[B][COLOR=red]Ramblings of a Seasoned Internet Marketer[/COLOR][/B]
I get this question often from members and students and my answer is always the same: "Video is [B][COLOR=red]VITAL[/COLOR][/B] to your survival as an Internet Marketer as a beginner and [B][COLOR=red]VITAL[/COLOR][/B] to your continued success as an experienced marketer. I has indeed become a corner stone of any Internet Marketing effort in every market (read niche) and every product within that market. [B]IF YOUR NOT DOING VIDEO, THEN STOP WHAT YOU ARE DOING AND ADD VIDEO TO ...
I have been marketing on the Internet since 1996. Yes, that is several lifetimes ago. In fact, I have one of the oldest and still active Yahoo email accounts, [EMAIL="gordontaylor@yahoo.com"]gordontaylor(at)yahoo.com[/EMAIL] and it was originally on their f1 mail server. Over the years, 14 to be exact this next November, I have made good money; enough in fact to retire 6 years ago, well ahead of the normal retirement age here in America. I have belonged to ...
As I stated in [URL="http://www.honestworkfromhomesuccess.com/affiliate-marketing/10567-facebook-facts.html"][COLOR=#810081]this thread[/COLOR][/URL] Facebook gets a massive amount of traffic, unmatched by any other website on the planet. However, in my humble opinion (IMHO) they are no longer what they used to be. PPC or even PPV brings spotty results at best and the cost of PPC has soared out of site. I credit the lack of conversions to what I call the "Kid Factor". ...
I have mixed feeling about these two approaches to marketing. On the one hand CPM is usually cheaper then PPC at most advertising venues. I use CPM to refine an add and test landing pages, because of it is cheape then paying for clicks that may not convert well. When I find the right combination of words or the right banner, I'll sometimes convert the campaing to PPC. However, I have had excellent results also with CPM. Some tell me CPM is for branding ...
From Time Magazine [quote]If you're like most people, you're way too smart for advertising. You flip right past newspaper ads, never click on ads online and leave the room during TV commercials. That, at least, is what we tell ourselves. But what we tell ourselves is hooey. Advertising works, which is why, even in hard economic times, Madison Avenue is a $34 billion--a--year business. And if Martin Lindstrom--author of the best seller Buyology and a marketing ...