How To Escape Your Day Job, Pay Your Bills and
Make Progress Towards the Ideal Lifestyle
By Marlon Sanders
There are 6 basic ways to get dough
online:
- Promote affiliate products
- Google adsense
- Sell a service
- Sell advertising
- Sell physical products (think ebay)
- Sell information
You'll notice that the last 4 all involve selling something.
That's the approach I wanna talk to you about today.
I did a survey with my Milcers and Alist members. I found
out that most of them are still stuck to a degree in getting
things going. I want to give you an abbreviated action plan
that I spend 100 pages elaborating on in "Gimme My Money Now"
and that the icons walk you through in "The Marketing
Dashboard".
There are MANY Formulas out there. Here's the Marlon Sanders
Formula in a nutshell. So many of you have written and said, "I
need a Formula. I need step-by-step."
This is the big picture:
- Find demand
- Write sales letter
- Create info product to meet demand
- Roll out with affiliate program
That whole formula is elaborated on in much greater depth in
both Amazing Formula and Gimme My Money Now.
Here's what I found out from my survey. Most of you guys and
gals have jobs that you want to escape from. You have bills and
debts to pay.
And most of you are coming into this without a lot of prior
knowledge of marketing and some of you have limited computer
skills.
Based on that, do you think it's safe for me to say it's
unrealistic to think you're going to quickly and easily become
a zillionaire? Well, it's true. If you have no background in
sales and marketing, and you don't have very good computer
skills, you have a learning curve ahead of you and that takes
time.
HERE'S HOW I PERSONALLY DID IT
I remember when I was broke and bought deodorant with all
pennies. But what I did was kept learning and didn't expect
easy nor overnight results.
I kept buying books when I could afford them. There were no
cheap and easy ebooks back then. I could have done it
10 times faster if I had access to all the information
available today.
Anyway, my way out was self education. And action. I kept
doing little projects to put what I learned into ACTION.
I ran this one little business where you sold booklets using
answering machines. You didn't have voice mail then. So I had 3
answering machines hooked up in my home (my friends hated
it).
I ran these little ads in what we call in the U.S. "penny
shoppers." These are little papers given away for free that are
all classified ads.
I ended up running ads in 72 cities! And people would leave
their name and address on the answering machines. I shipped the
books C.O.D. Half the books came back. It was sorta like paying
out 50% affiliate commissions.
You didn't have Paypal or easy merchant accounts in those
days. So you had to do C.O.D. I sold $12,000 of books via "mail
order." And I was exhilerated to do so. I think at the end of
the day I probably LOST money.
But I sure learned a lot.
Then AOL and CompuServe came along and I started writing
sales letters and running ads on there. You'd run a little
classified ad (they were free on AOL). People would email
you.
Since autoresponders didn't exist, you'd personally email
them back your "free report." Since there weren't any PDF's
then (at least, that I knew of), the free report was a long
email.
The "big trick" my friend Jonathan Mizel taught back then
was to put their name in the return email! That was a big
secret back then.
Mizel, me, others all learned copywriting from Tested
Advertising Methods by John Caples. That was like one of 4 or 5
books on copywriting. But you know what? We wrote some pretty
good sales letters back then. I first met Jonathan Mizel 'cause
he sent me one of his sales letters, and I thought it was good.
So I wrote and asked him where he learned to write copy.
Of course, he said "Tested Advertising Methods" by John
Caples. So we were immediate friends.
AOL was great. You could test out your little ads, emails
and sales letters. I don't even think in those days we sent out
follow up emails.
As far as I know, my friend the late Corey Rudl created the
demand for autoresponders when he wrote about how he brought in
all this money by automatically emailing buyers 4 days
later.
It was only after that someone was smart enough to create an
autoresponder. Corey's stuff was hand coded. Gosh, I miss
Corey. And I reckon you've been in this business a long time
when you see your friends move on to the next great
adventure.
Somewhere in this timeline (it all escapes me), I had a
little retail store selling self help books and tapes. The
first thing newbies think to sell online is either diet stuff
or self help.
Man, self help is a tough sell. Both Dan Kennedy and I had
self development stores. And we both lost bux on 'em. But I did
have the chance to write and send out a few sales letters. And
since I often didn't have the money to print and mail letters,
I'd call 'em on the phone.
I found out that just by calling people, I could say
ANYTHING and I'd STILL get a lot of people coming in for the
next 3 weeks.
That's the power of staying in contact with your
customers.
Anyway, I could go on with this story. I've told the rest of
it in bits and pieces in different places.
What are you supposed to get out of this?
Dan Kennedy I think had a path kinda like mine. And what he
said once is profound. He said, "I became an overnight
success after 20 years of effort."
Now, I'm NOT saying you need 20 years of effort. You don't.
But neither is 20 minutes a week gonna do much for ya.
Most of the people I've seen make it in this business do so
after trying things that didn't work. And they kept on trying.
And sooner or later, somethin' clicked.
I think I shoulda called this article, "Sooner or Later,
Something Clicked."
So you got a job that sucks. You got bills that are stacked
up. Hopefully you can buy deodorant with something other than
pennies like me in the old days.
So what do YOU do?
My friend, I'd personally tell ya to do what I did. Fall in
love with the process more than the immediate fixation of "I
gotta make this work now or the whole thing is a scam."
What you're learning is marketing.
And that'll benefit you your whole life. It can help you get
your son or daughter or friend a job. It can help you raise
money for your Church or charity. It can help you promote an
idea whose time has come.
See, a LOT of people say, "I feel like I've just wasted my
#*$&* money on stuff."
I my response is, "Then you don't understand what you're
learning. No wonder things haven't clicked for you yet."
See, this isn't about gimmicks. It isn't about you figuring
out how to trick people into buying with magic words. It isn't
about fooling the search engines into stickin' your stuff at
the top. If you do this business the way I teach it, it's about
learning marketing. And yeah, I said the dirty 5-letter word —
LEARN. You can paint it up. You can put perfume on it. You can
sell the sizzle not the steak.
But my friend, what you're doin' is learning. And like my
friend Jim Edwards says, "That isn't something you
microwave."
"So Marlon, tell me how long this is gonna take and how much
I'm gonna make when I'm done?"
Rule 1: People learn at different rates, so no one
knows.
Rule 2: You'll never be done.
Rule 3: It depends on what you sell, who you sell to, how
much you charge, what your margin is and how often they
buy.
Some people like Russ Brunson get in this business, do it
part time between classes in college and go great guns with it.
Russ was one of my top affiliates. But he figured out this
business so quickly, before I knew it he had his own line of
highly successful products. More power to him!
Others are like me and take like 10 or 20 years to learn it.
What's average? Average is not doing anything, therefore not
learning anything, therefore the bills pile higher and the job
gets tougher.
"Well, if you can't tell me how much I'm gonna make, how
long it's gonna take and how much it's gonna cost me, then I
think this whole thing is a scam."
To say that is to say you believe marketing is a scam.
Because at least the way I teach it, that's what you're
learning.
What's my advice?
Think of the best info product idea you know how to come up
with. Interview some experts and record it. Or have a friend
interview you. Do a little 3-hour product, write a sales letter
for it. And see if anyone buys.
If they don't buy, guess what? You asked the market a
question and the market answered.
You asked the market, "Do you want to buy this?" And the
market responded, "No, not in the way you're presenting it to
me."
Your choice is to present it differently or do another
product. Along the way hopefully you learn some things about
how to find out what people want, how to get 'em to buy, how to
fulfill products, write letters, create sales pages and so
forth.
Honestly, in the DOING, you'll learn a lot more than you'll
ever learn in the reading. You ask. The market answers. You
learn along the way.
But if you're a spectator and you never get in the game, I
can guarantee you one rock solid thing: You'll never win the
game if you aren't in it.
This is a great business. It isn't for everyone. It sure
isn't a way to become a zillionaire overnight. Maybe after 5,
10 or 20 years you hit that zillion and you're the next John
Reese or Jeff Walker.
I don't think everyone should be in this business. If you
don't wanna figure anything out yourself, if you don't wanna
learn how to solve problems, if you don't wanna learn more
things about html and the computer than you really wanna know,
if you can't tolerate risk, if you need your first attempt to
be a success, or even your first 3 or 4, then I don't know, if
you can't afford to spend money on learning and education, if
you can't afford to try things that don't work, if you think it
should all be simple and easy, I don't know if this industry is
for you.
A lot of people get seduced by the lure of ez dough. The
promises of zillions without learning. Just connect the dots
and you too can be John Reese, Marlon Sanders or whoever you
wanna choose.
Here's the deal: People WILL sell you a turnkey system to
escape your job, make zillions or whatever. They'll give you
the fish. I want to teach you TO FISH.
I have a strong belief that unless you buy a franchise, in
most cases your going to better off learning marketing than
"buying a fish." There are exceptions. But more often than not,
buying a fish doesn't serve you well.
Some of my friends would disagree with that premise. I
happen to have a strong conviction that you are better off
learning marketing. My friends are RIGHT in that people DO want
to buy the fish versus learn how to catch it. So oftentimes,
you're best off selling a "fish" product.
But everybody has their perspectives. And for me, my
criteria for buying a product: If whatever "IT" is doesn't "pan
out" for you, are you STILL better off from having spent money
on it? Will it continue to benefit you, your family or your
friends in the future?
If the answer is NO, then think twice before spending your
money.
You have a job you wanna escape, bills to pay off,
retirement to prepare for. Or special needs like a sick loved
one. Or a sickness yourself.
I can't promise you ez zillions. There's no integrity in
that.
I can't promise you 6 figures a year ez as pie.
What I CAN promise you is that selling products works. It's
no scam. People been doin' it for thousands of years.
I can promise you that marketing works. Always has. Always
will.
I can promise you that money and time spent learning
marketing can pay off in many ways.
I can promise you that if you find demand, meet it with
products and well-executed promotions, and you do that over
time, those bills will likely fade away.
I can promise you that everybody on the Net selling you this
or that "dough making system" ALL have 1 thing in common — THEY
are selling you a product, service or seminar.
They have a target market.
They have an intro offer.
They have a back end.
I believe in paying more attention to what people DO than
what they SAY.
People get all confused what to DO. And there's a new system
invented every day that's the next big thing. Thank God. I love
commerce.
But to remove the confusion, understand this:
They all may disagree on HOW you make money. But one thing
is certain: They're making bux selling a product to a target
market — YOU!
Go and do thou likewise.
I remember back then. When I bought deodorant with all
pennies.
I remember the date I had with a model in a car that smoked
like a bomb.
And to me, there's no confusion. It's all crystal. It's all
simple. Take away the smoke. Take away the mirrors.
You need a product. You need people who want it with the
money to buy it. You need some great promo out there.
There's only ONE method people having using to pay their
bills and quit their jobs for the past 1,000 years –
Selling products and services to a target market with a
great sales pitch that presents benefits and solves
problems.
I know you want more details on how. How do you find target
markets? How do you identify demand? How, how, how.
I have provided a lot of those answers in the Milcer's
newsletters, Amazing Formula, Gimme My Money, Action Grid.
You wanna quit that job? You wanna liquidate that debt? I
don't have an ez zillion for you. But I do have a crystal clear
answer.
Find a group of people. Find out what they need and want.
Meet those wants with a product. Provide great service.
And who knows. Maybe. Someday. If the stars shine down on
you, you'll hit that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
———————————————————–
Marlon Sanders is the author of "The Amazing
Formula That Sells Products Like
Crazy."
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