re
going to have to hop on our weekly webinar

TONIGHT , January 20th at 9:00 PM EST…
 

10 checks… under 6 months… One website…
AND NO PREVIOUS ONLINE MARKETING
EXPERIENCE…

This info will absolutely explode YOUR bank
account in 2010, period.  That would be a good
thing, right?  ;)

I’ll see you there TONIGHT.
 
 

Let’s Connect,
~Sotero Garcia~

http://vur.me/s/MonetizeFB < < < 20 Leads a day on FaceBook

http://SoteroGarcia.com
858.525.3631
SKYPE: sotero.garcia
EMAIL: sotero@soterogarcia.ws

Everybody WANTS & NEEDS more of this product.
NOBODY has enough now http://vur.me/s/SILVERandGOLD