How To
Use The Yellow Pages To
Boost
Your Business
|
A quick look through your
local Yellow Pages is all you’ll
need to find good consulting
prospects. Each one of those
full-page ads costs an arm and a
leg, and the Yellow Pages is
packed with them.
So in this three-part interview,
you’ll hear how a businessman
named Vanish Patel runs market
research using the Yellow Pages
– and how he takes that
information to make money for
himself. And once you hear how
he does it, you’ll know you can
easily apply those same concepts
to your HMA practice.
Basically, Vanish looks for a
target industry with advertising
dollars so that he can sell them
leads. For example, he has a
website that helps people find
the best mortgage brokers in
their area. After he collects
his visitors’ information on his
site, he sells their information
to mortgage brokers (and brings
in about $75,000 a month for his
trouble).
But this interview is also full
of valuable information on
identifying good prospects,
setting up effective websites
and using the Yellow Pages to
boost a consulting practice.
Part One
In the first audio, you’ll hear
exactly how to use the Yellow
Pages to run market research.
Then, you’ll get detailed
information on how to capture
valuable information on a
website by using a
questionnaire.
Key Concepts Of Part One…
• What an effective website
should look like – how many
pages it should be, what should
be on each page and when to hit
visitors up for their contact
information
• How to use an autoresponder
series to automatically bring
people back to a website if they
abandon a questionnaire without
finishing
Part Two
In the second audio, you’ll hear
how Vanish closes his deals.
You’ll also hear how he made a
simple joint venture deal with a
website designer to get his
website up and running when he
had no idea how to design one.
You’ll also get…
• Good marketing sales pitches
to use when you call businesses
• How any website can benefit
from a two-part inquiry form
• How Vanish got his “Mickey
Mouse” inquiries (people who
give fake contact information
when filling out questionnaires)
down to 2%
Part Three
Vanish does more than the
lead-finding business. He also
does marketing consulting. And
in the third part of this
interview, he talks about ways
you can use the Yellow Pages
concept offline by applying it
to your consulting practice.
You’ll also hear…
• Tips on how to land marketing
contracts from businesses in the
phonebook
• How to sell businesses on an
auto-responder marketing series
that you can easily set up for
them
• Simple ways to add value to
your consulting sessions so that
clients won’t mind paying higher
fees
Why spend money trying to
identify prospects when the
phonebook comes to you free? So
break out your copy of the
Yellow Pages and get ready to
turn it into gold for your
business. Each part of the
interview is about 20 minutes
long. Enjoy. For more interviews
like this go
here
Michael: You’re doing 800 leads
for the mortgage business a
month?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: And what are you
charging them per lead?
Vanish: We’re charging $25 per
broker.
Michael: You’re making $75 a
lead?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: And you’re doing 800 a
month?
Vanish: To be honest, closer to
1,000.
Michael: Are you serious?
Vanish: I’m not joking.
Michael: You’re doing $75,000 a
month in these leads?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Wow, Vanish, that’s
incredible.
[Music]
Vanish: I’ll tell you what we’ve
been finding that’s really good.
Michael: What?
Vanish: Yellow Page advertising.
Michael: Selling Yellow Page
advertising?
Vanish: No. Using the Yellow
Pages as a way to find market.
You know we always talking about
finding the money?
Michael: Yes.
Vanish: Here’s a really good
proven method for finding market
to make money.
Michael: Okay, go ahead.
Vanish: You grab the Yellow
Pages and you pick any section.
I’ve got my Yellow Pages. Give
me a section.
Michael: I’m going to pull out
my Yellow Pages here. Let’s do
landscaping.
Vanish: Here’s the thing. You’ve
got landscaping.
Michael: Right.
Vanish: What you want to do is
two things. You want to look in
the landscaping section and you
want to count how many pages do
you have in landscaping?
Michael: I’ve got five pages.
Vanish: Okay. Now, I’m in London
and I’ve got one, two, three,
four, five, six pages. Now, all
you want to do is this. Count
the number of display ads.
Michael: Thirty display ads.
Vanish: I have 50. Now, what you
want to do is quickly count the
number of line ads, which are
the free ads. The free ads are
the ones in between the display
ads. Roughly count how many
there are.
Michael: I have about 150.
Vanish: What you have is 30
display ads and 150 free lines.
Michael: About how many do you
have?
Vanish: I have 75 free ads. So,
what I have in my book is 50
people have paid for an ad and
75 people that haven’t. So, I
have a total market of 125
entries. And, therefore, I can
work out my percentages as to
how many are advertisers and how
many are non-advertisers. Now,
in your case, you had 30 people
that paid for a display ad and
160 that just put their entry in
for a total 190. You can find
what the people are spending
money trying to generate
business.
Michael: In this market.
Vanish: In this market.
Michael: What am I going to
divide into what?
Vanish: In your case, the total
number of business is 190. So,
divide 30 into 190, which is
15%.
Michael: So, 15% are paying big
money in the Yellow Pages.
Vanish: And then you have 160,
which are like the free loaders.
And so, 85% are not paying. Now,
in my case, the numbers work out
a little bit different but it’s
the same sort of ratio in that
you’ve got a small percentage of
people paying and a high
percentage that are not. Now,
the trick is to find the markets
where the odds are in your
favor. Now, in your case, one in
six is paying. If you have six
names, one is going to pay and
five are not.
Michael: So, that’s giving me
some market research within that
industry.
Vanish: Exactly. In my case
here, it’s 50/75. A third are
paying and two-thirds are not.
So, in my case, landscaping
tells me that they have a
problem don’t they because these
people are trying to get
business. Therefore, if I’m
going to go and talk about
advertising or generating
business, I want a successful
one because roughly have of them
are going to buy. So, then all I
need to do is channel that into
a different method and it’s not
a hard sell.
Michael: Give me an example as
to how you would pull money out
of this landscaping market.
Vanish: For example, what I have
proven here is that landscaping
in my sector, roughly half of
the people are willing to pay.
Michael: For advertising in the
Yellow Pages.
Vanish: Exactly, they’re paying
for advertising. The Yellow
Pages is just one form of
advertising.
Michael: So, that tells you
what?
Vanish: It tells me that that
market has a problem in
communicating. What Yellow Pages
has done is convinced them. Look
in your Yellow Pages under
accounting. Accounting is a good
example. And again, look at the
ratio. How many display ads are
there?
Michael: Not many at all.
Vanish: Not many at all. And
what you’ll generally find is
it’s about 10%— less than 10%.
Michael: Yes, I agree.
Vanish: So, trying to get money
out of accounting for
advertising is an uphill
struggle because accountants, as
a group, as a market, do not see
any worth in advertising because
they are convinced that
referrals is how they get all
their business. And the proof is
in the pudding because there’s
only about one in ten paying for
any form of advertising.
Michael: The Yellow Pages is a
great tool to research markets.
Vanish: Exactly. Let’s look at
another interesting one. Let’s
look at chiropractors.
Michael: Chiropractors, good
idea.
Vanish: See how instantly it
hits you in the face and you say
money, don’t you?
Michael: Yes, when you see the
full-page ads.
Vanish: Exactly. And you only
need to count and just do two
numbers. You only have to count
two numbers: the display ad and
the free ad. But people are
showing you their dollars.
They’re showing you their check.
Michael: Yes, they are,
especially when you see large,
half-page and full-page ads.
Vanish: Exactly because you know
the per square inch. If you
wanted to get real scientific,
you just count the number of
inches. And if you count the
number of inches and divide it
by the number of entries, you
know what the spending dollars
are. Now, isn’t it funny if you
look at chiropractors, you can
see how—and all you have to do
is this. Find a market.
Generally, this is what we call
the killer market. If you can
find where there are more people
paying to advertise than people
not …
Michael: You’ve got a good
market.
Vanish: That’s it.
Michael: Look at plumbers. It’s
full-page after full-page after
full-page after full-page.
Vanish: That market has money
now. I’ll tell you what’s a
really good one.
Michael: Let’s look at dental.
Dental is big. Here are
dentists. This is like the
plumbers.
Vanish: Visually you don’t have
to do the count, do you?
Michael: No. You can tell that
these people advertise. They
have money to advertise.
Vanish: Now, here’s the thing.
The Yellow Pages is a good
example. Do you know how much it
costs for a half-page ad in the
Yellow Pages?
Michael: It’s very, very
expensive.
Vanish: You can actually ring up
your local Yellow Pages
representative and find your
market and say, “I’m considering
putting an ad, a half-page ad in
this section.” And he’ll give
you that rate over the phone,
won’t he.
Michael: Yes.
Vanish: So, now what you know is
how much they’re spending almost
to the penny. Now, what that
means is you don’t have to
convince that market on
advertising or marketing or
generating leads. And all you
have to do is this. You’ve just
got to one little bit step
further than the Yellow Pages. A
market strategy that we use is
this. We take a Yellow Pages
section and we find the money;
say dentists, for example. You
know they’re already spending
money and you can work out
almost to the dollar roughly
what they’re spending per month
on Yellow Page advertising. Now,
here’s the thing. You have a
copy of the Yellow Pages in
front of you and I have a copy
of the Yellow Pages. What’s the
call to action?
Michael: It’s a phone call.
Vanish: What the Yellow Pages is
delivering to the advertiser is
a phone call. So, they’re
spending thousands and thousands
of dollars to get the phone to
ring. What we do is this. We
just say we will do exactly what
Yellow Pages does, but we’ll do
it at a higher degree. When you
ring up a dentist, what do you
think the first three questions
you’re going to be asked?
Michael: You’ll call and they’ll
say this is so and so dentist.
They’ll ask for your name and
maybe your phone number and
maybe, if you’re calling the
dentist from the Yellow Pages,
you’re probably considering
their services.
Vanish: You’re going to ask them
questions, aren’t you? And
they’re going to ask you some
questions back, aren’t they?
Michael: Yes, they are.
Vanish: Each market is going to
do the same thing. What we do is
this. We research a market and
we play mystery shopper. And we
find out the first five
questions that the market asks
everyone. They’re just the
generic questions that the
market will ask a prospective
customer.
Michael: I’m going to call ten
dentists. I’m going to act like
I’m interested in dentistry and
I’m going to write down the
questions that each one of the
ten dentist offices asks me and
look for the common denominator
questions.
Vanish: Exactly. Now, what you
have is the five main questions
that they ask everyone.
Michael: Correct.
Vanish: So, what we do is we
then take that on to online
world because you can do the
same form of advertising as the
Yellow Pages. And you can
literally buy pay for clicks;
send them to a web site. Say
someone is looking for a local
dentist. They’re doing the same
search as they would in the
Yellow Pages, aren’t they?
Michael: Yes, they are.
Vanish: They’re just doing it
online.
Michael: That’s correct.
Vanish: So, then you go in and
you set up a web site that gets
them to come to the web site.
And you do a little bit of sales
copy. So, basically what you
have is a form. And that form
has the first five questions.
Michael: For instance, like
what?
Vanish: We haven’t targeted the
dentist market. But we’ll do a
different market that we have
done an example. Let’s take
somebody that is looking for a
chiropractor. They’re going to
ask you for your name, your
address; the usual contact
details. But then they’re going
to ask questions like, for a
chiropractor what I found in my
research is, part of the reason
people ring is they have a
problem with their back and they
want to find a chiropractor who
will be covered by their
insurance. So, the question they
have is, “Who is your insurance
provider?” That’s the first
question the chiropractor will
ask because either you’re a
private client and you’re paying
yourself or it’s going to be
done through an insurance claim.
So, there are some questions
that go through that. There are
some questions about the
specific back problem they have;
is it work related or home, etc.
You can build a couple of simple
questions. And that’s a form
isn’t it, a web form?
Michael: Yes, it is.
Vanish: So, what happens now is
you get some traffic that comes
in. You have a three-page web
site. Page one basically offers
them the chance to find the
chiropractor that’s specific to
their requirement. Then what we
ask is simply first name and
email address. Then we present
the complete form to be filled
in and the details will then be
forwarded to a chiropractor in
your area. After we get their
name, address, usually contact
details and the first five
questions that the chiropractor
would typically ask. So, now
what we have is a lead. Now,
look at the postcode of where
that person is and I go to the
Yellow Pages and I find a bunch
of chiropractors in that area. I
contact them and say that I have
someone that has this problem.
So, rather than getting them to
advertise somewhere, we’ve got
this person pre-qualified. We’ve
already asked those five
questions. So, you sell them a
lead. What we do, obviously, is
we don’t send them the lead, we
send them to the web site where
they pay a few hundred dollars
and buy ten leads for people
that are in their vicinity.
Profit margins on that are
really good.
Michael: Are you doing this with
chiropractors?
Vanish: We’re not doing it with
chiropractors but we’re doing it
with a slightly different
market, which is the mortgage
market. But it can work with
printers. We’ve been doing it
with printers. If you look in
the printing section, that’s a
good example. So, what we just
do is approach the people that
are advertising and say, “What
does the Yellow Pages deliver?”
Basically the Yellow Pages
delivers to you the phone call,
doesn’t it? And that’s it. The
Yellow Pages is a generic
product. It’s just paper. So,
the only thing you can have is
the phone number. And you have
to be there to answer it and you
have to ask these questions,
don’t you? Now, we can get a web
site to do all of that.
Michael: So, you have these
mortgage brokers paying you per
lead?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Are you producing a
large amount of leads?
Vanish: We’re producing roughly
200 leads a week. Now, here’s
what we do, which is really
good. Let’s take the
chiropractor example. He’s
filled in the form. He’s
answered some basic questions
about what his problem is. Now,
we don’t sell that lead to one
chiropractor. We sell it to
three. Do you know why?
Michael: Why?
Vanish: Because if you sell it
to one person, it’s one of these
things where here is a bit of a
touchy-feely thing. It’s a bit
like if I said you have to go to
that Cinema even though you have
several Cinemas showing the same
film. And you have your favorite
one because it’s nicer and it’s
easier to park. So, what happens
is by getting three
chiropractors in front of the
prospect, they’re going to pick
one.
Michael: Do you tell the other
two mortgage brokers that the
lead is going out to their
competition?
Vanish: It’s not going to their
competition. That’s not the way
it is projected. The truth is
you can’t be everything to
everybody, can you?
Michael: No.
Vanish: So, what we do is say
it’s going to go to three and
only three. And then the reason
it goes to three is because in
that way the client will pick
one of them. If it only goes to
one, the odds of you getting it
right are going to be low.
Michael: That’s true.
Vanish: So, what we do is pick
three because that causes a good
marry up.
Michael: Yes. And it causes
those three to be on their best
behavior and give their best
service.
Vanish: Exactly. And we let the
market force this because if we
sell it to one and he does
nothing and he sits on it; who
gets the blame? We do. They say
it was a bad lead. With three of
them and one happens to sit on
the lead, then the other two
will fight it out and win.
Michael: You’re doing 800 leads
for the mortgage business a
month?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: And what are you
charging them per lead?
Vanish: We’re charging $25 per
broker.
Michael: You’re making $75 a
lead and you’re doing 800 a
month?
Vanish: To be honest, closer to
1,000.
Michael: Are you serious?
Vanish: I’m not joking.
Michael: You’re doing $75,000 a
month in these leads?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Wow, Vanish, that’s
incredible; seventy-five
thousand dollars a month selling
leads to mortgage brokers per
month through this one idea.
Vanish: Yes. And that is one
market.
Michael: Are you doing other
markets also?
Vanish: We have been doing
tentatively two or three other
markets. The main thing is
building the infrastructure in
place.
Michael: How long did it take
you to set this thing up with
the mortgage brokers?
Vanish: It took about a year.
Michael: When you say we, who is
we?
Vanish: I have a guy that does
all the web stuff because,
obviously, we have to get in a
search engine and all the pay
per clicks and everything.
Michael: This is you baby,
though?
Vanish: Yes, it’s one of the
things I sort of stumbled into.
Here’s the thing and this is the
bit that really knocks my socks
off. We generate 1,000 leads a
month. Typically, we will get
about 10,000 visitors. So, we
convert about one in ten
visitors that come to our site
into a lead. And here’s the
great thing. What we do is we
capture the name and email
address and then we ask them to
fill in a form asking a couple
of questions.
Michael: Let me ask a question.
When they come to the site, the
first thing they see is a little
bit about the mortgage broker.
Vanish: Yes. We provide the
mortgage broker service.
Michael: You’re asking them at
that page to put their name and
email address.
Vanish: All we ask is that if
they are interested in getting
in touch with mortgage brokers
that can find them the best
mortgage, then click here.
Michael: Okay. And then click
here. Do they have to fill in
their name and email address
before they click?
Vanish: Yes. Then what happens
is they get a page that restates
the offer and says, “Please
provide your first name and
email address.”
Michael: But before they get to
that page, do they have to enter
their name and email address?
Vanish: No. It’s three pages.
Page one is the landing page.
Michael: Click here for more
information.
Vanish: That’s right. For
example, it may come through a
pay per click or through one of
our traffic partners. So, they
get a landing page and it
basically says, “If you want to
get the best mortgage deal, we
provide a special service. We
have a bunch of mortgage brokers
in your areas that will help you
get the best mortgage deal that
you need. Click here.”
Michael: Then you’re taken to?
Vanish: Then you are taken to
the first part of the form. We
have a two-stage form. First one
is first name and email address.
Then when they click okay on
that, then they’re given a set
of questions that they must
complete.
Michael: After they click okay.
After you’ve captured their name
and email address?
Vanish: Yes. What happens a lot
of times is when people go there
and we ask a question like.
“What’s your outstanding
mortgage?” Now, if you haven’t
got that to enter, you’re going
to abandon the page, aren’t you?
And the way the computer system
is, an hour after they go into
page two of the form, if they
haven’t completed that, they’ll
get an email saying, “Don’t
worry if you haven’t answered
any of the questions or there is
something missing, you can come
back.” So, we have an
autoresponder series that keeps
getting them going from page one
to complete page two. And that
goes for the next four weeks.
Michael: Is that pretty
effective in getting them back?
Vanish: Yes. That’s the reason
why we set that split up.
Actually, we’ve changed our
business model a little bit in
that if after a week or two they
haven’t completed it, we still
have their name and email
address. And that’s worth
something to someone.
Michael: Sure it is.
Vanish: But the main thing is we
get them to complete the form.
And as soon as they have
completed the form and this is a
feature that you will really
like. Here’s what happens and I
have to explain a bit about the
backend. As soon as you have
completed the application form,
you press the submit button. You
then get an email saying, “Thank
you very much. You’re details
have now been forwarded to our
mortgage specialists. They will
be in touch with you soon.” At
the same time that email goes to
the prospective customer, we
send out three SMS’s.
Michael: What’s a SMS?
Vanish: A text message. Like on
your cell phone, you can get
messages. An email will go out
to each of the three brokers
breaking down all the details.
But we also send a brief version
of the message, just the name
and phone number of the customer
to the mobile phone of the
mortgage broker. As soon as you
press the submit button,
typically depending on what time
of day you do the submission,
you might get a phone call
within the next five minutes.
Michael: So, they’re getting
these leads while these people
are hot.
Vanish: Exactly. We could do it
for the U.S., but again, what we
then need to do is we need to
get in with all the U.S.
mortgage brokers. The main thing
is this, if you look at your
Yellow Pages and you look under
mortgage, you will see that is a
hot market. And that’s the
reason why it’s not hard to
divert some of that Yellow Page
advertising into online
advertising. The difference is,
we don’t deliver the phone call,
we deliver the first five
questions. Before we used to go
in and say we’ve got this great
thing since sliced bread. Now,
we go in and we talk to them
about Yellow Page advertising
and how effective it is and
everything. We say that if we
can, for the same price as
Yellow Page advertising, take
the phone call, ask the
prospective customer a couple of
questions and then get them to
fill in a form, take all the
details down, and send you that,
would you be happy to pay? And
do you know what most people
say? Absolutely because the
problem with putting an ad in
the Yellow Pages is that you
need someone on the other end of
the phone ready. We only talk to
people that would be happy to
say they are willing to pay the
same amount as the Yellow Page
ad. Ninety percent of them don’t
track the number of leads that
come in. We ask them how many
leads and what is the cost per
lead. And the market comes up
with roughly the same sort of
figure. And we say you get the
phone call and what happens when
you’re on an appointment. That’s
the problem with most these
businesses. When the phone call
comes in they loose half of
them, don’t they?
Michael: Yes, that’s true.
Vanish: So, what we say is what
if we took the name and address
and gave you their phone number.
And found out, for example in
the mortgage market, how much is
their existing mortgage, whether
they are a first time owner or
if they are refinancing; the
basic questions that you ask.
And then we fax that to you,
would you prefer that? And then
you can call them back whenever
you want.
Michael: What is your expense on
all the key words to generate
the leads?
Vanish: This is what you will
love. The business model that we
have at the moment, we’re
generating around 1,000 leads a
month, $75 for each lead we
generate. That’s our income end.
Our cost end is a little over
$25.
Michael: Twenty-five dollars a
lead?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Out of the $75,000 a
month that you are making, you
have costs of $25,000. And
that’s mainly your key work
placement, right?
Vanish: Exactly. That’s paying
for all the traffic to come to
us. Our model is this; we sell
to three brokers. One broker
pays for the traffic. Then,
obviously, we have the overhead
in running a business and
advertising, which the second
broker pays for. And then we
keep the third one.
Michael: How do you get paid
from your broker? How do you set
up the payment?
Vanish: The way we work it is
the broker basically deposits
for 20 leads.
Michael: Twenty leads at $25 a
lead.
Vanish: Which is $500. So, what
you do is you put $500 into our
account. And then we will
deliver, depending on the time
of day and year; we’ll deliver
you one lead a day, roughly. So,
you get a reasonable flow. But
with the Internet, there are
peaks and troughs. And so we get
them to pay up front.
Michael: That’s great.
Vanish: The biggest expense is
not actually generating the
lead. We spend more money in
selling the lead.
Michael: In selling the lead.
Vanish: Yes. That you still have
to use grunt work and contacting
potential customers.
Michael: Now, did you do that
yourself?
Vanish: No, we advertise in
normal trade publications.
Michael: So, what’s your expense
in selling it?
Vanish: That again is about
another $25.
Michael: So, you’re netting
after all your expenses about
$25.
Vanish: Yes. Our formula is to
spend $25 generating the lead,
$25 selling it and keep $25.
Michael: Does that end up being
your net, $25?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: That still isn’t bad.
And then you have an Internet
person that handles all the
Internet stuff?
Vanish: Yes. And it all runs
automatic.
Michael: Is that person an
employee of yours or a partner
or what?
Vanish: We joint venture because
for that person to keep running
it and everything, we have an
agreed deal.
Michael: So, he handles all your
technical stuff?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Do you split it half
and half?
Vanish: Our agreement is that
the technical person gets the
first “X” and I get everything
above that. The tech is
interested in profit and they
want to know roughly a
guarantee.
Michael: And you need him for
the web site and the set up.
Vanish: Yes. Whether I use him
or pay someone else, it’s the
same thing. And he is good. He
makes sure the whole thing runs.
Michael: Does he design the web
pages and write the copy or do
you?
Vanish: We do it together. He
does the first draft and I’ll
say change a thing here, move
this around a bit. What I do is
look at all the statistics to
see if it is converting.
Michael: Was this person doing
this already and you approach
him to improve the system?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: Is that how you got
into this?
Vanish: Yes, very much by
accident. He was at a trade
show; it was a finance trade
show, and one of the sections
was mortgage brokers. And he was
exhibiting there and we ended up
having coffee. I asked him a bit
about how his business worked.
And he didn’t really have what I
call a business model. So, I sat
down with him and developed the
model. He was only charging $15
for each lead.
Michael: Was he doing it to
three or just one person?
Vanish: He was doing it to
three. But he wasn’t really
positioning. He really didn’t
have a method for selling the
lead.
Michael: He didn’t do an
autoresponder sequence.
Vanish: No. And he didn’t really
have a sales process for selling
the lead. And he didn’t set
budgets. The big mistake that
most people have is they don’t
say if I’m going to make $100, I
have to produce my product at
price “X.” And that’s the budget
and either you make it work or
you don’t. If you can’t make it
work at that price, then don’t
do it. Most people will say it
costs me $5 to make this thing,
now I’m going to try selling it
for $15. And we did some market
research to find out what price
the product market will bear.
So, we went from $15 a lead to
$25 and lost nothing.
Michael: That’s a great concept.
You could find anyone marketing
anything, even if they’re
marketing poorly or better, even
if they’re great marketers. And
they may be underselling their
item. And you can come to them
as a consultant and say I can
show you how to increase your
profits a certain amount if you
do nothing else but increase the
price.
Vanish: Absolutely. And I’ll
tell you one thing, that’s the
difference between a start-up
and a set-up. A set-up is simply
a business that has been selling
and has been succeeding in spite
of themselves.
Michael: A set-up is?
Vanish: Think of it this way.
How many times have you been to
a great restaurant and you just
look at them and you know
they’re doing it badly. But they
‘re serving good food and people
are willing to come. Just think
if there were some business
processes and thought about what
they were doing, how much more
efficient could they be. Those
things just come all the time.
Michael: There are so many
opportunities out there. It’s
truly incredible.
Vanish: The simple thing is
this. So few businesses test.
I’ll give you one simple thing.
It only took me 20 minutes to
do. On that web page you’ll
notice that the enquiry form
comes in two parts. In fact,
actually if I were dishing out
some punishment, you’re guilty
of this on your web site. Do you
know your web enquiry form? It’s
one page isn’t it?
Michael: You’re absolutely
right.
Vanish: It should be two pages.
Michael: That’s an excellent
idea. Exactly what you have
done. That’s excellent because
I’m loosing tons of people
because they are afraid …
Vanish: Exactly. What you have
to do and here is an interesting
statistic and this statistic
bears out with us. You have a
long form, a set of questions
that you want people to commit
to.
Michael: An unheard of long
form.
Vanish: So, what you do is this.
You should simply have page one,
which is first name and email
address. That’s it. Nothing
more. And then click to
continue. It goes to a page two,
which is the whole complete
form. And then you have an
autoresponder series that gets
people to keep coming back to
that form to complete it. And
that way you will be going back
and continuing. Now, about 50%
of the people—depends on each
market, but you can test—a
certain percentage will complete
directly from the first page to
the second page. Others will
just forget because one of the
questions you ask, they don’t
have an answer to. Who’s your
favorite marketing person?
Michael: Right.
Vanish: We’re now into 30
seconds of time. They abandon.
Simply by having an
autoresponder that goes back out
and says, “I notice you didn’t
complete the form. Do you want
to try again?” And you just keep
doing that.
Michael: Now, what happens if
they fill out the first form,
the name and email address, and
then they go to the form and
complete it all?
Vanish: You take them off that
sequence.
Michael: Is there a way to do
that automatically?
Vanish: Yes. The simple thing is
when they complete, when they
complete part two, you’re adding
them on to an autoresponder
series. What you’re doing is
you’re adding instruction code
in there to take them off the
other one.
Michael: You can do that with an
autoresponder?
Vanish: Yes. So, what you do is
the first one—it’s a little bit
technical.
Michael: I understand. So, what
autoresponder system are you
using?
Vanish: We’re actually using one
that is proprietary because we
do one within an hour.
Michael: What do you mean you do
one within an hour?
Vanish: Most of the commercial
autoresponders work on day one,
day two, etc.
Michael: You have yours by the
hour?
Vanish: Yes. The reason is
because the mortgaging inquiry
is hot. So, when you complete
the first part, if you don’t
complete part two within an
hour, we send you an email.
Michael: So, is one that you
have developed yourself?
Vanish: Yes. The web guy
developed it especially for us.
Michael: That’s great. Did this
guy already have it set up
before you met him?
Vanish: No, he didn’t. What I
found was this. His biggest loss
was people abandoning the form.
And that’s his money. If people
don’t complete the form, he
doesn’t have profit. He can’t
sell leads to people that just
provide their name.
Michael: That’s true.
Vanish: In essence what I
managed to do was basically
double his income by telling him
to fix two things. First fix the
price. He never did any testing
on what the mortgage broker was
willing to pay. So, we spent
some time and figured out that
$25 was fine. So, he did that.
And then second, we converted
the form into two parts and put
autoresponders to get people to
come back and keep completing
the form.
Michael: Let’s go back to mine.
So, I set up that first page
with name and email address.
Vanish: Here’s what you’ll do.
First name, sir name and then
they submit to an autoresponder
series. You’re assuming that
they’re going to be human and
they are going to fail.
Michael: Correct. So, instantly
a message goes out …
Vanish: No, you don’t have to do
anything. Don’t send out
anything. Day zero, nothing
happens. Then day one, you’re
going to say, “You didn’t fill
out that form. Here’s the link.
Go back. Don’t worry about the
questions or was there a reason
that you didn’t do this,” or
whatever. And you just keep
reminding them every couple of
days. Some people you have to
sell more to complete the form.
Michael: That’s true.
Vanish: You just have to show
them the form and they’ll do it.
So, now you have an
autoresponder series that keeps
getting them to go back. Now,
when they go on to page two, you
will do two things. You’ll then
submit them to the autoresponder
series that you normally have.
And at the same time you put in
an instruction to remove them
off the reminder form.
Michael: So, the long form that
I have, when they fill that out
…
Vanish: Yes, those two things.
Michael: Okay. It puts them on
my auto respond one and then
there is some code that will
take them off the other one.
Vanish: Exactly.
Michael: I’m sure that doable.
Vanish: It’s very easy.
Michael: That’s great, that’s
excellent.
Vanish: And what will happen is
you will find that as soon as
you look at your statistics,
even by just doing the two
parts, you increased the number
of people completing the form.
And there is a dollar value from
capturing the email address.
Michael: Now, what are you doing
with all those email addresses?
Vanish: Well, what we do is we
just get them to keep coming
back. We’ve got roughly 60%
conversion rate. That means if
somebody is willing to give me a
name and email address, 60% of
the time I can get them to fill
in the form. Now, that doesn’t
mean that they will fill in the
form straight away when they are
presented on the first page.
Some will fill in two weeks
later. But it’s an email
sequence.
You see, Michael, it’s just
really focusing on the basics.
When you approach a business and
you say we’re going to talk
about the real basics, they are
not really interested. The line
I use is this, “I looked at your
business and I can see some room
for improvement. I reckon
working with you over the next
three or four months, I maybe
able to do a 25% improvement.
Are you willing to invest an
hour or so to see that
possibility?” And you know what
happens? They go, yes. Now, the
truth is this. I can get that
25% in a week or two. The thing
is this, when I approach
businesses and say that I can
get 20% improvement in their
business in the next two or
three weeks, they just don’t
believe it. So, what I say is I
believe I can do 20%, maybe 25%,
in the next three to four months
because that is a believable
statement.
Michael: Yes, you’ll blow them
away.
Vanish: Exactly. And then you go
in and you don’t have to do
much. Most people think you have
to rehash it all. I ask them to
tell me what they are trying to
achieve. So, how do you do that?
And you just ask them question.
And you ask them their game
plan. And then you just say okay
you’re trying to do this. And
there are only a few things you
have to fix. And most people do
not fix, say the web site, and
really get honed in and tuned in
on capturing people’s email
addresses.
Now, go on; what have you got?
Michael: What did I say; I had
100 and what?
Vanish: 105.
Michael: I have about 85 people
who filled out the form.
Vanish: That’s pretty good.
Michael: Now, let me tell you an
observation. I had done some
consulting for a cement truck
seller. And I had done this.
Before they got into the site, I
wanted to capture their email
and their name. And that was the
very first thing when they came
to the home page. And I realized
that I was loosing people by
having that and I took it off
and it made a world of
difference. Now, I want you to
test something.
Vanish: Go on.
Michael: I want you to get rid
of that first page totally
because even though you’re
capturing some of the names,
there’s a possibility that the
end result you maybe loosing
more people than you believe
you’re saving.
Vanish: Okay. I’ll tell you
what. I’ll give you the feedback
on what testing we’ve done. For
my market, which is the mortgage
inquirer, less is more.
Michael: Explain that.
Vanish: Because that person is
looking for a specific solution.
They’re looking for a mortgage
solution.
Michael: But isn’t the rest
going to come from the
commitment of filling out the
long form?
Vanish: No, because what happens
is this. At that point, they
don’t have all the information
to hand.
Michael: Oh, I see. That first
one gives you the chance to
resell them on the form.
Vanish: Exactly. Now, in your
case, the person is a business
owner. My market is a consumer.
Michael: That is true.
Vanish: One of the things I’ve
learned over time is you have to
think in terms of a tool kit as
opposed to the generic
irrespective of who your market
is, split the form into two
parts. That isn’t necessary the
solution. You have to look at
the market and study and see how
the market behaves. A good
example is we tested with the
phone number. The consumers were
happy to give email addresses.
They weren’t so happy to give
telephone numbers.
Michael: I totally agree. And
I’ll interject a test I did for
my www.fingerprintpen.com where
to get a free sample of the
fingerprint pen they had to
complete the form totally. And
when I started calling these
leads back by phone number,
almost 90% of them were the
wrong numbers.
Vanish: Exactly. They didn’t
want to give it.
Michael: So, it shows you
they’re resentful about giving
their phone number, number one,
because they don’t trust you and
that they are going to be sold
something. But it also tells you
something about their state of
mind. Even with the email
address, how many bounce-backs
or incomplete or wrong email
addresses are you getting?
Vanish: We get what we call the
“Mickey Mouse” inquiry. We have
that down to about 2%, which is
not worth trying to improve.
Michael: Okay, so go ahead—your
research …?
Vanish: So, in terms of the
market …
Michael: They don’t want to give
you a phone number, but …?
Vanish: They don’t want to give
the phone number, but here’s
what we found. In the business
world, where we were talking to
the mortgage broker and we did a
form for them, we were a lot
more up front in the form. So,
what happened was we did the
email address first and then we
transferred about 50% of the
questions from page two on to
page one. And what you’re
telling me in your research is
that just asking for a name and
email, they think they’re being
sold something. Now, if you
transferred a couple of the key
questions, your statistics would
not change anyway because it not
sign up and I’m going to Spam
you full of stuff because those
questions pre-qualify people and
draw the attention. Now, they
say it’s worth it. For example,
if you say I’m going to send you
a free CD and I’m going to post
it under my expense and all I
want is your name and email
address, you’re not going to get
many business people because the
trade-off doesn’t make sense. If
you have them complete the
entire form and then send the
CD, then you’re going to hit a
higher completion rate because
they understand the ethical
bribe that you are
offering—complete the entire
form, spend some time filling it
in and then I’ll send you the
CD.
The Yellow Pages is the easiest
way to make money because it’s
just a list of people with
products.
Michael: Yes, it is.
Vanish: And you just have to
find the market, listen to them
and come up with a solution.
There isn’t that much you have
to do. There are loads of ways
in which you can do that. Like
we talked about, you can take
your autoresponder series and
take it off line. In fact, what
I have is I have one or two
little contracts with people
that want a series of letters
they want sent out. And I do it
all. It’s obviously not me; I
just contract that out and watch
it.
Michael: You just set it up.
Vanish: Yes. How long would it
take you to design an
autoresponder page?
Michael: This stuff is very
painful for me. It wouldn’t take
long if I was focused. I don’t
enjoy doing stuff like that.
Vanish: You don’t need to. What
happens is you approach a
business and here is an
example—easy way to make money.
Again, go to the Yellow Pages
with the list of businesses. You
contact the business and ask how
do they generate leads. And
they’ll say we send out letters.
And you offer a free critic.
Send me the letter. I’ll show
you five things that you can do
to improve its responsiveness.
And what happens? They’ll send
you the letter. And what do you
do? You highlight to them the
three or four things they’re
doing wrong. Big bold letters –
the company name, no headline,
your signature is not real it’s
digital. You should use a real
pen. No name of the person.
That’s it. And then you say
that’s what you need to fix. And
do you know what they invariably
say?
Michael: Will you do it for me?
Vanish: Exactly. And then what
you say is what you should do is
use a real live stamp and
handwrite the name and address.
And they’re going to say that’s
going to work, isn’t it. And you
say here’s what you do. You
email me the database of the
names and addresses. I will do
it for you. I will print the
letter. I’ll hand sign it. They
don’t care what your signature
looks like. I don’t know what
your signature looks like. As
long as it is in blue ink pen,
it looks personal doesn’t it as
opposed to a scanned image of
the signature.
Michael: Correct.
Vanish: I use a real live stamp.
The idea is to get it into the A
pile not in the B pile. Most
businesses don’t even understand
A and B.
Michael: No, they don’t. You’re
right.
Vanish: What they say is here
I’ve got a database of 1,000
names. Then you just negotiate a
fee per letter. The only
difference is this. You convert
it into a series. Most of the
marketing material is there. It
doesn’t take much to rewrite the
letter. And in most of the
direct mail, it’s never more
than a page. And here’s the
classic thing. Once you’ve done
it for one industry or one
client in the Yellow Page
directory …
Michael: You just go to the same
industry but another business.
Vanish: Exactly. And then what
do you change? You change maybe
a few words. The only difference
is, when he sends you the email,
you forward it on to someone
else and say send out the letter
and take the difference.
Michael: How many letters are
you doing for clients a month?
Vanish: I am sending out a
couple of hundred a week. I’ve
been picky about the clients I
choose. Here’s what I’ve got.
Say 300 letters going out every
week and each one is paying me
$10.00.
Michael: What’s your cost in it
with the girl and everything?
Vanish: At tops $5.00.
Michael: So, you’re making $5.00
a pop every week on each letter.
Vanish: That’s right. Now,
here’s the thing. Say I have one
client. He has a database of
5,000 prospects. So, what we do
is we send out 100 letters every
week.
Michael: Right. So it’s ongoing.
And he’s pleased with the
results so far?
Vanish: Absolutely. Think of it
this way. He’s emailed me the
total database of 5,000.
Michael: That’s $25,000 right
there that you know you are
going to get.
Vanish: Absolutely. In a year’s
time, he will just send me a new
database because business has
changed and evolved.
Michael: That’s great. Now,
what’s going to keep him from
stealing your sequence and
everything?
Vanish: Nothing.
Michael: Do you worry about it?
Vanish: No. Think of it this
way. You’ve been to McDonald’s?
Michael: Yes.
Vanish: How much does a
McDonald’s meal cost?
Michael: Two-three dollars.
Vanish: Right. How much does it
cost them to make it?
Michael: Say, $0.50.
Vanish: Do you steal their idea?
Michael: No.
Vanish: It’s not your business.
Michael: You’re right.
Vanish: And this is what happens
with most people. You have to
remember you can know a lot of
things but it doesn’t mean you
choose to do them.
Michael: True. Or you think you
may know it but you question
yourself and you maybe missing
something.
Vanish: The reality is this.
When you are efficient at what
you do, and you can do it better
than them, they know it.
Michael: That’s true.
Vanish: I’m not a great cook.
I’m a great marketer. But in
terms of cooking, I’ll happily
pay someone because I know that
area is not useful to my time.
And I know I’m getting ripped
off. When I go to the cinema,
I’m getting ripped off. If I
wanted to save money then I just
don’t go out. What happens with
businesses is you have to
combine the product with a bit
of personality. You don’t
commoditize it; you provide a
service. The real issue is not
him taking it back and in house.
It’s him passing it on to
somebody else.
Michael: Say, if someone was to
call you up, Vanish, and say I
need some marketing consulting
and you were going to charge
them; what do you charge for
marketing? You have clients that
call you out of the blue, are
you going to take this kind of
time and talk to them on the
phone?
Vanish: Generally, yes and no. I
always give everybody 20
minutes. You never know. When
somebody has a problem and
they’re searching, that’s how
opportunity occurs. That
mortgage business, it wasn’t
necessarily they contacted me.
We happened to be at a trade
show and I just started asking
some questions about his
business. He started giving me
some information and I just
asked him to go for a cup of
coffee. And we went and had
coffee and we talked a little
bit. He told me a little bit
about his business. A few days
later I ended up meeting with
him and that’s it. Most people,
I always find out, what they’re
trying to achieve. I do 20
minutes and then I make a
judgment call.
Michael: Do you charge people
for consulting over the phone?
Vanish: Yes. If I have people
that are interested in doing
some consulting, then I will
tend to do it over the phone.
Michael: What do you charge
them?
Vanish: The way I work it is
this. Basically they buy a block
of sessions. So, they’ll buy ten
sessions for $175 an hour. That
works out about $1,750. The
format I use is this. Basically
what we’ll do is you buy ten
sessions. Typically it’s about
once a week of once every other
week depending on how much work
they been assigned to do. And
then I say at the end of the ten
sessions you can make a decision
to purchase some more sessions
or call it a day. Normally we
will put in a letter of
agreement saying it will start
with this and cover X number of
months. And then I will say,
obviously, with marketing you
have to have a little bit of
time to implement before you see
the results. We will agree on a
reasonable time that they will
see the results. And after that
point, if they are not satisfied
with what I do, then they ask
for their money back. I ask them
to be listening to me and
thinking about your business as
opposed to thinking about how
much this time is costing.
Michael: What kind of time are
you putting into consulting
right now?
Vanish: I put in about a day a
week. And I don’t need to do
that much. I’ve got other
subjects that generate money for
me. A few years ago I kind of
gave it all up and what I found
was I lost my edge.
Michael: You lost your edge?
Vanish: Yes.
Michael: The consulting edge?
Vanish: Yes. And business. It’s
a bit like, let’s say I suddenly
become a full ime information
product developer. You stop
playing the game. If you’re
constantly coaching other
people, you’re never playing the
game.
Michael: You felt that doing all
the consulting, you’re loosing
the edge because you’re not in
the game.
Vanish: Exactly because you’re
not really doing a business.
Michael: That’s true.
Vanish: So, what I do is
actually run one or two little
businesses and I am a full time
employee. I am the business
owner. And what I find is that
really helped me to relate with
my clients because when the
economy goes down, my business
see it. The trick is don’t be
one of everything. Play a little
football. Coach a little bit of
football. Go and watch some
games. I go and look at other
people’s businesses. I do an
investment in other people’s
businesses.
Michael: How much time do you
spend writing—copywriting?
Vanish: Zero.
Michael: Do you like it?
Vanish: No.
Michael: It’s difficult, isn’t
it?
Vanish: One thing I’ve learned
is this. Eighty percent of the
money I make is using the phone.
Michael: You’re like me. I’m a
talker.
Vanish: Exactly. And for me, I
can spend six hours on the phone
in a day and feel full of
energy. If I have to sit for one
day and write a page, I just
feel physically drained.
Michael: That’s very true. But
there are people that love it.
Vanish: Absolutely. And you know
what? I track them down. I have
two or three really good
copywriters who are sensibly
priced.
Michael: Where are they? Are
they in your area?
Vanish: Yes, they’re in the U.K.
They are people I know and I do
business on a regular basis.
That’s the trick in business.
Know what you’re good at and
know what you’re not good at. I
am a deal maker.
Michael: You’re good on the
phone. You’re a deal maker. You
can set it up. You can sell the
idea. That’s right. You’re the
front man.
Vanish: Then I farm everything
out. All I know is this, the
area of expertise that I have is
simple stuff. I find somebody
that has a problem or an issue.
I give them a solution. And,
obviously, I make the solution a
lot cheaper than what they’re
paying me and take a cut in the
middle. I’ve gone over the years
less and less interested in
eating or making the whole pie.
Michael: Exactly.
Vanish: Like we talked
previously, it just amazes me
that people think you have got
to bake the pie to sell it.
There’s someone else out there
that’s a better pie baker than
you. You find the market; people
that want to eat pie and put the
two together.
Michael: You have really opened
my eyes to joint venture. That
recording I have up on my site
when we talked about joint
ventures.
Vanish: I was listening to that
a few days ago and I was
thinking that it’s still fresh.
Michael: It’s still fresh. And
that’s the first time I’ve heard
it. But now I’m hearing it over
and over again. You’ll hear in
the recordings—I did a great
recording with a lady where I
had an idea for joint ventures
with PayPal shop owners. You
have to check that out. I want
you to hear that recording. But
the first one I want to hear is
the one with Martin Howey.
Vanish: Martin. I like him.
Michael: I did another with him
just two days ago. And I did all
the editing. I spent about seven
hours editing the recording.
It’s a three-part series and you
have the link in the email I
sent you.
Vanish: Yes. I’ll go and …
Michael: Wait until you hear
what he is doing. He’s selling
these consulting licenses in
Europe for millions of dollars.
You will love this.
Vanish: Oh, definitely. I’m
always listening to other
people’s ideas. My view is this.
I haven’t come up with an
original idea in a long time.
Michael: I like your Yellow Page
idea.
Vanish: The Yellow Pages, in
terms of market research, it’s
the easiest thing.
Michael: That Yellow Page book
that people take for granted is
an incredible resource tool.
Vanish: It’s a money maker
especially If you opened the
Yellow Pages and instead of it
seeing a display ad, you see the
dollar signs of how much that
person spent. For example, here
in the U.K., the Yellow Pages
company is listed on the stock
market. Here in the U.K. the
Yellow Pages is a paper-based
product and, obviously, you have
one in the U.S. It’s a basic
thing, isn’t it, just pieces of
paper with printing on it. Last
year the Yellow Pages in the
U.K. did $500 million. Now,
here’s the thing. It kept $250
million of it. That’s a
paper-based product. What that
tells you is that’s what Yellow
Pages is making in selling to
those advertisers. That’s $500
million.
Michael: That’s incredible.
Vanish: Now, you can go and
target that market by just being
a bit more specific than Yellow
Pages. All Yellow Pages does is
deliver the phone call. If you
can deliver value upstream, I
call it. You could put an ad in
the Yellow Pages and actually
just take the inquiry and ask
the first five questions. Set up
a deal with a calling house and
research. What you have to do is
find out those five questions.
Structure it for like a two-page
type. The first question is,
“Can I have your name and
number/” And if they don’t
answer the five questions, have
someone do a call back to get
them to complete it. And then
once it’s all been completed,
email it to a prospective
person. That means their Yellow
Page advertising is more
effective doing it through you
than doing it themselves.
Michael: Yes, that’s true.
Vanish: What’s the typical
address that most people put?
Their general number, isn’t it?
Michael: Yes.
Vanish: It’s the same number
their clients use. And the first
thing is have a separate number
for prospects because if know
there are prospects that are
going to be calling that number,
you can have a very defined game
plan of what you want them to
do. Most people just put the
same general business number.
So, you have prospects and
clients calling the same number.
And, therefore, the person at
the other end doesn’t have a
defined script or target. When
you have the Yellow Pages
working, you can do that in any
Yellow Pages in the world
really.
Michael: I’m sure you can.
Vanish: Yes, because you have an
advertisement that is proven.
You have a backend. The phone
number connects to something
that is more efficient at
converting the phone call into a
lead. And if you can do it more
efficiently than just using the
generic numbers of that market
and a market is willing to pay a
premium for the lead; you’re
automatically going to win. I
think the thing you are doing
with the recordings and things,
I should be doing that.
Michael: Anyone that you talk
to, Vanish, you should be
recording.
Vanish: Exactly because, as you
say, one of the things I find is
when I’m doing my
consulting—I’ve even thought
about this. It’s nice to offer a
recording of the consulting.
Michael: Any time I talk to
someone, if I’m not recording I
feel like I’m wasting my time
because it’s gone forever.
Vanish: Exactly.
Michael: I am duplicating myself
with 65 hours of my best content
and then I’m immortalized.
Vanish: One thing I have found
and I am thinking, for me to
sell my consulting services,
it’s not that hard for me. But
you do get price resistance and
people challenging and things
like that. One of the things you
find is this. By giving people a
copy of the audio—let’s say I’m
doing my ten sessions. I want to
get ten hours worth of
recording, aren’t I? Well, I can
email them the MP3 every week so
they have a copy and they can
refer to. But at the end of the
ten sessions, when I send my
invoice, I’m thinking what I
should do is include a CD burned
with the ten sessions. And when
I send my invoice, they’re
thinking what am I paying for,
the time on the phone or the
time on the CD? They don’t have
an issue with paying for the CD.
Michael: Absolutely. It’s there
for them to refer back to.
Vanish: And I think the whole
point is that they can refer
back to it. And so, they don’t
feel then that they have just
been—it’s a bit like when you go
to the cinema to see a film and
at the end of it you get to take
a copy of a DVD.
Michael: That would be nice.
Vanish: Because now you have a
memento. But that doesn’t happen
because they want to make money
and keep you coming back. From a
business perspective, it’s good.
Let me ask you one question
before you go. In terms of
yourself, what are you doing in
marketing, in terms of your
business and consulting
services?
Michael: What I’m doing, as I
explained before, I am still
product focused. I am building
content just like the last two
and a half hours we have been
talking. This will become a
product with your permission, of
course. This will become Michael
Senoff consulting. As I said
before, I want enough content to
where I feel so proud of it and
the information on it blows
people away. It’s in a class by
its self and it’s timeless. Then
I have a product that I can sell
to some many different markets
and I can niche different.
That’s what I’m going to be
selling. Actually one of my Ebay
auctions tested a sales letter
that I put together for the CD.
I’ve been working on a sales
letter to sell this CD, to sell
this information product. That’s
selling me and at the same time
each one of these recording is
also selling a product. So, as I
sell I make income from the CD.
That CD, whether they pay for it
or whether it goes out free,
brings in business for sales of
the different products that are
on my web site. The CD brings
them to the web site. It sells
the products that I have
developed myself and that I have
the rights to resell; my joint
venture manual, the Art Hamel
Business Buying Course. I just
got a check in the mail for $267
for another product that I have
the resell rights to called the
Kizine Marketing System by Alexi.
It just surprises me everyday
when I get a payment for
something, not even on line, the
checks come in the mail for
items that I never even
expected. And it’s all a result
of this CD.
So, I have Michael Senoff at his
best canned, educating people on
marketing in business that would
never have this type of exposure
or this level of education. And
that makes me feel good.
Vanish: I’m in mind to copy your
format.
Michael: Go for it.
Vanish: It’s more of a question
of getting some other businesses
I have going down pat before
taking on another project
because the last thing you want
to do is burn yourself out. You
make it look simple, but I’m
pretty sure you put some hours
in.
Michael: I could go out and
start calling on clients and
become a marketing consultant. I
can do all that. But right now I
have the time to develop this
product, this information
product.
Vanish: I think if there is any
council that I would give to
you, Michael, is get a big list
of what your backend can be.
Michael: They’re multiple.
They’re the products on the
site. They’re consulting.
They’re recordings. I have had
sales result of doing these
audio interviews for clients.
Vanish: The other thing you may
want to think about is your next
version is going to be on
marketing is it? You’re
effectively upgrading your CD.
Michael: Yes. I’ll be upgrading
but I can niche the CD for
anything. I can niche this CD as
a marketing CD for chiropractors
even though I don’t talk about
chiropractors.
Vanish: You talk about marketing
in terms of finding …
Michael: How to get customers
and all of that.
Vanish: I think if you have a CD
on just marketing in general,
but in all these different
businesses, then any one
business is going to find
something that they can relate.
Michael: There’s no doubt.
Vanish: As you say if you have
killer content, my view is this.
You will come up with 60 hours
of just fantastic stuff. You’re
upgrading a few of them and
dropping out some. You’re moving
up and coming up with the 60
best. I think that’s going to
help you tremendously because
then you have a killer product.
You also have an opportunity
then to license that out.
Michael: Absolutely.
Vanish: And because you have the
hard physical CD, there’s
nothing stopping you from using
that in a business opportunity
type thing and saying, “Do you
want to sell something? Look,
how about this?”
Michael: I received a call from
a guy in Australia. In my
autoresponder sequence, when
someone orders the CD, probably
about 40 days later I offer them
the free distribution rights to
the CD. Now, he’s a magazine in
Australia and he works with
trade. And he’s working a deal
with a trade organization and
he’s sending out 5,000 of my CD
ROMs to all the members of this
barter exchange in farm type
communities in Australia who
need help in business. This CD
will help anyone in business
whether it’s the Mail Box, Etc.,
which is now called the UPS
Store. If a UPS Store endorsed
my CD and put it in everyone’s
mail box, it’s going to mean, if
someone studies it and they’re
more savvy on business, it’s a
benefit for the USP Store or
Mail Box, Etc. to teach their
mail box holders how do to
business better because they’ll
use their services more.
Vanish: Exactly. It’s just a
straight consumption. You could
just go to accountants everyday
and ask if they would like to
have a great promotional gift.
Most people are giving pens
away, fluffy dice or whatever.
Why not give them a great
business tool. Here’s the CD.
Here’s the letter endorsing it.
Basically sell it for a dollar
or two a pop.
Michael: Now, that’s exciting
because this product cannot be
duplicated. It’s me; no matter
what, it’s me.
Vanish: That’s why I said you
should do all the recordings.
You own the shop. It’s like
Oprah. Oprah is Oprah. If she
leaves the show, there is no
Oprah.
Michael: Time goes by and two or
three years from now I may have
200 or 300 hours of killer
content.
Vanish: And you’ll just have
different CD’s and slightly
different niches. One thing I
would suggest is this, look over
all your audio and look at the
general topic question that it
relates to because that will
tell you what the basic bits
are. Like, for example, the
number one issue with all
businesses is this—how to get
more customers.
Michael: That’s right. And
that’s really what most of the
CD is about with the consulting
bit that I do. It’s how to get
more customers, how to get more
out of what you’re doing.
Vanish: But then there are also
things about how to get more
customers, how to save time and
all those kinds of things. But
again, you’re only talking to
businesses again and again. But
the thing is because of your
style and doing it live and
unedited in that way, is just
that much more believable.
Michael: It’s much more
believable. It’s real. But
people need to hear it. Most of
these recordings basically say
the same thing. But you’re
hearing it from a different
context, in a different business
and from a different point of
view. And it ingrains you.
Vanish: I have listened to loads
of people and have talked with
them and it always comes back to
the basics like a web site. The
number one purpose of your web
site, get the name and email
address. That’s been hammered
into me so many times. When I go
and consult with businesses,
online businesses, the number
one question I ask is what is
the purpose of your web site.
And how many people are doing
thousands of dollars worth of
business don’t even answer it
that way. They’re telling the
clients about the service and
what they are doing and all
that. Until you have their name
and email address, you have
nothing.
Michael: I agree.
Vanish: It’s been great talking
with you Michael.
Michael: You, too, Vanish.
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