How to Profit on the Internet
by Harvey Segal
Over 50 million people have access to the Internet - and
yet it is still in its infancy.
Every month sees millions of newcomers and thousands of
businesses setting up online.
Combine this huge, expanding audience with the fact that
marketing and advertising can be done on the Internet at a
fraction of the costs of traditional methods . . . and you
have a situation where the potential for online success is
unlimited.
Here is a 7-step guide to ensure that you will cash in on
this growing boom.
1. DECIDE WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO SELL
The online business opportunities that you will come across
can be neatly divided into two areas:
(1) Products (2) Services.
1.1. Selling Products
When you sell a product you can either carry out the whole
operation of handling orders, stocking and shipping the
goods, processing the payments
OR
simply market for a company that will handle all the
administration for you. Your job is merely to get the
orders to the company and then receive commission.
== What product sells well on the Internet ? ==
The item that has been hailed as the number one business
product of the future is . . . INFORMATION.
Examples of highly successful information products are the
'how-to' and self-improvement books. If you are
knowledgeable about a particular subject you could consider
writing and developing your own product and delivering it
via Email.
1.2. Selling Services
One advantage of selling a service is that you can often
generate a 'residual' commission - a monthly income all
the while that the customer continues to use the service.
== What service is suitable for online selling ? ==
As the Internet boom continues the most obvious candidate
is any service which assists companies in using the
Internet. A prime example is a web hosting service: a web
host will provide the space to put up a web site, the tools
to manage it and technical advice.
2. HOW TO ADVERTISE
2.1. The 2-STEP Approach
The usual method of advertising is to have short Classified
Ads which leave the reader in a state of enticement, so
that he then asks for the full detailed information in your
sales letter, ideally sent by autoresponder. The purpose of
the ad is not to try to sell the product - it is simply to
get interested people to respond.
As your ad may be competing with dozens of others in the
same publication you must aim for a winning headline to
make it stand out. Use key words which attract readers such
as . . . Free, How, You , Money, Secret.
2.2. Using a Signature File
A Signature File is a section of text that you place at the
end of your articles or Email messages. It should contain
contact details and a brief summary of what your company
offers.
3. WHERE TO ADVERTISE
3.1. Where to place Classified Ads
Online Services Classifieds:
The major online services such as AOL, Compuserve,
Delphi, Genie, Prodigy, MSN have sections for placing
classified ads.
Ezines (newsletters):
Ezines are Email magazines which you can subscribe to -
usually for free. Most Ezines offer low cost
advertising and are also an excellent source of
marketing tips.
WWW (World wide web):
You can set up your ads at web sites for free or at low
cost.
3.2. Using Signatures in Discussion Groups
A discussion group is a group of people with a common
interest in a specific topic. If you participate in
discussion groups with useful contributions or helpful
articles you can add your signature files at the end of
your posting. Here are examples of discussion group areas.
Mailing Lists:
There are thousands of mailing lists available on every
conceivable topic.
You become a member of a mailing list by sending a
simple 'subscribe' Email message to the list. You can
post a message to the list and it will be distributed
automatically to all the subscribers.
Newsgroups:
Newsgroups (also known as Usenet) are similar to
mailing lists except that you need to access the
newsgroup with a newsreader online (whereas mailing
list posts are sent to your Email box).
Online Services Forums:
Similar to newsgroups, usually better controlled and
organised.
3.3. Other places for free ads
Newsgroups:
Some newsgroups allow ads. Examples are
misc.entrepreneur, alt.internet.commerce,
alt.make.money.fast.
Online services Forums:
There are forums where ads are acceptable: try looking
for forums which have sections with titles such as
'Opportunities', 'Marketing', 'Business'.
3.4. Direct Mail
Direct mail is the sending by Email of your advert or sales
letter to a list of people who are looking for the product
or service that you are offering. Such a list can be
purchased from a mailing list broker.
4. PUT YOUR WORK ON AUTO-PILOT
Here are some software tools which can automate your work
and reduce time and money spent online.
4.1. Autoresponders
An autoresponder spends 24 hours a day responding to
enquirers with information such as sales letters,
price lists, catalogs, order forms.
If you have ever had to reply manually to 100 responses to
an ad you will realise the importance of an autoresponder
to any business setting up on the Internet.
4.2. Free Agent (for Newsgroups)
Free Agent is a powerful and easy-to-use newsgroup reader.
It allows you to browse newsgroups both online and offline.
4.3. Navigator (for Compuserve Users)
CompuServe Navigator (CSNAV) allows you to set up in
advance a script to navigate the Compuserve Forums, sending
and retrieving messages, downloading from or uploading to
the libraries.
4.4. Waytogo (for AOL users)
If you want to post ads on AOL classifieds then, instead of
manually navigating the various menus and options, you can
automate the task with a program called "Way To Go".
5. SET UP YOUR OWN WEB SITE
Once you have developed a portfolio of (ideally) related
items you will want to bring all the information about them
together on your own web site. The website will provide you
with a 24 hour international presence and a means for
people anywhere in the world to obtain free reports about
your products or services instantly, especially when
complemented with autoresponders.
5.1. Design considerations
Make your site easy to navigate
Don't clutter up your pages with information
Ensure that there are no long delays in loading web
pages (the chief cause of this is the use of large
graphics)
5.2. Content
Make a good first impression with your front page, make it
interesting and let it show clearly what the rest of the
site contains. You may only have ten seconds or so to keep
your visitor's attention.
Offer free information and useful articles. Ensure that the
content of the site continually changes, consider a weekly
column of hints and tips.
6. HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR WEB SITE
6.1. Register with search engines
When people are scanning the Internet for a specific
product or service they use 'Search Engines' to feed in
a 'keyword' to specify what they are looking for. You can
submit your site to these search engines specifying the key
words that make up the site, so that your site can then
appear in such searches. There are over 20 major search
engines, some popular ones being:
Alta Vista, Excite, Infoseek, Lycos, Yahoo
6.2. Publicity
Now that you have a web site you can include it in your
signature and therefore publicise it
whenever you send an Email
when you contribute to discussion groups
when you contribute a posting to an Ezine
You can advertise offline by including your web address on
your company stationery, business cards, letterheads,
envelopes etc.
7. BECOME AN EXPERT
Learn how to find information:
Master the use of search engines.
Learn from the work of others:
Study other ads, other web sites, other signature files.
Study online marketing methods:
Visit newsgroups and forums, and subscribe to mailing
lists. You will find excellent marketing tips from Ezines
- just see the footnote below.
This article is an extract from the Free publication
"7 Steps to Online Success"
which contains full details of all the sources of
information mentioned above, such as web site addresses,
lists of ezines, mailing lists and newsgroups, software
tools and services and also includes relevant business
opportunities and many more valuable ideas.
You are welcome to read this publication PLUS "The SuperTips Book of Internet Marketing".
Both FREE at http://www.supertips.com