Almost any field has potential for scammers and it seems internet marketing has at least it’s fair share.
So how to not get scammed?
The first thing is to apply a “does it seem to good to be true?” rule.
Almost any field has potential for scammers and it seems internet marketing has at least it’s fair share.
So how to not get scammed?
The first thing is to apply a “does it seem to good to be true?” rule.
Riding a trend or a craze can be profitable if you get it right.
As a general rule, trends last a reasonable amount of time whereas crazes are often forgotten almost as soon as they happen.
Sometimes there’s a crossover – the song Macarena was popular for a lot longer than a normal song but you knew deep down that it was only a craze when seemingly every politician felt the need to show they could act out the movements.
If Teespring had been around you’d have made a lot of money selling T-shirts with pictures of people making a fool of themselves.
Whenever I talk to people about how to improve their websites, I almost always say they need to create more content.
Which normally gets a scared “deer in headlights” look and the comment of “I can’t do that, I’m not a writer”.
Here are 5 simple tips to get over that:
Robert Allen’s book first introduced me to the idea multiple streams of income: instead of having one income stream (such as a job), you have lots of different income streams (a main job, rental properties, some internet income, maybe a sideline doing something else, etc).
In internet marketing it makes sense to aim for multiple income streams.
That way if one of them gets hit by Google or a change in people’s methods of buying or an affiliate program that disappears, you’re not left stranded with no income.
A few years ago, I remember trying to explain to a friend where my internet income came from.
It just got more and more complicated:
And those were just the main ones.
Those didn’t happen overnight.
Most sites take time to work – Google is taking longer and longer to show most sites and is forever changing its mind about what it thinks are good sites to show on the first page of the results. Always assuming people scroll past the inordinate number of adverts and get to the real results.
Not every site works – some seem a good idea at the time but a few years later are like flogging a dead horse and you have not renew them, putting the site and yourself out of the misery.
Some sites work well for a while and then you neglect them, which usually means that traffic dwindles and the site that was getting a few hundred visitors a day now gets just a few.
Those are frustrating – sometimes it’s something you’ve done (neglected to do), sometimes it’s other factors. But they seem to be very awkward to turn round.
But whatever the reasons and the ups and downs, it pays to have multiple streams of income in internet marketing.
Start with one stream and get it up to speed so that it’s at least getting a consistent – and slightly growing – number of visitors.
Then add another stream but keep the first one going.
It’s a bit like spinning plates…
If you aim to start one new project every month or two months or three months, that will build up over time.
Often I’ll start a site and let it “mature” in the rankings.
Which is shorthand for saying I’ll near enough neglect it until it gets indexed and occasionally shows up in the search results.
If that fits with you and how you work, that’s a good way to work.
If you prefer to work on bigger projects, that’s OK too. But personally I find that big projects often never quite get finished.
That’s not just me either – a group of friends have been working on a big membership site they were going to launch on Clickbank this time last year but it’s still in beta testing twelve months later and my best guess is that will still be the case this time next year.
The group have moved on.
Their personal objectives have changed.
Life has changed.
So I’d strongly suggest that you start with smaller projects – a simple affiliate website or whatever – and keep doing those even if you decide to work on a larger project as well.
Multiple streams of income also means that you’re a bit more immune to changes.
Look away if you’re squeamish but there’s the old story that you can put a frog in a pan of cold water and gradually heat the water and the frog won’t notice (but will get boiled).
That happens with our internet marketing.
We’re comparing visitors day by day or week by week and we don’t notice small declines until they’re too late.
Step back occasionally and look at the bigger picture.
But definitely have other streams of income.
Anyone who relied on Geocites or mySpace a few years ago would have nothing now, even if they’d kept their page in top condition.
Personally I think that Google’s influence – at least as far as search is concerned – will reduce over the next few years. I created a product in 2013 that covered my thoughts – you can check it out here.
The market is fragmenting and we all need to adapt to that.
Free is becoming the norm.
As part of your multiple streams, think about how you can work that in to your mix.
Free usually means that a high percentage of your users will never pay you anything else but the money you get from the small number who do pay you makes a lot of cash.
That’s certainly a direction I’m looking into at the moment.
If you’ve not currently got a plan for your internet marketing, make one!
If you have got a plan, refer to it on a regular basis and tweak it as necessary.
And set yourself a target so that this time next year you’ll have a number of extra streams of income from your internet marketing.
Feel free to add your thoughts and comments in the box below.
You’ve probably read stories about overnight success in internet marketing. But are they just that? Stories? Or is it really possible to make money fast?
As always, the answer isn’t exactly straightforward.
If you can start something that grabs people’s attention then it’s possible to make money faster than you ever dreamed possible – Alex Tew did it in 2005 with the million dollar home page and the “overnight” part of that took a couple of months for it to start making reasonable money.
Whilst there are a lot of similarities between internet marketing for B2C (business to consumer) and B2B (business to business) there are also some differences. The borders between the two are definitely blurring and it’s important not to rule out a method just because it didn’t work a year or two ago.
Here are some of the most important strategies you can currently adopt:
This question gets asked all the time.
The usual advice is to come up with something that’s popular and in high demand.
But that isn’t necessarily good advice…