Authors: David Lindahl,Jonathan Rozek
Tags: #Business & Economics, #Entrepreneurship
you do that, several excel ent things happen.
• You separate yourself from al the Buy Now! pushy people.
• You demonstrate your expertise in the topic.
• You provide value for nothing, and that builds confidence in potential customers.
• Those customers are left thinking: “
Wow, if
al that quality information is what
this person has for free, I wonder how good the paid stuff is—it must be real y
great
.”
We talked some time ago about how competitive some markets are. I can guarantee
you that, even in the most competitive of marketplaces, the vast majority of vendors wil
never offer something of value for free. You wil stand out in the very best light.
This phenomenon is not limited to just free special reports, of course. If you deliver a
free audio download from a web site you might accomplish the same thing. Don’t think
either/or, but instead think both/and. There’s no one single Silver Bul et, as we
established in Chapter 1. Therefore, think about coming out with a special report and
later perhaps doing a free audio or video, and so on.
2. Getting-Started Kit
This usual y takes the form of a series of special reports, plus perhaps a CD or a DVD,
al spread out for prospects to see. The idea is to show lots of material for a fairly low
price. High content plus low price is another way to say high value. It can simply be a
repackaging of other items you offered separately, including free ones.
3. Home-Study Course
This has been the bread-and-butter of the info products business for some time. It’s like
the
Getting-Started Kit,
only bigger. This wil be the biggest product that many people in
your customer list wil ever buy because they want a complete system but don’t have the
time or money to invest in a multi-day live event.
The beauty of a home-study course is it can be composed of content you created for
other purposes. For instance, you may have offered a teleseminar or one-day event
where a number of speakers presented information. Those are products in their own
right, but the transcripts can become the basis for your home-study course manual.
It’s common for a home-study course to contain a manual in a three-ring binder, plus
audio CDs and a few special reports. It doesn’t hurt to show a big spread of stuff people
wil receive for their several hundred bucks.
4. Sample Newsletter
This is again in the spirit of give before you get. Why not give people a sample of your
existing newsletter and show them what they’re missing each month? Some marketers
swear by newsletters that are one single page of great content. Other people like to give
12 to 16 pages of good but less-dense content. There’s no one right answer and both
ends of the spectrum are worth testing.
5. Book
This could real y be the topic of several chapters and we won’t do that. You know that I
like books or you wouldn’t be holding one of mine in your hands right now. However, they
are a great deal of work for a list price of around $25, especial y considering what other,
easier products you can sel for $25 or even more.
Stil , there’s nothing like a book to get wide exposure. It’s a great product format for
later, after you’ve already made a bunch of money. On the other hand, if you’re
particularly itching to become a published author, you need not wait. If that fire is in you to
do a book, it just might be the product that puts you on the map.
Just be sure to guard against devoting too much of your time to a book only to
become despondent if you get rejected multiple times by publishers. The truth is that
publishers wil pay much more attention to you once you have a large fol owing of fans.
Don’t think of a book as a great way to get customers—instead think of a bunch of
customers as a great way to get a book deal.
6. Interview Series Transcript
This is more repurposing at work. Some people make tens of thousands of dol ars at a
time by interviewing a series of experts on a topic and then sel ing the interviews for
$100 to $200, depending on the topic.
If they’re smart, they recognize that different people like their information delivered in
different media. If I’m a road warrior with a long commute each day, I might love to have
downloadable MP3 audios of these interviews to listen to instead of the same old news
on a radio station.
If I spend a lot of time at a desk, at home, or in airports I might want a handy transcript
I can pop out and read with a cup of coffee or while standing in line. Therefore, you can
increase the perceived value of an interview by offering both the audio and the transcript.
7. Fast-Start Guide
People are impatient, as you know, and are often wil ing to pay for the shortest shortcut
possible. Marketers sometimes get caught up in a paradox: If they offer a big fat home-
study course they’re giving lots of value to customers, but they may be overwhelmed
when they receive the course in the mail: ‘
‘Wow
, I don’t know where to start with this
thing! I bet the first chapter’s kind of boring, so I maybe won’t start there. Where’s the
real meat? Did
I get myself in
over my head again this time? Should I return it instead?”
You don’t want your customers to have those bad thoughts. Therefore, make it easy to
take the first few bites of your larger course or system by creating a fast-start guide. It
can be nothing more than a summary of what they’l find in other places in your system.
Note: This is typical y not something you sel on its own but instead you include it in a
larger package and assign a separate dol ar value to it, like $49.
8. Pocket Guide
This is a way to take advantage of the downtime people have while waiting in line, eating
lunch, and so on. They’l often appreciate that you create your information in many
different formats, so whether they’re at home, in a car or plane, or just out and about,
your material is accessible.
No one person wil probably use al the media you provide, but by offering different
formats you’l appeal to the broadest possible audience.
9. Checklist
This is an underused category of info product with a lot of potential for you. In a sense, a
checklist is the most-distil ed type of guide you can have because it answers the
request: Just tel me exactly what I should do when.
Think about what pilots do before a flight. They’ve had years of training and we hope
they know that airplane inside out. Yet they rely on a preflight checklist to make sure they
remembered the procedures in the correct sequence. That method of displaying
knowledge can work in other contexts besides aviation.
The other great thing about checklists is they are the opposite of the daunting, giant
package of material for someone to have to wade through. They seem simple and
inviting and that leaves the correct impression in the minds of your customers.
Often a checklist only makes sense in conjunction with a longer, more descriptive
document. You may go into great detail in the longer document about al the variations
and possibilities of something and then summarize in the checklist the key actions the
reader should take.
10. T-shirt
There’s something about T-shirts that animates people. In the course of my (Dave’s)
dozens of live events around the country, I’ve offered al sorts of prizes and fun bonuses.
T-shirts are definitely one of the most popular.
If you offer a T-shirt, make sure it’s a cool one. In other words, if it’s a cheapo shirt with
plain lettering of your web site name, that’s not going to be worn proudly by anyone
except you and your mom. You’re going to have to spring for a nice design or a wel -
known quote that resonates with your audience. It’s pretty hard to describe a formula in
matters of taste, so I won’t attempt it. When you hit it right, you’l know because people
wil buy whatever you have in order to get the bonus T-shirt.
You’re not much of a designer? No problem. Just go to www.99designs.com and
create a contest. It’s a very neat web site that’s something of a clearinghouse for people
who need designs and designers who need money. You can create a contest for around
$100. If you offered $500 it would be considered a lot of money. Then you establish the
guidelines of what you’re after and set a deadline.
Designers from around the world wil create T-shirt designs and post them to your
private contest area. You then should critique the contestants’ work by saying things like,
“You’re on the right track here with the al igator motif, but I don’t like that color,” or
whatever your impression is of that work. Your ongoing observations help the designers
to get a better sense of what wil be a winning entry. By the way, al the designers
typical y see everyone else’s entries so it can become pretty competitive, which is good
for you.
At the end of the contest you pick the winner. You get the design sent to you in large,
usable format and the designer walks away with the money.
You may feel uneasy about al the other designers who didn’t win but that shouldn’t
bother you. First, no one forced them to compete and they knew the rules. Second, we al
know that, in life, you win some and you lose some. Third, there’s nothing stopping you
from hiring one of the other designers for future work if you liked his or her work.
This whole system is just another example of the Internet creating opportunities and
value for people. In the bad old days you’d have to pay big bucks for a professional
designer at a big firm to create that T-shirt. Fewer designers were employed because
even the big firms couldn’t hire them al . Now that the middleman is out of the picture, it’s
a win-win for both the designer and the customer who needs a great design.
11. and 12. Poster and Laminated Poster
People love posters. Similar to checklists, they seem compact, less daunting, and they
get right to the heart of a topic. I’ve had great success with offering posters as either free
items to get people to give me their names or as paid products.
I separated these items in the checklist simply because you might offer a free poster
that’s a downloadable document for people to print out on their own. Then, for perhaps
$19 to $49, you can offer to send them a mailing tube with a beautiful, four-color large
poster with tons of information on it, professional y designed.
By the way, you could do another contest at www.99designs.com for the poster. On the
other hand, you can go to other sites like www.elance.com, browse the portfolios of
graphic designers, and hire one directly without going through the contest route.
Posters can be great products because their brevity works in your favor. Let’s say you
list on a poster three dozen ways to get something done. That’s valuable to the expert
who only needed reminding of those methods. However, the beginner might be left
wanting more information about those ways. Having your name at the bottom or top of
the poster means that anyone viewing it may then contact you and say, “Hey, I saw your
poster—do you have more information on those last five items on there?” What a great
way to offer motivated people more of your stuff!
13. Calendar
This is not a new concept by any means, but it’s just as valuable as it was in the
precomputer era. Back then insurance companies and gas stations offered calendars to
customers, not because they were just good guys but so that their names literal y hung
around the house al year.
What could you create that has a nice calendar in it, but also would perhaps subtly
remind people of your products and services? If you Google the term custom calendars
you’l find a huge selection of companies that can do this work in any quantity including
very smal amounts.
14. Game
Robert Kiyosaki is famous in the real estate and personal wealth arena for coming out
with his Rich Dad Poor Dad book and his Cashflow 101 game. What a smart move to
think of creating a game in an industry that previously had none.
There’s an old story of two shoe salesmen who went to Africa. After the main office
back in the United States had not heard from them for months, final y two telegrams
arrived. The first one said, “No luck. Coming home. Nobody around here wears shoes.”
The second salesman’s telegram said, “Send boatload of shoes. Nobody around here
wears shoes.”
It’s al how you look at it. Wel , Kiyosaki viewed the lack of a game in the personal
wealth arena as an opportunity and he became the pioneer. Maybe a game in your
chosen product area would work and maybe it wouldn’t, but it’s worth considering.
15. Mug
This is the same concept as a T-shirt—if it’s real y attractive, you’l get people to want it
as much as the main product you’re offering.