New Rich Experiment Update
October 19, 2007
Whew, glad that’s done! Let’s see what I accomplished in my 3 hour intense working blitz:
- Added Technorati to both blogs – although I don’t know why it’s out of order on this one. It doesn’t show that way on my dashboard.
- Added del.icio.us to both blogs. Need to explore it further, but it’s up.
- Wrote 2 articles for submission to article directories. Will proofread them tomorrow with fresh eyes and submit them.
- Posted an old article on a forum. Did not read any other postings – honest!
- Answered 1 email. I wasn’t peeking, it just appeared like a ghost (Windows Vista is cool that way) and I answered it because it was a customer.
- Posted on this blog twice.
- Posted on my other blog once. Surfed only long enough to add some website examples to my post. Amazing for me!
- Created a thank you page for this website.
- Created text for a double opt-in autoresponder
- Consolidated info from 3 scraps of paper onto a word doc for one of my great upcoming schemes.
- Answered comments on my blog. Misspelled “forum” because I’m exhausted. I hate typos.
Wow. I would have been happy just completing 1 article. I kept reminding myself of the deadline every time I wanted to stare into space, or answer the phone, or start surfing, or see what mischief my son was getting in to.
Cheers!
Peggy
The New Rich
October 18, 2007
I’ve been reading Timothy Ferriss’ The 4-Hour Work Week in which he describes the new rich. I want to be one of those! I’m not very far into the book, but some of the stuff he writes about really resonates with me. Plus, I like his writing style and think he’s funny.
You know how sometimes when you read something right before bed, it really sticks with you? Well last night I was reading the part about Parkinson’s Law and how a task will become increasingly more important and complex the more time we have to do it. The magic is in the upcoming deadline and how close or far away it is.
So tonight I’m conducting my own little experiment. I have 3 hours to myself right now and I am going to see how much I can DO in these 3 hours. No answering the phone, no raiding the fridge, no checking my email or checking to see how much money I didn’t make with my Adsense. No downloading anything or opening up and reading eBooks. After the 3 hours are up, I will list here everything I’ve achieved.
Stay tuned…
To AWeber…or Not To AWeber?
October 15, 2007
“Everyone who is serious about marketing over the Internet needs an autoresponder.” How many times have I heard that? What’s the big deal and how does it help me? Well, the short answer is it’s an automatic responder that automatically answers emails that are sent to it. The long answer is an autoresponder can be used to do all sorts of things like confirm subscriptions, send a series of instructional emails, send content, redirect customers to squeeze pages, give unsubscribe confirmation, assure someone that their help ticket will be handled shortly, and more.
You can think of an autoresponder as your own personal secretary who replies to every one of your customers yet who doesn’t get benefits, get sick, or take vacation. Your autoresponder can follow up with your prospects and subscribers, and do it in a personal way. There are several great autoresponders out there and in choosing one, I first had to figure out just what features I wanted from an autoresponder. Your wants may be different from mine, but here are the features I wanted:
· unlimited # of autoresponders (one time and sequential), unlimited follow ups, unlimited broadcasts
· personalization features (especially first name, but many different fields to chose from)
· unlimited list size – this will matter pretty soon! J
· data analysis
· split testing
· automatic handling of subscribers and unsubscribers
· live chat and good support- very important for me as I’m one of the technically-challenged J
· cool templates to use for the newsletters I send out from one of my sites
· affiliate program
· cost in line with the features I want
In order to figure out which autoresponders to look at without taking up too much of my already stretched time, I started with looking at which autoresponders the big internet marketers use. Since I’m on most of their lists, I simply went to my email in-bin and looked at the last line of their emails. Here’s what my unscientific and informal poll showed:
AWeber - 21 people (including private label versions)
GetResponse - 3
Infusion Soft - 2
Autocontractor - 2
Other - 9 (1 vote for each)
I then took a closer look at the top two, AWeber and GetResponse and tried to compare features. Check it out here:
| Features | AWeber | GetResponse |
|
Automatic handling of subscribes and unsubscribes |
Yes | Yes |
| Data analysis | Yes | Yes |
| Split testing | Yes | ? |
| Stylish message templates | Yes | Yes |
| Live Chat | 8am-8pm M-F, 9-5 Sat | 9am-8pm M-F |
| Customer Support | Yes | Yes |
| Blog and forum | Yes | Yes |
| Unlimited autoresponders | Yes | Yes |
| Unlimited broadcasts | Yes | Yes |
|
Segmented broadcast capability |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Unlimited campaigns |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Unlimited follow ups |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Personalized fields |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Web form generator |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Form pop-ups/ overs/hovers/exit pops |
Yes |
?, at least a pop-over |
|
My customized subscription page, removal page, and opt-in confirmation page |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Moves people from an advertising campaign to a customer list |
Yes | Yes |
| Cost |
$19.95/mo./10,000 leads and $9.95 for each add’l 10,000 leads |
$17.95/mo./10,000 leads and $4.50 for each add’l 5000 leads |
My conclusion to this informal autoresponder comparison? They both have everything that I want, plus way more cool features than I need right now. Most of the features are the same for both autoresponders, so you probably can’t go wrong with either. It depends on what you want. Since I really am not sure what will come in handy in the future, I decided to go with the one that my 21 successful internet marketers use – AWeber. My reasoning is that since these gurus are farther along in needing and using features right now than I am, they must be satisfied with AWeber’s features or they wouldn’t use AWeber.
I have to tell you, after deciding on AWeber and signing up, I have found it very easy to use. Their How to Get Started Guide made it extremely easy to get my first autoresponder set up in no time. When I signed up they hooked me up with an autoresponder series on how to get started. They then followed up offline with a letter that included a handy dandy little card with my log-in information on it. A few days ago, I got a follow up phone call from them welcoming me and making sure everything was going fine for me. Today I got an email from customer service asking how they could be of service. Now, I haven’t submitted a help ticket or called live chat (yet), but I’m pretty impressed with AWeber’s customer service so far.
I hope this helps.
Lead Supreme
October 12, 2007
I just signed up for Lead Supreme’s trial contest to learn how to build my list fast. I can’t figure out who ends up with the leads – me or them. I want to go after the $10,000 prize for the most leads generated in the 10 days (10/13 to 10/23) but the timing is not good. My kids are off school for fall break for the week. Oh well, we’ll see just how good I am at multi-tasking and organization.
However it turns out, I think it will be $20 well spent for all that I’m going to learn.
My Blog
October 11, 2007
Yes! My blog is finally integrated with my website. I’ve put on my previous “fake” blog posts here and backdated them. I’ve spent the day, in between walking dogs (as I am a pet sitter), going over some of the “how to” WordPress guides. I already have a Blogger blog, but WordPress is different. Next I need to figure out how to add RSS feed and BlogRush. I’m sure it would be easy for most people, but lately every time I try to do the littlest thing here I run into big obstacles.
Let’s regroup… what have I done so far?
Got a domain name
Set up the website
Got a blog
Integrated the blog into the website
Started blogging
Sent out many emails to my “report experts”
Continuous research and learning – a big chunk of my time but so interesting.
Came up with 2 product ideas but I need a programmer

