A:
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An interesting question, which will occur to most people at the start of their
marketing career. Especially as there's not really anyone out there that teaches
this stuff outside of the internet. With things being so impersonal, and with
such a huge selection of information laying around for you to pick up, I'm going
to give you some pointers from which you should be able to establish yourself a
solid ground of online marketers that hold good information about the subject
you're looking for without having to buy and test, and buy and test, which in
the end will only put a big dent in your pocket.
Let’s look at some things that you should be looking for when buying other
peoples stuff, and some things that you should avoid at all costs. First up,
testimonials. Who's saying what about these people and their products? We're
looking for real testimonials here, plain text, audio, video, or all of those
put together, the more the better. Look out for marketers that you already know
and trust writing testimonials about these people on their sites, but failing
that, you can always look at who's promoting it.
But hold on, back up a second. What does this mean for you as a marketer? Like I
said before, to get the attention of the big guys, you'll need to be pretty
established already, so what if you can't get testimonials by well known people
that everyone knows and trusts? Well, you can, in a more indirect way. Remember
how I said everything connects to everything else in this system, and they all
develop and build eachother in so many ways that I'm still discovering them
myself? Well, think about your joint ventures. These are the people who are
going to be telling their lists, and the people that have been on them for
years, and totally trust them. This is another advantage you have, and another
big reason to score these joint ventures. It's not only going to form the basis
of your sales and your resource building, but the basis of trust that's going to
be passed from the list owner, to their subscribers, to your site. Again, this
is another way to succeed without having to fight over pulling big names. Far
more effective.
This is one of my favorites. Because I'm subscribed to so many marketers lists
now, that exclusively promote affiliate programs after building their resources,
that’s the perfect place for me to find out, not only who to trust, but as a
bonus, what’s hot and what’s not. This is why you'll never see me touch the
unsubscribe button as long as I'm receiving ads from top marketers, because it's
such a powerful tool, they're doing me a service and they get to advertise their
stuff and make a whole bundle of cash at the same time, steering me in the right
direction based on the research that they've already done. How’s that for a
silent joint venture? It’s a win, win situation. I would suggest you do the
same, and don't forget to keep yourself a record too, so that if you change
e-mail addresses you can edit your subscription so that you're not missing
anything.
The other great thing about this is, the more you mingle in your chosen market,
the more people you meet and contacts you gain (most of who will come to you
after your first few products) the more you hear, the more information you're
fed, the wiser you become. As with any part of online marketing, from product
creation to understanding and spotting who to trust, it all develops with time
and experience. As you can see, using those two methods, there's no need for
extensive research or to pull your wallet out for every well written sales
letter.
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