Sunday, April 12, 2009

Squidoo: how to build lensrank

Spirituality, Squidoo Angel and Giant Squid,
has built a lens on how to improve lensrank.

In previous posts, I mentiond the importance
of regular updating of Squidoo lenses and the value
of blog feeds for improving lensrank.

Spirituality explains the nature of lensrank,
its purpose and how lensrank can be improved.

She indicates that lensrank is influenced by
lens freshness, visitors, whether you're a Giant Squid,
number of clickouts, blessing by a Squidoo Angel
(temporary boost), etc. Check it out on the link:
How is Squidoo Lensrank Determined?

While you are there make sure you visit and comment
in the Guestbook - that's where you find the current
discussion on what's impacting lensrank:
What's impacting lensrank today

**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources
for Squidoo affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:

Ron is the author of the e-Book:

************************************************

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Twitter Hints: Promote Your Articles on Twitter

Why promote your articles on Twitter?

Well Twitter has a Google PR9 ranking
and is growing like crazy (a growth of 7oo%
since February 2008 - now 10,000,000 users).

Tweeting about your articles on Twitter can
give you these benefits:
  • widen your audience for your article
  • provide a high quality backlink to the article
  • bring new followers to your Twitter account
  • encourage people to subscribe to your articles RSS feed
To ensure that you get the whole article title into
your tweet, use Tinyurl.com to create a shorter
URL (usually article URLs are very long and may
take up your whole 140 characters of your tweet!).
e.g. my article on affiliate marketing for stay at home
mums:
http://tinyurl.com/ckx3f7

For more information on how to earn cash
with Twitter marketing, visit:
Twitter Traffic Exposed.


**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources
for Squidoo affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:

Ron is the author of the e-Book:

************************************************

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Why Create an Authority Site?

In his recent e-Book, Authority Site 2.0 Blueprint,
Mike Paetzold identifies the search engine benefits of
an authority site.

Mike argues that an authority site will enable you to
gain top search engine rankings, attract free traffic
and boost your income accordingly. He suggests
that Web 2.0 with its social networking capabilities
makes it even easier today to create an authority
site that is attractive to Google and the other search
engines.

I could not agree more and this has been
confirmed by my own experience with my
Squidoo Marketing Strategies authority site
(Google PR4 ranking and no1. position for a
number of search term results on Google).

But how do you use Web 2.0 to gain recognition
by Google as an authority site?

Well that is the subject of Mike Paetzold's
comprehensive, 159 page e-Book
(that is going for a steal at the moment).

What I want to concentrate on is what I think
Mike underplays - the value of creating
an Authority
Site.

Starting your own authority site is perhaps
the critical ingredient for success in Internet
marketing. Think of any successful marketer...
and what comes to mind?

You know them and buy from them because they
are recognized experts in blogging, social
marketing, AdSense, Google AdWords, SEO, list
building, affiliate marketing, article writing,
weight loss or Squidoo.

They have established their reputation
and gained recognition through their
authority sites
.

An "authority" by definition is someone who
exerts influence, has credibility, gains followers,
leads by example and commands attention.

People are attracted to "authority figures",
respect their opinions, want to be associated
with them, quote them, talk and write about
them and voluntarily promote the authority's
expertise through buzz, blogging and social
networking.

Once you have established yourself as an authority,
people begin to trust you and follow your
recommendations. Your conversion rate soars
and daily income becomes a reality.

If you are recognized as an expert, people want
to associate with you and want to listen to
what you have to say. They will seek you out
for joint ventures, product development,
interviews and collaborative marketing.

When you think about it, the Internet would
not exist if people had not first created authority
sites to make it worthwhile for others to use the
Internet to search for information.

Those early pioneers offered information because
they were passionate about their topic. It was only
later that we learned to monetize this information
provision.


The sure road to success on the Internet is to
become
established as an authority in your own right -
to create your own authority site.


Mike Paetzold has shown the way to create an
authority site within a Web 2.0 environment:
Authority Site 2.0 Blueprint

**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources
for Squidoo affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:

Ron is the author of the e-Book:

************************************************

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Stick-at-it-ness: a key success factor in squidoo affiliate marketing

I have had two inquiries recently from subscribers to
my mailing list which related to the question, "Why
I am not getting traffic to my Squidoo lens?"

I noticed that one of them had a lens that was not
indexed by Google, had limited tags and was a re-hash
of a sales page - with no original content whatsoever.

How would anyone find the lens and why would they
want to visit the lens - let alone return for a second
visit?

I know I often have to resist the temptation to move
onto new things all the time and leave some things
unfinished or incomplete.

I have just had a few days free from travel and realized
that I could spend a day just improving the lenses that I
had created and integrating my marketing efforts further.
I set about doing that today and was amazed at what
I had overlooked.

Often the solution to growth of your Internet business
and income is right before your eyes, looking you in the
face – you just can’t see it! That's the theme of an
article I wrote some time ago:
Walk to gain insights into your Internet business

The more I study the really successful Internet marketers,
the more I am convinced that their key to success is not
only that they have a marketing plan, but they stick to it.

They have what I termed stick-at-it-ness. They stick to
their marketing plan and don't deviate - they are not
distracted by the latest and greatest.

They do the daily grind as well as the more interesting
aspects of Internet marketing (and when they are successful
they give the daily grind to someone else to do!).

I don't know about you, but I don't like routine - I love
creating new things, learning new ideas and trying out different
ways to do things.

But I have come to realize increasingly that stick-at-it-ness
and a planned routine is what I really need to improve
my online marketing results.

That's why PotPieGirl's One Week Marketing Plan
is good medicine for me. Her detailed, planned approach
builds income weekly through a phased approach to
affiliate marketing. If you follow her plan, your income
will grow week by week. But you have to stick at it!

As PotPieGirl (Jennifer) points out:
If you are willing to do for a year
what others won't,

you can spend a lifetime doing
what others CAN'T.


She goes further and suggests:
There Are NO Short Cuts
To Success…

But, you CAN spend yourself
into failure.


Well, today I have been doing a bit of searching on
terms related to squidoo and affiliate marketing, and
for almost every term I searched, I found one of
PotPieGirl's sites/posts/articles listed in the top
ten Google results - and that is why she gets heaps
of traffic (and makes heaps of sales).

Jennifer has that stick-at-it quality that makes her
highly successful - her One Week Marketing Plan
was recently the third highest selling ClickBank
product for her category. Jennifer's plan combines
the Google pulling power of Squidoo with the viral
marketing power of article marketing and blogging.

I can vouch for the effectiveness of her plan -
I have made over $400 just from applying
her plan (half-heartedly) to marketing her own
product.

So if you want to copy a marketing plan that works,
visit the link below (but don't forget to stick-at-it
and you WILL be successful):
PotPieGirl's One Week Marketing Plan


**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources
for Squidoo affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:

Ron is the author of the ebook:

************************************************

Use your Chakra energy to develop your Squidoo marketing

The seven Chakras are the hidden energy centers
in your body through which you receive, process
and transmit life energies. They act as
"energy transformers" and influencers of change.

Your thoughts, emotions or actions can either block
or activate these hidden energy centers.

Whether you are writing articles or e-Books,
developing Squidoo lenses or using other Squidoo
marketing strategies, you will experience the ebb
and flow of energy.

It is important to identify the things that block
Chakra energy and the strategies that help
to release energy. In this way you can experience
focused achievement.

The seven Chakras can be identified as follows:

1. Base Chakra – the energy of existence
2. Naval Chakra – the energy of activity
3. Solar Plexus Chakra – the energy of control
4. The Heart Chakra – the energy of community
5. The Throat Chakra – the energy of meaning
6. The Third Eye Chakra – the energy of integration
7. The Crown Chakra – the energy of Spirit

In the following article, I explain each of these
Chakras and identify ways in which we can block them
unconsciously. I discuss strategies that can be used to
tap the energy of each of the seven Chakras:
How to Use Chakra Energies for Squidoo Marketing

While the examples are focused on article writing,
the principles apply to any aspect of
Squidoo Marketing.


**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources
for Squidoo affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:

Ron is the author of the ebook:

********************************************

Friday, April 03, 2009

Squidoo: create a product review lens

One of the best ways to promote affiliate products
is to create a product review lens.

However, there are ways to make such a review
effective in terms of affiliate sales.

Rosalind Gardner, author of the Super Affiliate
Handbook
, has written a landmark article on
this topic:

How to Write a Product Review

by Rosalind Gardner

How do you choose the products you buy?
Do you simply accept as gospel truth all the
good things a merchant says about their own
product? Or, do you ask your friends' opinions
and look for independent product reviews
before opening your wallet?

If you're a savvy consumer (which of course you are),
then you put more stock in your friends' opinions
and independent product reviews. As affiliate marketers,
we become much more successful when we approach
our site visitors as friends and take the attitude that
they too are savvy consumers

From that standpoint, an affiliate's real work is to
pre-sell our merchant partners' products by writing fair
and balanced reviews, also known as endorsement letters.

Sure, writing a review for each product takes a little time
and effort, but it's an activity that sets the super affiliates
apart from their less-super counterparts in terms of
rewards... read 'income'.

Product reviews can be either stand-alone or
comparative.
The first type focuses on a single product,
while the second is an evaluation of similar items that
allows readers to choose which product best suits them.

Before you begin to write a product review, you'll
need to evaluate the product. (Nothing like stating the
obvious, eh?)

I prefer to endorse products that I've actually used.
However, buying a product isn't always feasible.
If that's the case, affiliate managers will often grant
'proven' super-affiliates access to products for their
review.

That's especially true of information products and
ervices that are delivered online, such as internet
dating services.

But what if you're not yet a super affiliate, and can't
fathom a basement full of treadmills to review for
your exercise site? Well, do what your customer
would do if product reviews didn't exist on the
Internet - go to the store and test those treadmills
out!

And how do you review acne medications for your
skin care site if you don't have acne? Surely, you
have some friends with (previously) pimply-faced
teenagers... ask them to tell you what worked for
them.

If you can't find out that way, search Google
for "consumer reviews" + "acne medications".
Read as many as you can to come up with three
to five effective products (that have affiliate programs).

Once you've collected information about the product,
it's time to start writing that product review.

The structure for a product review is simple,
containing an introduction, overview and summary.

The introduction consists of a few sentences outlining
the problem and introduces a possible solution for
the reader, without going into detail.

The overview describes the product's promise,
a description of how the product is used, as well as
its effectiveness and value.

The summary is almost a repeat of the introduction,
and contains a strong recommendation for purchase
based on your conclusions.

To simplify the review-writing process, I ask myself
the following questions when writing product reviews
for my own affiliate sites.

1. Who is my reader and what is their problem?
2. What does the product promise?
3. How well does the product solve the problem?
What does it do? How does it work?
4. Does the product offer good value? (Would I buy
this product?)

Let's look at each question in turn.

The first question asks, "Who is my reader and what
is their problem?" If acne is your reader's problem and
your site visitors are adults, you probably want to avoid
terminology like 'Zap those zits!' and use more
age-appropriate language. Remember too, that 'zits'
aren't really the problem.

The real problem is how your reader feels
about having pimples all over their face and
how that affects their life
.

If you've experienced the problem yourself, say so.
Describe your experience, and show understanding
and compassion for the reader's plight. Speaking from
real experience earns your readers' trust which always
improves sales rates.

If you have trouble figuring out how your reader might
be affected by his problem, then you can research
that online too. For example, I searched Google for
"hate acne" and came across Acne.org, where one
young woman lamented, "My sh%tty skin is seriously
ruining my social life and my relationships with men.
I'm avoiding it all just cuz I don't want to show my face.
Its really sad. I also spend a lot of money on make up'
I'm not even asking for the most perfect skin (even
though it would be nice) but even if I was limited to
just a couple zits....and then it would take me under
30 mins to get ready ....I would never be home, and
I would go back to living the life that I ohh so miss."

That gives you a pretty clear picture of how she feels,
right? Now address those concerns using emotive
terms and you'll improve your conversion rates.

Here's an example. Rather than say, "Product A will
cure your acne", start with a question that appeals
to your reader's emotion, such as "Is acne ruining your
social life? Scared to leave the house - or even show
your face? There IS a solution to your plight."

That introduction brings us to the next question
which is, 'What does the product promise?' Does the
product cure the problem? Does it work faster, or with
less hassle and expense? You found answers to that
question during your product research.

In this section you simply summarize your findings.
Next, answer the third set of questions, "How well
does the product solve the problem?", "what does it
do?" and "how does it work?" based on your product
research.

Results are the most important information,
so it's not necessary to provide nitty gritty details
about how you use the product or what it's made of or
how it is packaged, etc. unless the merchant does not
supply that information on their site, and you consider
the information of importance to your reader.

Too, we're all aware that no product is perfect, so don't
go overboard and write a completely glowing, one-sided
review. To make the product review balanced and fair,
detail what you do and don't like about the product. If you
want to avoid negative statements when outlining your
dislikes, try phrasing the sentence like "although I'd
prefer a slightly less greasy formula..." or "although the
bottle lacks a pump dispenser..." and finish on a positive
note.

Lastly, make a value statement. For example,
"While Product A and B both eliminate most acne problems
in 30 days, Product A wins our 'best value' award priced
at $20 less per bottle. Or, if you're writing a single product
review, you could say something like, "Acme's Acne Product
would be great value even at twice the price, but at this price
it can't be beat!"

For even better conversions, be sure to include a
product graphic
on your product review webpage,
and a testimonial or two from users that you solicit
through your site or use with permission from your
merchant partner's site.

In summary, tell your visitors what you would say
to a friend if you were telling them about a product
that you found and liked. That approach will make
writing reviews easier and your friendly attitude
will push your conversion rates through the roof!

© Copyright Rosalind Gardner, All Rights Reserved.

Article by Rosalind Gardner, author of the best-selling
"Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797
in One Year Selling Other People's Stuff Online".


[Emphasis added]



**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resources for Squidoo
affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
http://www.squidoo.com/squidoomarketingstrategies

To learn more about Squidoo Affiliate Marketing
check out:
http://www.squidooaffiliatemarketing.com/

Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:
http://www.smsecourse.squidoomarketingstrategies.com/

Ron is the author of the ebook:
Squidoo Marketing Strategies

********************************************

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Who said you can't write?

I used to believe that I couldn't write too!

I ended up writing a 100.000 word doctoral thesis
in 1996 and a swag of technical articles published in
journals. Since then I have co-edited 2 books, written
four e-books and published 40 online articles on affiliate
marketing and Squidoo.

What's the secret? - START WRITING!

The biggest impediment to developing your
writing skills is INACTION.

The secret is action learning - plan, write, review.

You learn to write by DOING IT!

When my son started Grade 8 at 13 years of age he
was gifted with a female teacher who believed in the
action learning approach to writing.

She started off by insisting that each student write
50 words a day and submit it for review ... and she
provided a range of topics.

At the beginning we had tears and tantrums as my
son asserted that, "I don't know how to write...I
can't do it."

We helped him plan his writing and gave him some
feedback as he finished. The teacher gradually
incremented the number of words required each day.

The more he wrote the easier it got...and the
more independent he became. By the end of the year
he was writing 1,500 words without much difficulty.

It's worth stating that principe again,:
The more you write, the easier it gets!

Where do you start?

Well, I recommend starting with a
Blogger.com blog as I did in 2005 (this blog).
You don't have to locate or add plug-ins, etc. They
are there for you to use if you want to.

The main thing is that your blog is an online journal -
a place to record ideas, insights, opinions, thoughts,
recollections, case studies... and to include links,
resources and references. It's your online data
storage as well because blogs are searchable via
the tags you include below each post. Keep
your audience in mind as you write and you will build
your readership (as well as your credibility).

The steps:

1. decide the focus you want

2. create a blogger.com blog

3. START WRITING

4. Make a post on Twitter.com with the URL
of the blog post.

....rinse and repeat with whatever frequency
you can muster.

Optional:

5. Add the blog RSS feed to your Squidoo lens if you
have one (and the feed will automatically appear on
your Squidoo lens).

WARNING for the perfectionists - don't try
to make every blog post a landmark post. Focus on
an idea or an insight and just get it down.

P.S. The great novelists will tell you that writing
is 95% perspiration and 5% inspiration. They create
a writing routine - and some have been known to tie
themselves to their chair to make sure they persist
with trying to write ... even when nothing seems to
come.

Again, the principle of focused achievement comes
into play.

**********************************************
Ron Passfield is a Top 100 Squidoo Lensmaster and
Giant Squid. He provides free resourcesfor Squidoo
affiliate marketing on his Squidoo lens:
http://www.squidoo.com/squidoomarketingstrategies

To learn more about Squidoo Affiliate Marketing
check out:
http://www.squidooaffiliatemarketing.com/

Subscribe to Ron's free Squidoo Marketing e-course:
http://www.smsecourse.squidoomarketingstrategies.com/

Ron is the author of the ebook:
Squidoo Marketing Strategies

********************************************