Connecting Marketing Dots
By
Walt Goshert on Jun 9, 2008 in Marketing Mindset
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Here in the heart of Amish Country in South Eastern Pennsylvania, today it’s hazy, humid… and already HOT. Excellent conditions for growing tomatoes and peppers. Not so good for a comfortable round of golf.

So, I’m inside, cool and comfy, spending the morning connecting some marketing dots in my head.
First off, Coach Deb’s video and post, “Is the Sick Sense Scaring Off Your Profits?”
Yes, with all the social marketing tools, isn’t it mind-boggling how downright pathetic and inept most marketing and sales attempts are? Pay attention to the marketing messages aimed at you. TV, radio, magazine, and newspaper ads. Pay attention when someone puts the “sales pitch” on you. Learn from it… and… in most cases:
Don’t be like that guy (or babe)!
Be genuine, be different , be unique, be transparent, real, and honest. Oh yeah, and understand, not everyone is a prospect for your product/service, but adopt a mindset of “thankful and patient abundance.”
So, speaking of “abundance”, next thanks to an email from Jack Humphrey, I checked out Joe Vitale’s Hypnotic Marketing 2.0.

Dr. Joe Vitale’s Drawing of “The Age of Engagement”
Mr. Fire does spin one hellva marketing story in his sales letters. They are truly “Hypnotic.”
And, the $27 for the information he provides here is a steal.
WARNING: Some of you are going to be turned off by Dr. Joe’s 4 attempts to up-sell you after you place your order. Be patient, learn, and only buy more of his info if you truly want it. Plus, all his info carries a full 365 day money-back guarantee.
Better yet: Print out all his sales pages, study them, and re-create their essence and apply and test them on your own products.
And, the third dot… Sean D’Souza’s article that follows.
Each of us has within us, “Most Wanted” Information.
Marketing is unleashing this information and presenting it in a way that those who really need it want it.
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How To Attract Clients With ‘Most-Wanted’ Information
http://www.psychotactics.com/artmost-wanted
Imagine you had a handicapped child.
And now this child is twenty years old and reasonably self-sufficient. Self-sufficient enough for you to decide you want to get back in the work force.
But twenty years have passed.
What will you do?
Your qualifications are worthless. Your experience doesn’t count for much. And you’re intimidated as hell
So let’s start with what you know.
What you do know is how to care for a handicapped child.
You know what that child needs in their first year. Their second year; fifth year; seventh year; nineteenth year. You know what it is to be a parent of that child.
What you have is ‘most-wanted’ information.
So what is ‘most-wanted’ information?
Um, it’s kind of self-explanatory, but let’s explain it anyway. ‘Most-wanted’ information is simply a tiny slice of information that’s of great value to a potential audience. It’s not the entire saga of what you know. It’s just a tiny, tiny bit. So let’s take an example: Let’s say you’re in business.
What kind of information would be of extreme value to you?
You’d be interested in marketing strategy, sales letters, websites, and blah-dee-blah-dee-blah.
But that’s the whole saga. What if I avoided the saga, and gave you just ‘most-wanted’ information?
Information on a niche of a topic.
Like ‘pricing’, for example.
What if I were to say to you, that you could get a document/audio/video/ or even a bunch of ideas scribbled on a napkin.
And those ideas enabled you to:
1) Get the prices you want.
2) Test if the prices were right for the market.
3) Increase the prices of your product/service as many as thrice a year, and never lose customers.
Would you be interested?
Oh sure you would. Because that factor of pricing bzzzzzzs around in your brain. And you figure, if you could find a way to increase prices without losing customers, aha, that would be nice.
And the best part of most-wanted information is that it’s unique, because it’s a tiny, tiny piece of advice.
So let’s take another example:
For example, there was a shopkeeper who could tell you if your employees were stealing from you. He put this information on ‘How to Spot (And Stop) Thieving Employees.’
The audio on tape–yes, back in the good ol’ days it was ‘tape–was less than 15 minutes long. The text feature was a handy reference card. Yup that was it. And he sold it for $200.
So why would a customer pay $200 for a 15-minute blab, and a reference card?
That customer sees the $200 price tag, but also sees the danger of thieving employees. Thieving employees can not only siphon off more than $200, but can encourage others to do the same.
Or at the very least, reduce morale in a store. So the ‘most-wanted’ information became valuable.
As valuable as the mother of the handicapped child telling you how to ‘bypass medical red-tape.’
Or who grows hundreds of tomatoes from just four plants, in a tiny square patch in your backyard.
Or the ‘audio-guy’ who teaches you how to ‘correctly compress files’ and avoid the volume making unwanted leaps and drops.
‘Most-wanted’ information doesn’t have to 100 pages to start
When we started out our business, we had a concept in our head. That concept was the Brain Audit. When I first put it down on paper, it amounted to sixteen measly pages. But it was ‘most-wanted’ information. And sixteen pages were all I could fill. Today, those sixteen pages have grown into a website, blog, and a very detailed book. But I too was ‘handicapped’ when I started out.
I didn’t know that much about marketing.
All I had was these measly sixteen pages. And all you probably have are nine pages.
All that mother of the handicapped child has is probably six pages.
But six pages of ‘wanted-information’ are what’s critical.
And the information you have, would be of extreme interest to someone else who has a handicapped child. And just like you, that parent has to deal with a range of emotions, and real-life issues of bringing up a handicapped child. Do you think that parent would want advice? Do you think that parent would want empathy?
Do you think that parent would want you to give as much detail as you possibly could, to bring up their child the way you have?
And more importantly, if you were that parent, would you pay $100 a year to get the information you so desperately seek? Across the planet, guess how many handicapped children are born every day.
Guess how many of those parents would gladly pay $100 a year to get informed? And guess how much $100 x 1000 amounts to per year?
But, but, but, but, but…you say
I know. You’re not confident anyone would buy your information. And heck, there’s no way out of this confidence issue other than to simply sell what you know.
Selling your information, leads people to buying. And buying leads to feedback and experience.
And of course, confidence. Because confidence can’t be bought. Or taught.
There’s really no shortage of people who want to write a book; a play; a movie.
The reason why they never get started is because they are trying to create a big production.
What you need isn’t a production, its ‘most-wanted’ information.
It could be twenty minutes of audio.
Ten pages of text.
Thirty seconds of video.
The ‘most-wanted’ information not only creates a stream of income, but also sets you out as the expert.
An expert who clients turn to when they want even more ‘most-wanted’ information. Even if it’s scribbles on the back of a napkin.
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This Week’s Product Offers:
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1) “There are marketing books and there are marketing books -
I bet there are not many you have read many times over?
The Brain Audit really teaches you the art of persuasion because it gives an insight into how people’s brains work. I have used the principles in writing WebPages, writing articles, making presentations, networking, negotiating and even writing submissions for a judge! But the best bit about the Brain Audit is that it actually works. The principles are easy to understand.
Would I recommend it to people serious about getting on in business?
1) “Absolutely.” Michael Smyth, approachablelawyer.com, Auckland Judge for yourself at http://www.psychotactics.com/brainaudit
2) “I started listening on my PC, and found it so compelling that I downloaded the audio files, and put them on my PDA to keep listening when I went out.”
Eric Graudins, Webangel, Australia
Find out Why the Website Trilogy Series is so compelling? http://www.psychotactics.com/website-secrets
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Wouldn’t you love to stumble upon a sec’ret library of small business ideas? Find simple, yet electrifying ideas, on copywriting, public speaking, marketing strategies, sa’les conversion, psychological tactics and branding. Head down to http://www.psychotactics.com today and judge for yourself.
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2 Comment(s)
By
from CoachDeb
(Check me out!) on Jun 11, 2008 | Reply
Aloha Walt, Thanks for the mention in this post & link to my “Sick Sense” video on Tribal Seduction - and thanks for following!BTW: Although I’m living in Hawaii now - I spent most my life in Jersey - and not a distant neighbor of you in Amish Country - what a beautiful place that is. We were a hop skip & a jump over from Bucks County PA - but on the Jersey side. Small world eh?Enjoy PA & yeah - don’t be THAT guy!
oooh the experience still gives me the shivers. yeck! LOL@CoachDeb
By
Walt Goshert
(Check me out!) on Jun 11, 2008 | Reply
Thanks Coach Deb!
Great post and video.
Yeah… agree, Don’t be THAT guy!