Friday, February 29, 2008

How Writing Articles On Blogs Can Make You Money

You have probably heard that one of the ways of making money online is to write articles. Good articles would bring you readers, which mean traffic. If you place affiliate links in your articles, and if you manage to raise the interest of your readers, they would eventually go and buy those products you've written about, and you'd earn commissions from the manufacturer.

How much money you could make from these articles depends on many factors, such as how popular your site is, how good are the affiliate programs in your niche, and how much effort and time you are willing to invest in building your site to be an authority in its niche.

Content is not everything, you'll need to think of making your site known, and this can be done without too much spending by doing a good SEO optimization. This means that you have to make sure you use the keywordsyou like people to find you for in your article titles, headlines, in the text and in anchors of internal links.

Some people say that they make a lot of money by writing articles online, and judging from my own experience, they are probably right: if you are serious and treat it like a real business, a website can bring you as much as $5000 - $1000 per month, or even more.

Your income can come from many sources, both active and passive. The passive or recurring ones can come, for example, from promoting affiliate programs for web hosting, or membership sites, which require monthly payments from subscribers. Each moth you'll get new commissions from the old members, without doing anything more. This is passive income. Another source of passive income is selling ads on your site. You can sell ads either directly, or join an ads network and place their ads on your pages. Active income can come from writing paid articles, either on your sites, or ghostwriting for other people's sites. Depending on your writing talent and skills, you can earn between $5 - $100 per article, or even more, if you become an authority in your field.

After you have built one successful site, you can choose to go on building a second one, then a third one, adding every month some sources of income to your portfolio. The more sites you build, the better your income will be. Plus, you'll be on the safe side if one of the sites crashes or loses Google rankings.

Most of all, remember that building the first site is the biggest challenge of all. The next ones will seem much easier, because you'll already have experience of things which work well and things which don't, so you won't be guessing in the dark anymore.

Simonne Matthew is an entrepreneur, running a small online business, and writing for a series of online publications. She helps people to make money online, by publishing case studies from her practice, and reviews of the methods of making money from home.
Article Source: http://www.wahm-articles.com/

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Network Marketing: Four Questions That Can Make or Break Your Business by Liz Monte

WHAT are you marketing? WHY are you marketing what you're marketing? WHO are you marketing to? HOW are you marketing?

The answers to these four questions lay the foundation for your network marketing business. You need to be clear about the answers yourself, AND you need to be able to convey those answers to your prospects.

Of course, it's obvious to you WHAT you're selling, and you probably have a pretty clear idea of WHY you're selling what you're selling. (Something to do with a beach house in Jamaica, right? Or is it Maui?)

I'll bet you're really good at explaining the WHAT when you're recruiting, too, giving out an abundance of info on your products and services, your company, and your compensation plan.

I'll also bet you know that to be an effective enroller, you need to explore your prospect's WHY, encouraging her to open up and share with you all her frustrations, hopes, and dreams. You want your new recruit to be motivated, after all. And you want to be able to demonstrate how your opportunity can help solve her frustrations, and turn her hopes and dreams into reality.

This is all good.

But when we come to the WHO and the HOW, many network marketers fall flat on their faces.

Your prospect needs to be able to envision herself doing this business. She wants to know exactly HOW she's going to market your company's products and opportunity and WHO she's going to sell them to.

I'm sure a prospect has asked you this before. "What, exactly, will I be doing?"

What do you tell her?

If you give her the usual lame explanation that she'll be "sharing" with her "warm" market of family and friends and that she needs to make a list of everyone she knows right away, chances are she's going to be skeptical.

Anyone who's done network marketing before or whose brother-in-law or coworker ever hounded her to join a business is already hip to the fact that this approach will take her down the road to humiliation and social isolation. No one wants this.

Plus, there's the dirty little secret that out of all the highly successful people in network marketing, hardly any of them got there by recruiting friends and relatives. I'm not saying it never happens, but in general, you can't rely on the warm market strategy to get you where you want to go. And recommending it to your prospects just compounds the problem.

So what IS the HOW? And who IS the WHO?

What if you don't really know the answers to these questions yourself?

To shed some light on this, let's take a look at another group of professionals - real marketers. In other words, professional business people who actually make a living marketing products and services.


You don't see them hitting on their family and friends. Or putting flyers on windshields, or tacking up posters on coffee shop bulletin boards, or dropping their business cards in restrooms, or inviting their neighbors over for product parties.

This is the scatter-shot, if-I-just-shoot-enough-bullets-in-that-general-direction-maybe-I'll-eventually-hit-a-duck approach. You're going to run out of ammo long before you see any results. You do these things if you want a hobby, not a business.

By contrast, professional marketers know exactly WHO makes up their target market - people who already see a need and have a desire for the marketer's products or services. Their HOW uses laser-focused, thoroughly tested strategies to reach that target market.

If you really want to have a business that will allow you to quit your J.O.B., to support you in your retirement, to give you the lifestyle of your dreams… then you need to treat it as a business and start using the marketing strategies that real, successful businesses use.

You need to discover how real marketers reach thousands of prospects and sift and sort and qualify them so they only talk to the best ones?

If you learn to do that, and learn how to teach it to your downline, what will it do for your organization?

I know -- it takes digging, and researching, and lots of reading to learn real, effective marketing techniques. Fortunately, you can find plenty of resources out there to help you. And when you're done with your basic research, you'll want to try things out and experiment to see what works best for your business.

You'll experience a very steep and exhilarating learning curve for a while. But believe me, you'll think it's SO worth it when you've joined the ranks of the really successful network marketers and you're sipping Mai-tai's in Maui.

Would you like to begin learning effective, real-world marketing techniques today? Liz Monte is the author of "Basic Training: The 21st Century Approach to Network Marketing," which will give you a major headstart. http://www.wisenetworkmarketer.com/.
Article Source: http://www.wahm-articles.com/