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The Myth of Set-it-and-Forget-It Marketing

by admin

The Myth of Set-it-and-Forget-It Marketing

When you inject paid advertising into a content marketing strategy, the fundamentals that helped you succeed with content marketing don’t go out the window. In fact, your ad strategy and your content marketing strategy will be more similar than you think.

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That is the topic of this week’s episode of The Digital Entrepreneur.

In this 26-minute episode, Brian Clark and Jerod Morris discuss:

  • How automated marketing funnels work
  • Why you can’t ever really “set it and forget it”
  • The advertising editorial calendar
  • Treating Facebook like an email list

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

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The Show Notes

  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris

The Transcript

The Myth of Set-It-and-Forget-It Marketing

Voiceover: You’re listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs.

DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce.

Jerod Morris: Welcome back to The Digital Entrepreneur. I’m your host, Jerod Morris, the VP of marketing for Rainmaker Digital, and I am joined by Brian Clark, founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital.

Brian, as we mentioned on our last episode, we were getting ready for our company meeting in Denver. We are now both home after the company meeting in Denver. As usual, it was a great experience. We got a lot done, and we got to experience that special energy that you only can get when you’re working in person with folks. All in all, a good couple of days, a productive couple of days.

Brian Clark: Yeah, and as usual, so many new ideas and just slightly different ways of thinking that come together when you get us all in a room together, as opposed to the way we normally work now. Some people might say, “Well, isn’t that an indictment of the virtual model.” I’m like, “No, because we like each other a lot.” If we were around each other all the time, who knows if that would still remain the case.

Jerod Morris: Right.

Brian Clark: It’s almost the contrast that sparks the creativity. Not, “Oh, you have to be in the same room every day.”

Jerod Morris: Right, and there’s an urgency to it when you know we only have a few days. I think that’s part of what contributes to so much of that in those times we get together.

Brian Clark: Yep, it really does. Of course, given the topic of today’s show, there was a whole lot of very complex, in some cases, and sometimes not so complex sequencing and charting of adaptive content funnels, which we’ve been talking about quite a bit on the show.

I love it, and I know you do, too. I saw you get into Lucidchart, and you were just like a kid in a candy store. But it is cool, right? You can get that thing out of your head in a visual format. I’m a Word guy. So I try to explain things to people, and I get frustrated because it’s too complex. Then you sit down with a Word document or something, and you’re trying to map it out. You’re like, “This doesn’t work. I just need some boxes, triangles, and arrows.”

That really was productive when we literally started using that charting software, sitting there next to each other. Even though we were in the same room, we were sharing charts with each other. That was easier than explaining verbally.

Jerod Morris: It was. Well, we got a chance to get up on the whiteboard. You, me, Chris Garrett, and others, we’ve been having these conversations for awhile. It was great to be in person. You draw something, and then Garrett, add a little bit here, add a little bit there. Then put it in this Lucidchart program, like you were talking about, to share it.

It was great to get some of those ideas down, stuff we’ve been talking about, get it into a format that can be executed, that can be shared among the different team members.

Here’s the thing that’s interesting about this, which leads into the topic that we’re going to talk about today. We’ve been spending a lot more time, obviously, working on these marketing funnels and starting to link it up with what we’re doing with paid advertising. That, of course, is something that we’re relatively new in, in doing and learning more about.

How Automated Marketing Funnels Work

Jerod Morris: What’s been really interesting, and you and I just got done talking about this, is you can make this mistake in thinking that your strategy for paid advertising needs to be so much different from what you’ve done before if you’ve been focused on content marketing. Yet we’re finding, the deeper into this that we get, that a lot of the standard practices of content marketing, you don’t just throw them out the window.

Actually running successful campaigns is a lot more like blogging, a lot more like email marketing even, than you would think–which is surprising and very, very comforting at the same time.

Brian Clark: Yeah, because it ultimately comes down to email. People are like, “Well that’s where the funnel starts.” With blogging, you know that it really starts out there, with our concentric circle design.

You float content out there. It gets shared on social. People discover it. They come in closer, or maybe they come through a search engine. They’re a little more intentional. But you’re bringing them closer to you until they opt-in to a list. From there, that list can be segmented. They convert to a customer. They go onto a customer list. They go onto a repeat or recurring customer list.

This is what we were teaching for years before we even started experimenting with paid traffic. Almost immediately, I was looking around at best practices, talking to people who’ve been advertising the whole time. I’m like, “You’re just doing content marketing with paid distribution.” I say ‘just’ not to belittle it. I say that because it’s more familiar than you think.

What we found is actually interesting. When you’re paying for something, you’re much more conscientious of conversion. Everything is trackable, right down from the campaign, the traffic source, etcetera. We got much more intentional that way. For the last five years, we have launched multiple, if not one huge new thing each year.

That was always a big catalyst for revenue growth. Generally, anything we launch becomes a seven-figure line of business pretty quickly. Then, once we were out of building and launching mode and more into optimization and growth mode, I thought everything had to change–and to a certain degree, it does.

I’d say, when we were in build and launch mode, we relied on brute-strength authority marketing. That’s not a bad thing. Big email list, big customer list, great new products, announce them everywhere. People buy, and you grow. It’s a little more nuanced once you’re in optimization and growth mode and not building something new to add on to revenue.

Yet what I found through the first quarter of this year with testing and whatnot, it’s a lot like what we’ve been doing all along–except more targeted. And really, we’re held more accountable for why are we creating this piece of content.

Instead of creating as much content as possible–because you know only certain parts are going to stick with certain people–you can be much more intentional and targeted. Yet ultimately, what I hope to get across today, is that it’s a lot more like the combination of blogging to email marketing that we’ve been doing since 2006 than most people think. That’s what we’re going to talk about today.

Why You Can t Ever Really ‘Set It And Forget It’

Jerod Morris: All right, so let’s dig into that. A lot of times, when people hear about the promises of paid advertising and what you can do with Facebook, and you hear these terms thrown around like ‘machine,’ ‘get your machine in order,’ and ‘automated marketing funnels.’

I think people feel like you can get a couple of landing pages that work, you set up some different ads and test them, and you can just set it and forget it. One of the things that we’re learning is that the set-it-and-forget-it mentality isn’t really the right mentality to go into with this, is it?

Brian Clark: It’s not. I knew that going back to, I’d say, 2003 when I created my early autoresponder courses for my real estate business. I really did have a set-it-and-forget-it type thing. In that business, the topics don’t change, but things do change overall–market conditions, etcetera–to where you want to go back and look at your content stream.

In that case, it works while you sleep. It’s automatic, all that kind of good stuff. There was no adaptive element to it. But it still dripped out according to your content marketing strategy of, “What do they need to learn before they’re going to do business with me?”

To a certain degree, even with autoresponders, it’s always been kind of a myth. Automated marketing funnels are really cool with the technology we have now because you can literally do a mini-launch to a new prospect and/or a promotion to a new prospect, like a one-time, ‘this week only’ discount or bundle, or some sort of incentive that’s not made to the general public.

With the marketing automation technology in Rainmaker and just some short codes that we give, you can basically make a time-limited offer with a page that, after whatever many days after they enter the funnel, disappears. Not just with cookies, either.

We’ve figured out how to do it with Rainmaker to where, even if you think you’re crafty and you try to bookmark the page or clear your cookies or whatever, no, the page is really gone. It’s like we’re doing a manual promotion where we change the page, delete the page, change the product offer, or whatever the case me be–what we’ve been doing for years–and that’s all automated.

Again, that leads one to believe that set it, forget it is alive and well and better than ever, to a certain degree. If you create the right kind of opt-in funnel and you adapt appropriately based on behavior within it, that can remain in place for quite awhile.

What we’ve found is, it’s what happens before they enter the beginning of the funnel. But it’s way more like blogging has been used to deliver a steady stream of content, often related by topic or whatnot. For example, I started Copyblogger, more or less, by writing Copywriting 101, a series of 10 articles. That’s a great introductory lead-in.

Each of those articles could have a so-called ‘content upgrade’ that got you to the next level, which could be, let’s say, a free workshop on the most important copywriting skill you could learn. Then that workshop leads to an offer of a paid copywriting course. That was a blogging technique. That’s our whole cornerstone content approach.

That’s good for general converting people to customers. It’s good for search when you aggregate them on a content landing page. It’s good for social because people share the aggregated pages–all of that stuff. Yet I didn’t realize that, conceptually, that’s how you treat Facebook, for example.

Jerod Morris: When you’re saying, “Treat Facebook like that,” you’re saying, to use your example, you would take each of those individual parts and pieces from that Copywriting 101 and basically run a Facebook Ad to it and expose that content to people.

Of course, you aren’t going to know which one is going to get them to click or which one is going to end up being the one that leads to a conversion. But continuously expose those ideas to people over time in a sequence, and let the content work for you on Facebook, just like it does on the blog.

Brian Clark: Yeah. There are different levels here. I don’t want to mislead people. It’s not like we don’t advertise the free trial of the Rainmaker Platform directly. Really, when you think about it, you would hope that, that would work, and you could just spend as much money as you could possibly throw at it.

We know that, when we do that, we get a very healthy return on investment about three times what we spent. You remember, of course, that Rainmaker is a recurring product. We’re making three times ROI on the initial payments. That doesn’t count next quarter’s payment, next year’s payment, or whatever the case may be. That’s very healthy.

Why don’t we just throw $100,000 a month at that? Because you can’t scale it that well. Because that very direct approach will be ignored by a lot of people. Facebook’s algorithm will say, “Look, you’re about to waste your money. I’m not going to let you spend anymore.” Which is awful gracious of them, but it can be frustrating because you’re like, “Ahhhhhhh!”

The Advertising Editorial Calendar

Brian Clark: Let me plant the idea in your head of an editorial calendar, just like you would use for blogging, for your advertising. You’re not just creating ads. You are creating content. Beyond the ROI that you can get from advertising a product directly and beyond the ROI that you can get for advertising a landing page directly, the next level is to have individual pieces of content that point to a landing page, that puts them in a sequence that eventually presents the product.

We’ve known for years of pay-per-click advertising that selling the product directly went way down in effectiveness, while getting someone on the email list boosted conversions significantly. It’s not any different now. People want and share content. That’s the fundamental basis behind content marketing.

I’m not saying with ads that you can’t advertise a product directly or the opt-in directly. You’re just not going to get as much traffic into your funnel as you’d like by stopping there. Again, it’s almost like thinking about it in terms of, “I blog to put content out there so that social sharing and search engine traffic feeds my funnel.”

Here, we think, “Oh, I don’t have to mess with that because I’m spending money.” But in order to scale the amount of people that get into your funnel and really make an impact on your growth, it really is a combination of all those things.

Some people want to buy now because they’re interested in this thing. Some people want to opt-in now because it’s very compelling to them enough at that moment. Then the rest of the people, that’s why we’ve done general blogging for 10 years.

It’s still the same thing, which is why you think of your advertising campaigns more in lines of content series as part of the mix that includes direct ads to your product or service, and direct landing-page advertising.

Treating Facebook Like an Email List

Jerod Morris: I love this idea of treating Facebook like an email list. If you think about it with maybe an email promotion you may have, and maybe you have three emails in the promotion, well, your call to action or the way that you’re going to try and relate the offer to people is going to be different with each email.

You’re not going to use, let’s say, just the direct benefit in each one. One may have scarcity. One may have urgency. One focuses more on the direct benefit. Same thing with a single email. If you have multiple calls to action, you want to try and hit people in different ways.

I think what you’re saying is that this is similar. You’re going to put the direct sale to the landing-page offer out there for the people who are ready for that, but this benefit with Facebook is that you can really get granular with your targeting.

You know you’re targeting people who are going to be interested in what you’re doing. Now you just have to find the right way to speak to them. Okay, so some people want just the direct link to the landing page. Great, you’ve got them. But now, how can you speak to the other people? How can you give them value? What topics are they going to be interested in?

Again, you put out this series of content. It’s not like whichever one draws the click, that’s the only one that worked. But continuing to expose them to different ideas to different content–maybe they’re not ready to buy, but get them into your funnel–now, you’re really allowing the work that you’re doing in Facebook, the money that you’re spending in Facebook to pay off more in the long term.

You’re allowing people to take the next step with you, wherever they are, instead of just putting out these one or two things that require people to be in this specific spot.

Brian Clark: Yeah, and I’m going to give a little credit here to Tim Mayer, who’s here in Boulder. We had lunch. Marty Weintraub of aimClear told him this a long time ago. He related it to me, and with all the work we’ve been doing, I didn’t need any explanation.

He said, “Treat Facebook like an email list.” I’ll add to that, ” like a blog,” at least the way we blog. We plan each message–like you said, coming at an issue or a different pain point, the framing of an offer or whatever in an email funnel, in an email sequence–very carefully.

We sit there, and that’s why we map these things out. Yet with advertising, for example, with Facebook, we started out thinking, “Well, we’ll try this approach. If that doesn’t work, we’ll swap out this approach, and see if that works better.”

But the reality of what Marty was saying is, no, you try all of them–not swapping things out, but in series. If you have a campaign aimed at a certain interest group, or say it’s at people who ‘like’ your page that’s a perfect example, people who like Rainmaker Digital’s Facebook Page. Our blog is posted there every day. The algorithm messes with us, but conceivably that audience would get our sequence of posts that hopefully have some thought of what the ultimate business objective is to that series of content.

Same with an email list. Like I said, if you put someone in a sequence, some emails are to get them to know, like you, and trust you. Some are to teach valuable information in order to prime them for an offer. Then you start making the offer. Then you follow up and position that offer in different ways, like you said, direct benefit, scarcity, whatever the case may be. Usually, it’s a sequence that ends with, “This is going away.”

That one statement made me realize that it’s just like blogging. It’s just like a sequence of carefully constructed messages that go in a certain order. We know, with blogging, that people don’t read every piece of content. It depends on the headline. It depends on the context. It depends on how busy they are. That’s why you take multiple shots at the apple.

Going back to advertising clichés, it takes seven messages, really, in order to get inside someone’s head and get them to notice you. Why would it be any different with Facebook Ads? The concept here is, you’re not swapping out different ideas. You’re presenting those different ideas in order. Just like we do on the blog. Just like we do in our email list.

And through the course of that sequence to that particular interest group, that particular campaign, something or other is going to catch a prospect’s attention. One or two will probably catch attention better than others, which is very valuable to know because maybe you can pare down your sequence or your series.

I’ve heard it likened to playing roulette. You don’t really take anything off the table. You just move your chips to the things that are hot.

Why the Fundamentals That Build Success Don’t Change

Jerod Morris: Yeah, I love that one. It’s interesting. Just on recent episodes, we’ve talked about digital sharecropping. We’ve talked about having an app versus a mobile-responsive website. We come across all of these topics. The tools are new, and there are these hot new strategies. Yet there are always these underlying fundamentals that it comes back to, that success is built upon.

We’re finding that exact same thing here with building funnels and using paid traffic to fill them up. It’s the exact same thing.

Brian Clark: Yeah, and it can happen to anyone. You know I get on people for thinking all this is new and shiny. Really, it’s the same fundamentals that worked in 1920 at the beginning of scientific advertising as a testable and trackable discipline. Now, we’ve got more ways to do that than ever. Yet I almost let myself think that, what’s been working for us for the last 10 years, wasn’t going to work once we started trying to advertise and actually make a significant difference with that.

Hey, I’ll own up to it. There are no mistakes. What’s the saying? There’s only success in learning.

How to Take Your Digital Business to the Next Level

Jerod Morris: Right, exactly. What’s interesting is, you were mentioning earlier when we were on the subject of automated marketing funnels, how especially using the Rainmaker Platform now, you get someone on your email list, and you can set up maybe a special offer on a page that will go away after a certain period of time. We’ve actually got an example of that, that people can see built on the Rainmaker Platform.

If you go to Rainmaker.FM/DCfree, that’ll be the offer page for the Digital Commerce Institute free membership, which has a bunch of lessons of Brian’s course. It’s got lessons in the course on setting up automated marketing funnels that work that Chris Garrett and Tony Clark did. When you register for that, you get on an autoresponder email list that has an offer and will give you an example, Brian, of what you talked about, that very thing, using the platform.

For folks who want to see it in action, again, we talk about these things, and a lot of what we’re talking about on here, we’re talking about right after or right before we’re implementing it ourselves–doing, showing, and telling you all at the same time. That would be a great way going and signing up. Not only will you be getting all that great information, but you’ll get to see an example of this in action.

Brian Clark: Yeah, it’s also an interesting point that I just realized. This podcast is an example of one ‘campaign’ or ‘channel,’ among all the other stuff. We’re not advertising it. It’s more organic. Each topic that we cover, we are covering things in series now, aren’t we?

Jerod Morris: Exactly.

Brian Clark: We’re going to do more of that. At the end, there’s a call to action that basically is what we’d like you to do. I will say that telling people to go watch your marketing is great for them. It doesn’t necessarily convert as much, but I hope you will actually sample the content over there if you’re trying to build a digital business. Ultimately, that’s what we’re trying to help you to do.

Jerod Morris: Yep, absolutely. Again, that URL, Rainmaker.FM/DCfree. Go over there, claim your free membership to Digital Commerce Institute, and keep listening to The Digital Entrepreneur. We’ll be back next week with another brand new episode, and we look forward to talking to you then.

Brian Clark: This is the easiest podcast ever because of what you said. We discover, implement, and test so many things each week. We always know what we’re going to … no, we never know what we’re going to talk about the next week, but we end up figuring it out, no problem, which is actually kind of interesting. Real-time marketing, real-time education, only here on The Digital Entrepreneur.

Jerod Morris: That is right. We’ll talk to you next week, everybody.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

Making This Common Mistake Could Kill the Profitability of Your Online Course

by admin

Making This Common Mistake Could Kill the Profitability of Your Online Course

If we’ve said it once, we’ve said it a thousand times: don’t build your online business on rented land. From the world of online course marketplaces we get yet another example illustrating why this is so important.

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In this 14-minute episode, Brian Clark and Jerod Morris discuss:

  • What the recent decision by Udemy means for online course course creators
  • The important difference between online course marketplaces and learning management systems
  • How smart online course creators leverage online course marketplaces

Even if you’ve heard us talk about digital sharecropping before, a reminder is always useful.

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

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The Show Notes

  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris

The Transcript

Making This Common Mistake Could Kill the Profitability of Your Online Course

Voiceover: You’re listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs. DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a life education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information go to Rainmaker.FM/digitalcommerce. That’s Rainmaker.FM/digitalcommerce.

Jerod Morris: Welcome back to another episode of The Digital Entrepreneur. I’m your host, Jerod Morris, VP of Marketing for Rainmaker Digital. I’m joined today by the founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital, Brian Clark. Brian, by the time people actually listen to this episode I will have come to Denver and come home from Denver from our company meeting which is happening this week. I’m excited to see you and to see everybody.

Brian Clark: Yeah, it’ll be good to see all the new faces that have joined the company since a year ago and also to spend some valuable white-boarding time. We’ve got more ideas than we know how to process, all for the benefit of you all out there. We’ve got to sit down, get in a room, actually. That’s the only time where it’s challenging to be a virtual company. Every once in a while you want to be in the same room with someone and just write stuff up on the wall.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, I agree. There’s a special kind of energy that happens and we always get a lot out of these meetings ,so I’m really looking forward to it. Really looking forward to it. Let’s go quickly today because I’ve got to go get packed and get ready for my flight tomorrow.

What The Recent Decision by Udemy Means for Online Course Creators

Jerod Morris: I wanted to talk with you about, frankly, a topic that we have talked about a lot in a lot of different ways. You wrote about it a long time ago on Copyblogger, and it remains relevant. That is this idea of digital sharecropping. It came up again recently when Udemy decided that they were going to make a change to their pricing. I believe it was effective on April 4th. They updated their pricing and their promotions on Udemy.

Essentially, what they did is instead of allowing you to basically set your price all the way up to — I think it was about $300 — they made everybody basically pick a price between $20 and $50 in increments of $5. They had some reasons to do this, and I think some of those reasons are defensible from their standpoint. But from the standpoint of online course creators, it’s yet another example of why you really don’t want to build on rented land. Or at least you better do it very smartly with a really smart strategy, because you don’t own the land. Someone could, as Udemy did, just change the policy. Change what you can charge for your course. Which, ultimately, is something that could really kill the profitability of your course. Especially if you’re someone who was selling for $300 and now the most that you can sell for is $50. I’m sure that you have some thoughts on this. Again, just another example of digital sharecropping and why you don’t want to do that.

Brian Clark: Yeah. Since 2007 we’ve warned about Facebook. We’ve warned about Amazon. We’ve warned about Udemy even, specidfically. I’m even losing track of how many examples of this happening, but you know what? I don’t blame the platforms anymore. I don’t like them sometimes, but they’re just doing what’s in their best interest. I’m sure Udemy did an analysis that said, “How do we make the most money?” Well, we make the most money with volume that comes from this price range.

Jerod Morris: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Brian Clark: So what do you expect? That’s why I tried to gently but firmly say, “Look, people, be smart. It’s not yours. You do not control what’s going on.” But I saw all the gnashing of teeth and complaining from course creators over at Udemy. I’m like, “What did you expect?”

Jerod Morris: Yeah, well, that’s the lesson here. It is disappointing, and I’m sure those people were very frustrated. But don’t you have to go into it assuming that something like that could happen when you don’t own the place that you build on?

Brian Clark: Absolutely. I get that it’s a marketplace and that means there are people there who take online courses. There are people at Amazon who buy ebooks. There are a lot of people in general over at Facebook. Okay, great. There are people there. They’re qualified in a certain way. Be strategic about it.

I saw one person — I think you may have sent me this — she was just harsh. She didn’t take the gentle-but-firm approach toward the other Udemy people. She’s like, “You’re an idiot if you’re selling all your courses on Udemy. You need to treat it like ebooks over at Amazon where it’s a big search engine and people are looking for books and you have a book on a topic. They find your book, they buy it, and then you’re constantly telling them to go to your site throughout the book. “Go get the audio version for free. Get this flow chart. Get this worksheet. Get whatever.”

It’s really just a step in the proverbial funnel, because they’re being strategic about the use of Amazon. Her argument was, “Well that’s what Udemy’s for, too. There are people here that want to learn. They’re going to search and find me. They’re going to pay me money — not much, but some — to begin the first step of the relationship with me. Of course, during that course I would imagine she is constantly pushing them to a website for some reason. Her website, not anyone else’s. To sign up for something free or whatever. To get into a sequence. Or whatever the case may be for her more premium offerings.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, that’s what smart people do. They leverage course marketplaces to help build their own online training business.

The Difference Between Online Course Marketplaces and Learning Management Systems

Jerod Morris: I think it’s important to draw this distinction between online course marketplaces and learning management systems. Apparently there are a lot of people that get confused by this. I think maybe that’s where this issue comes up with people being disappointed by what Udemy did. If you go to Udemy and you think you can put your course up here and you own everything and you’re going to own the terms of engagement with the customer forever, well that’s just not a good understanding of where you are and what a place like Udemy is. It’s a marketplace.

Yes, there are going to be lots of people there who are looking for online courses. It will get your course out in front of those people. Maybe you’ll be featured in a Udemy newsletter. There’s different ways that you can help get some quick attention. But the difference is, when you have a learning management system and you’ve built a course on your own website and you own it, you can charge whatever you want. You can build an email list and own that email list. You can base your communications with people based on how they actually interact with your site and with your content because you own all of that.

It’s important that people understand the differences between the two. If you’re going to be very smart about it and strategic about it, there is a place for an online course marketplace in your overall online training business strategy. But you’ve got to eventually get them back to your own site. To your own learning management system. Again, so that you can own those terms of engagement with the people. So you can set your own prices. Because that’s what’s eventually going to allow you to maximize your profit in the long run.

Brian Clark: I’ve warmed up a bit to the value of an ebook at Amazon, or maybe a low price course at Udemy. But here’s something you also have to realize: you don’t create credibility and authority by teaching a course. No one’s going to select your course in Udemy when you’ve got no credentials to back up what you’re teaching. On the other hand, Brian Harris calls this the ‘Learning Out Loud’ method. Tim Farris does this. He basically experiments, he learns, and he shares, which builds an audience, which creates his authority and expertise, and which means he can teach any course he wants. Again, if you’re an established, credible authority or instructor on a topic, then sure, why not throw something into Udemy. But if you’re just starting out, that’s not going to work for you. You’ve got to learn out loud and build an audience, which is content marketing.

Even though, again, I can see the strategic benefit of it, it’s not someplace that you run to right away. When you’re further down the line, I would say, where we are — thanks to 10 years of Copyblogger. I’m not even sure that you would want to mess with that channel. But never say never. You may talk me into it.

How Smart Online Course Creators Leverage Online Course Marketplaces

Jerod Morris: Just to provide a concrete example, let’s use The Showrunner as an example. We’ve got this course. The last time we launched it was $649 for the course. Obviously, we couldn’t charge that on Udemy, but we were able to charge it ourselves because we knew what the value was and we were able to set the price because we own it. If we were going to do this, and I’m not saying we would, but if we were going to leverage an online course marketplace it wouldn’t be to put the entire Showrunner course in there.

It would be to maybe take a small piece of it — maybe a quick-start guide or a quick course on naming your show, or whatever it would be — something small in there and use that as a way to target people that we already know are taking online courses. But then we’re sending them back to The Showrunner, to listen to the podcast where we do a lot of our learning out loud like you talked about. Then get them into the course. But certainly not to put the whole thing there and bank on that as the entire revenue strategy.

Brian Clark: Yeah, you should try that. I’d be interested in seeing if that got some results. It depends on a lot of variables. Do people go to Udemy to learn something like podcasting, or is that more of an open web thing? It’s just really hard. Experimenting with that type of stuff. Especially when you’re repurposing content you already created. There’s not a whole lot of brain damage or risk involved in that you’re wasting your time. You’re just repackaging something and putting it in a marketplace and seeing what happens. That’s a decently smart strategy in my mind and I’d like to see what would happen.

Jerod Morris: Yeah. The big idea here is don’t build everything on a place that you don’t own because ultimately it could kill your profitability if you’re not able to charge what you want. If you don’t own the ability to communicate with your audience members — with your customers — on your own terms and when you want to. Because those are going to be the two big drivers of what you’re able to do on a go-forward basis. How much can you charge? And how much are you able to keep communicating so that you can turn customers into repeat customers? Because if you don’t give yourself that ability you’re chopping yourself off at the legs before you even get started.

Brian Clark: Yeah, and you have to be quite aware that with these strategies with Amazon, Udemy, whatever — some people say, “Well I’m acquiring a customer.” No you’re not. Amazon’s acquiring a customer or keeping a customer. You got your product sold by someone else if they don’t take action based on content that’s inside the product or the course, then you don’t have a customer. Never confuse that.

There’s always a benefit — even if you’re selling a low-price gateway product — to being the point of sale. That’s why content marketing and building an audience — you just can’t stop talking about how valuable it is. Because these other people are relying on someone else to bring the audience, whether it’s Facebook, Amazon, Udemy, whatever the case may be. They’re saying, “I don’t care about having a direct relationship with people.” That’s just a huge mistake but we see it happen over and over online.

Jerod Morris: We do. If you want more insight on how to build your online training business the smart way, Brian actually developed the course about this inside of Digital Commerce Academy, so we encourage you to go to Rainmaker.FM/digitalcommerce and get a free membership to Digital Commerce Academy which will give you access to the first four lessons in Brian’s course, totally free. You can also get free lessons then in the course on marketing funnels along with a bunch of other goodies that are in there. It’s at Rainmaker.FM/digitalcommerce. Go there, get started with your free membership and learn other smart strategies for building your online course the way you should do it. Brian, I think that wraps up another episode. Looking forward to seeing you tomorrow.

Brian Clark: Yeah, I’ll see you tomorrow, which is really a week ago.

Jerod Morris: Yes.

Brian Clark: This time shifting always gets to me.

Jerod Morris: That’s right. We will talk to you all in a week, which is really two weeks from now, from when we record this.

Brian Clark: I think that’s right.

Jerod Morris: I think so. All right, everybody, have a great week and we’ll talk to you on the next episode of The Digital Entrepreneur.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

Why You (Still) Don’t Need a Mobile App That is Separate From Your Website

by admin

Why You (Still) Don’t Need a Mobile App That is Separate From Your Website

Do you need a mobile app that is separate from your website? If you’ve built an audience online, you’ve probably pondered this question a time or two. The answer (still) hasn’t changed.

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In this 25-minute episode, Brian Clark, Jerod Morris, and Chris Garrett discuss:

  • Whether Brian’s analysis from 2013 still holds true
  • Why the future is without apps
  • How emerging technologies have changed the game (and the outlook for the future)
  • What specific circumstances might dictate the consideration of a separate mobile app

And much more. If you want to hear Brian get unabashedly cantankerous, this is the episode for you

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

Download MP3 Subscribe by RSS Subscribe in iTunes

The Show Notes

  • When it Comes to Content, Who Cares if there s an App for That? — by Brian Clark
  • The Future is Without Apps — by Donny Reynolds
  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris

The Transcript

Why You (Still) Don’t Need a Mobile App That Is Separate from Your Website

Voiceover: You are listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs.

DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce.

Jerod Morris: Welcome back to another episode of The Digital Entrepreneur. I am your host today, Jerod Morris, the VP of marketing for Rainmaker Digital. I have two co-hosts with me on this episode. We have Brian Clark here, founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital, as well as Mr. Chris Garrett, the chief digital officer for Rainmaker Digital.

Brian, Chris, welcome.

Brian Clark: Hey there. I thought we were changing Garrett’s title to chief marketing technologist? I think that’s sexy.

Jerod Morris: Oh, that’s right.

Chris Garrett: Let’s see how my performance review goes first.

Brian Clark: Yeah, let’s put it up to the audience. Leave a comment on this episode, and tell us what Garrett’s title should be. Do you even know what a chief digital officer is? I don’t. But a chief marketing technologist? That’s macho.

Jerod Morris: Okay. I like that. Leave a comment. Let us know.

Today, we want to talk about something that a lot of digital entrepreneurs are thinking about and consider. We know that so much traffic now for the web is done with our mobile devices. It’s a big decision–how you’re going to display your content. Are you going to do it with an app? Are you going to do it with a responsive website? People are kicking these ideas around and have been for awhile.

Whether Brian’s Analysis From 2013 Still Holds True

Jerod Morris: The three of us had an email conversation about this very topic earlier this week that we wanted to basically bring here to the air. Brian, to kick things off, we actually went back and found an article that you wrote in 2013. I want to read a quick excerpt from this article and see if you still agree with this as a way to launch into this discussion. Here’s the excerpt.

“The argument for content apps is the most shockingly wrong. Content of all shades depends on frictionless social sharing, and questions related to problems and desires inherently involve search engines. If your content platform impedes social and search, you’re done.

Don’t believe the hype from the non-practitioner pundits. If apps are where it’s at for content, I’d be using them as a marketer and selling them as a businessman.”

Still agree?

Brian Clark: I do agree, completely. It’s interesting that you focused on the search engine aspect of it. That’s only one argument. The main argument against apps is no one wants to download your damn app.

We’re seeing even more movement three years later into a direction that maybe suggests that the whole mobile app phase is just that–a phase. It’s not an enduring thing. We’ll talk a little bit more about that. But there have been some progress made in interlinking apps and getting some of the functionality that’s just native to the web, and always has been, between apps.

It hasn’t been completely successful. That shows you how hard a problem it is. Even though Google has tried to deal with the app universe, it’s still one of the compelling reasons why, number one, for content marketers, you don’t need an app. Number two, that mobile apps may not be an enduring thing.

Why the Future Is Without Apps

Jerod Morris: Well, that’s what was interesting about this article. We’ll link to this in the show notes. The article is called The Future Is Without Apps written by Donny Reynolds. That’s the big idea of this article is that we are moving toward this future where there will be these really blurred lines between what is an app and what happens on the web, and everything becoming as one.

Brian, how will that impact the decisions that digital entrepreneurs need to be making when it comes to A) how they’re displaying their content, and then B) how they’re building their sites and their membership sites as they move forward?

Brian Clark: Well, the key is that, to a degree, people love apps for certain functions. Now, when we say ‘apps,’ we’re talking about mobile apps. Technically, all software is an application or an app, but this is the lingo that we’re using here. We’re definitely talking about mobile, which is increasingly important.

We talk over and over again about creating an app-like experience or actually creating apps. Look at Unemployable.com. It’s a very simple site at this point, but it is a web app because it’s a membership site. Those were some of the first web apps.

With a combination of that functionality and responsive design, you’ve got an app-like experience. You’re giving people what they like about apps without cluttering up their device with another app. That’s what’s important.

We say over and over, it’s the experience that matters, not necessarily following the advice of people who were like, four years ago, saying, “Got to have an app. Got to have an app.” All these media publications were lemming-like hitting you with a ‘download our app’ as soon as you were trying to read an article until guess what? Google slapped them down and said, “Don’t do that anymore.” You don’t see it anymore because people are afraid of Google even more than they’re lemming-like.

Jerod Morris: Chris, you are the chief marketing technologist for Rainmaker Digital.

Chris Garrett: You’ve decided, have you?

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Brian Clark: Early returns are in.

Jerod Morris: Yes, yes. Yeah, they are in. What are your thoughts about this future that Donny’s talking about here without apps?

Chris Garrett: It just makes perfect sense to me. We were talking earlier about how the experience of having an app forced on you makes you look elsewhere. If you looking at restaurants and you want to know where to eat, who are you going to go with? The one that you can just go to their website on your mobile, it’s a responsive site, you can see the menu, looks great or one that says, ‘download our app.’

Now, in Canada, we have these horrible data plans. We don’t want to use our data anyway. We just want a very slimmed-down website experience. We’re certainly not going to download a big app just for your menu, for a place that you’re only going to go once. That’s an extreme example, but just think about the end-user experience of apps.

You have to have something really extra special to make me install an app, something that is going to live on my toolbar–not just something that I’m going to use once and then forget about. It’s taking up space. It’s taking up bandwidth.

How Emerging Technologies Have Changed the Game (and the Outlook for the Future)

Brian Clark: We always talk about with our StudioPress themes and with Rainmaker’s included designs, responsive? Absolutely–but also HTML5, which we really haven’t even begun to exploit the possibilities there, because that is a markup that allows you to create any kind of app functionality on a website.

Is this part of the argument that this guy’s making, that this type of advanced Hypertext Markup Language is actually going to be the thing that kills apps, or is it something bigger than that?

Chris Garrett: I think it already has to a large extent. The fact that we haven’t really had to dig that deep into what the technology can do shows that we haven’t needed to. There’s not been that demand from our customers and users.

Now, the Rainmaker Platform’s getting a lot more advanced. We’re doing a lot of stuff on there that gives the administrator of a site a lot more power. But when it comes to consuming the content, you don’t really need that advanced technology.

For content marketers, it’s nice that we have these features, but 80/20 rule. Eighty percent of what we need to do, we can already do in a normal, responsive website with a content management system. That’s the experience people want. That remaining 20 percent is advanced. You can do a lot of stuff, especially geo-targeting and all those things where you can have a really nice, rich, animated experience.

But a lot of it’s sugarcoating, and a lot of it actually slows down getting the customer to the information they want. You have to be really careful with all that.

Brian Clark: Yeah. It was interesting because the three of us were working on creating an adaptive content funnel this week, which we’ve been talking about a lot, we have a lot of fun doing. We’re about to get together for our company meeting, and there’s going to be whiteboards everywhere because we’re going to be just sitting down, mapping out these things.

I asked a question that said, “Who’s going to change this functionality?” Is this a Garrett thing or a Rafal thing–a tech thing or a design thing? Then I remembered. It is so brain-dead simple to do in Rainmaker that I could have done it myself.

That just shows you that we are using our own technology, and compared to the technology we built, say, for example, on Copyblogger, in order to get to Rainmaker. We can’t wait to move Copyblogger over to Rainmaker because we actually can do more on our Rainmaker sites than on our custom sites, at this point. Even I can do it. That’s the amazing thing. Sometimes I just forget.

Jerod Morris: Yeah. Chris, you mentioned that someone would have to have something pretty great for you to install an app. For people who are listening to this and they’re thinking about what they’re going to do, are there any situations right now where someone in our audience should be thinking about an app?

Or with this future where there aren’t going to be apps and those lines are going to be blurred and what we’ve just been talking about with how much you can do with HTML5 and with an adaptive website, is that something that people really shouldn’t be thinking about, or are there some specific functionalities that lend themselves to it?

What Specific Circumstances Might Dictate the Consideration of a Separate Mobile App

Chris Garrett: If you talk about content marketing, if you talked about using this as promotion or marketing for your business, there aren’t really features that you’re going to gain from an app. What you’re losing is the attraction and retention ability.

If you think about the apps that are one-time use or very seldom used, that on the far right-hand side of your screen, you have to swipe to get to them ,and then you’re not even sure why you downloaded it. I’ve got Snapchat. I don’t use that. That would be an example of something that would be difficult to do in HTML5. But as a content marketer, you need that.

Are you an app developer? You’re creating an experience for your prospects and customers. If it’s an experience, if it’s content marketing, I would say, chances are, you want that attraction ability, that discovery ability, that shareability of your content, that having a walled-garden app would lose for you.

There are features, though, that could be really advanced and cool, but I’m struggling to think of something that can’t be done using the browser experience. A lot of apps out there are just shells for a browser anyway.

Brian Clark: Yeah. That’s what people don’t realize. We could introduce app functionality for Rainmaker users, but it’s really just wrapping up your website in an application. If people ask for that, we might do it. I don’t know if we put that on that on the roadmap or not, but that’s really what you’re dealing with–and probably being overcharged by an app developer.

Again, if your loyal, fanatic audience members want an app, then you should consider it, I suppose. But as Chris said, what are we talking about here? Having to download an app first is a conversion killer. It’s hard enough to get people to convert, and you’re adding another barrier.

It’s a search engine killer. It’s a sharing killer. All of these things we need in order to build more business, yet people rush to a format that actually kills that.

Why the Mobile App Phenomenon Might Just Be a Bad Blip in History

Brian Clark: Let me quote from this article, so you won’t think that this is just us spewing our opinions. The gist of the argument is that web applications will be the new apps. Of course, again, they’re both apps. But compared to a mobile app that is specifically installed on the device, he says, “Web apps don’t need to be installed. They run securely in closed browser environments. They’re web-friendly, meaning they can be indexed and surfaced by search engines. Oh, wait. Isn’t that exactly what we want today?” Right?

It’s almost like this whole mobile app phenomenon is just a bad blip in history. It started out okay because it was cool to download from the App Store and be able to do certain things, but now you look at your phones, and it’s a cluster, a mess. I have so many different folders to try to keep it organized, and I still don’t use half of what’s on there. The web is perfect.

Chris Garrett: And apps drain your battery. If you have the Facebook app, your battery gets drained. The experience of using the web browser actually saves you a resource that might be precious to you or your customer.

I also go back to my latest website that I’ve been working on. For the first time, there’s more Android users than iPhone users. I was shocked by that. I shouldn’t have been because the audience is DIY people. But it means that you have to have a cross-platform developer or development environment, which the web already is. It works on a Blackberry. It works on an old Nokia. You know?

Brian Clark: Yeah. It’s funny. It’s funny how we have everything we need, yet we lose sight of it. It reminds me of people who gave up their websites to build on Facebook. No one saw that coming–what a disaster of a train wreck that would be? It feels like the same phenomenon here–just poor thinking, following trends instead of thinking what’s actually right for your business and your audience.

Jerod Morris: Well, you have a lot of people with big platforms that are saying that kind of thing, and people are listening. I think you’re right. Part of that is a failure of critical thinking. It’s getting caught up in the hype and getting caught up in the excitement of it, to a certain extent–the status of it when it comes to apps. I think people like being in the App Store and just that idea.

Brian Clark: You mean lost in the App Store?

Jerod Morris: That’s right.

Chris Garrett: Yeah. I was just going to say, I’m not sure people do enjoy that because my parents, my in-laws, don’t like going in the App Store. They don’t like it when they’re asked to put in a credit card, even though the download is for free. Is that really true?

With the web, you can sample a lot better. See if something is for you, and then you can go deeper. You can register, you can sign up, and all those things. You can’t really sample apps as easy. It’s a commitment for somebody who’s very non-technical and maybe just giving you a slim chance.

It’s like Brian said, that conversion, there’s a big friction element to apps. There’s the daunting thing of–especially on some other platforms, mentioning no names–you’re not even sure if it’s a legitimate app. You don’t know what it’s going to do. We’ve seen these horror stories of data leaks and all those kinds of things. There is a bit of resistance there mentally of, “What is this going to do to my phone or my device?”

Jerod Morris: Yeah. Well, that’s what I mean. I think people got caught up in just the idea of being in the App Store, having an app, and being able to send that Tweet that says, “Hey, we have an app. Download it,” because it sounds cool–but it’s not really providing a lot of utility to them or to the audience that they’re actually trying to serve.

Chris Garrett: Yeah. The ego of the developer.

Brian Clark: It’s probably one of the worst and most expensive cases of shiny-object syndrome in recent history. It’s one thing to go chase after Ello and then watch it fail. Okay, you wasted a little time, but it wasn’t a big deal. But if you developed an app that really didn’t work out for you, you have my condolences.

Chris Garrett: If you really develop the app instead of just doing the MVP, that’s a lot of cost, time, resource, and energy you’re putting into the thing. You have to then spend more money to get more people to know about it. The chances of you getting on that top 10 table of popular apps in any of the app stores is slim to none now.

Possible Alternatives to the App’s Easy Access to Sites

Jerod Morris: Hey, let me ask you this question. Clearly one of the benefits of having an app and when you install it on your phone–whether it’s an iPhone or an Android–is you get that convenient little logo right there. It’s easy to access. Maybe most people know this. I don’t know. But it’s pretty easy to just create a bookmark for your site or for your web app on your Android home screen or on your iPhone home screen.

Do you think more sites should give people instructions for how to do that or tell people how to create a quick mobile shortcut on their phone or on their device to get to their site? Then you would get the big benefit of having the app, which is the easy-access icon right there on someone’s device.

Brian Clark: That is interesting. I don’t think it can hurt, especially, for example, if you’re web-based and you have people asking for an app. Maybe they just want that easy access. That’s good advice. My problem with it is, unless it’s mission critical, the apps I use every single day, I don’t see anything because I have everything put in folders to reduce clutter.

You have to be the most important thing in my life. Hopefully, for example, Copyblogger is important to people. People read it every day. But I wouldn’t presume to think it was worthy of an app, necessarily, that would be front and center. You would hope so, but think about that. Would there be a critical mass of people who would do that? I doubt it.

Chris Garrett: I think that a social login is more important as part of the experience, which is why we’re introducing it in Rainmaker. The ability to just quickly log in is the main thing that an app can do for most people over and above having that web experience.

If you can smoothly and quickly get people to log in and get the usefulness out of what you’re offering, how they get there I don’t think is as important. They’re going to have their own work flow. But the funny thing about those little icons is, I’ve got them on my phone based on just web pages that are bookmarked that way, and I never look at them. I don’t know if you do gain that much. It should be more visible, but they’re on my second page. I never swipe to them.

Brian Clark: You know what gets me to come back to a site? Email. What are in those emails? Links. Where do those links point? The web.

Chris Garrett: Yeah.

Brian Clark: We’ve come full-circle back to email, as always.

Jerod Morris: Yes.

Chris Garrett: Some perception of future value, and it’s usually indicated by an email coming in.

Jerod Morris: Yep. Good point. Very good point. Well these articles, both the article that I quoted that Brian wrote and this article, The Future Is Without Apps, those will both be in the show notes for the show. You can get those there.

Any final thoughts, guys, on this topic of apps before we close up this episode?

Chris’ and Brian’s Closing Thoughts

Brian Clark: Well, it’s just encouraging news. Over the years, since I wrote that article and even before that, there were people who were thinking very critically. Generally, these were long-time web people. Instead of being biased toward the web, they understood the idea behind the open web, what that meant, and why no walled garden–from AOL to Myspace to Facebook–has ever killed it.

And apps, it’s the same thing. You’re seeing very, very bright people more and more say, “You know, this is probably just a phase we went through. We’re going to return to web apps because it makes so much more sense on so many levels.”

If you’re out there and thinking, “Oh my gosh, we didn’t get an app. We’ve missed the wagon,” no, you didn’t miss anything. That’s the important thing. You’re always safe on the web. Any time a link can be followed, it’s the quickest and easiest way for people to get to you.

Chris Garrett: I’m looking at the potential for us to develop apps, but as yet, I’ve not had a compelling reason to do that. Do let us know if you can think of a compelling reason why we need an app. I’ve yet to find the reason.

That said, if you’ve decided to do an app, you have to support it and maintain it. How are you going to get people to upgrade to the latest version? You’re creating a lot of marketing problems by creating this marketing solution. It’s not a one-and-done deal. You have to then support it and maintain it. You know what it’s like? Having a baby. That baby’s going to become an 18 year old. What are you going to do then?

Brian Clark: Spoken like a true marketing technologist.

Jerod Morris: Yes, yes.

Brian Clark: I’m not biased at all on how you vote on Chris’s title.

Chris Garrett: Make Chris great again.

How to Take Your Digital Commerce Education to the Next Level

Jerod Morris: That’s right. Go vote for Chris’ title. Go, of course, create your mobile shortcut to The Digital Entrepreneur podcast, and for more insight on this and many other topics, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce. That’s where you can activate your free membership to Digital Commerce Institute.

When you do that, you will actually have free access to the courses developed by both of these gentlemen. Brian has a course in there called Build Your Online Training Business the Smarter Way, and Chris was part of the team with Tony Clark that developed a course on building automated marketing funnels that work. You can get free lessons in each one of those courses plus case studies and more when you go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce. It is free, so go get your free registration today.

All right, guys. Thank you for being here. We will talk to you next week on another episode of The Digital Entrepreneur.

Brian Clark: Take care, everyone.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

5 Key Concepts to Understand About Tracking, Testing, and Making Decisions

by admin

5 Key Concepts to Understand About Tracking, Testing, and Making Decisions

This is the fifth episode in our 5-part series on the essential elements of the modern marketing website. In it, we dive into the importance of testing and tracking when it comes to making the best decisions about the future of your digital business.

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In this 27-minute episode, Brian Clark, Jerod Morris, and Loryn Thompson discuss:

  • Why the best time to start is now
  • Why context is everything
  • The importance of understanding what your tools are telling you — and what they are not
  • How to balance the qualitative with the quantitative
  • Why intuition still matters

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

Download MP3 Subscribe by RSS Subscribe in iTunes

The Show Notes

  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris

The Transcript

5 Key Concepts to Understand About Tracking, Testing, and Making Decisions

Voiceover: You’re listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs. DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information go to rainmaker.fm/digitalcommerce, that’s rainmaker.fm/digitalcommerce.

Brian Clark: Hey there everyone, welcome to The Digital Entrepreneur. I am Brian Clark, founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital. Today, as always, we have Jerod Morris, VP of marketing for Rainmaker Digital. We also have our very own data ninja, Loryn Thompson. Don’t ever call yourself a ninja. We’ve talked about this. I can call you a ninja, right?

Loryn Thompson: Exactly.

Jerod Morris: Yes.

Brian Clark: Okay, this is a podcast, you have to talk. Today we’re flipping things around a little bit to close out our series on the elements of the modern website. We’re going to talk about testing. Instead of me rambling on about it, I’ve decided to flip the switch and let Jerod and Loryn talk about testing. As we came out of our launch and build phase — which, when we launched Digital Commerce Institute in the fall, that was the last piece of the puzzle. We don’t plan on building anything brand new or launching something new. What we’re doing now is shifting into our ‘optimize and grow’ phase.

A big part of that initiative that we knew we wanted to tackle as soon as we could — it was at the beginning of the year — was to move from tracking and testing when we thought it might be a good idea, to a culture of tracking and testing. There’s a big difference there. A one-off test here or there can give you valuable information. A process, a system, a culture that basically tracks and tests everything and then tries to make sense of the resulting data and apply that back into our own intuitive creativity, that’s where we needed to go next. That was really what I tasked Jerod and Loryn with, so who better to talk to about it than these two. Are you guys ready?

Jerod Morris: We are ready. Yes.

Loryn Thompson: Yup, ready.

Brian Clark: All right. I’ve got here some notes from you two. This catchy headline, I wonder where you got that from.

Jerod Morris: I know.

Brian Clark: “5 Key Concepts to Understand About Tracking, Testing and Making Decisions. Very nicely done, Jerod was that you?

Jerod Morris: That was me, yes, but with Loryn’s help.

Brian Clark: Good job. Oh, with Loryn’s help, okay. We know Loryn’s the brains behind this but you’re the front man. She’s got to feed you the smart stuff.

Jerod Morris: Right, and I do want to say, Brian, as the lead-in to this conversation — when we talk about data and testing I think it’s so important, as you just said, to create a culture of testing. It’s so important to have two things, number one you’ve got to have commitment from the top. Because if you aren’t committed to this and to doing this, then something like this isn’t really going to happen. I think you’ve really got to have organizational commitment to this being important.

The second thing I think you’ve got to have is enthusiasm. I think that’s really what Loryn has brought, a real enthusiasm for the subject, for learning more, for figuring out where we can use it. It’s really helped and infused what we’re doing with a lot more information and insight. I think as we talk about this, this isn’t listed here as one of the things we’re going to talk about, but it’s very important if you want have this culture of testing. Having that commitment from the top down and then individuals with enthusiasm for actually doing the work that it will take is really important.

Loryn Thompson: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Brian Clark: Yeah. You not only have my commitment, but I’ve been nerding out right along with you. I think we’re all enthusiastic about it because it’s fascinating.

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Brian Clark: It’s fascinating when your intuition actually gets proven correct. It’s also just as fascinating when you’re completely wrong. You just have to be open to being wrong because …

Loryn Thompson: Whichever one makes you more money.

Brian Clark: Exactly. Blindly going along with a losing strategy is not that smart in my book. Yeah, I think the enthusiasm is there as soon as people get over their trepidation about it. People think split testing is complicated, but with the right tools it’s becoming easier and easier. Even I can do it when you let me.

Jerod Morris: Yes.

Brian Clark: All right, let’s go through these 5 key concepts. What is number 1?

The Best Time to Start is Now

Jerod Morris: Number 1 is starting now. Again, this is one of those that almost seems so simple you don’t want to say it, but it’s really important. It’s similar to what we tell people on the The Showrunner with podcasting who see that there are people who’ve been podcasting since 2008 so they feel intimidated. It’s like, “Yeah, okay. The best time to start a podcast was back then — 2007, 2008 — but the next best time is now.” Same thing with a blog.

Think about if you haven’t been working out or if you’ve gotten out of shape. Sometimes you’ll think about it and it’s like, “Man, I don’t even want to get on the treadmill for the first time because I haven’t been doing it for so long.” You can’t think that way, because you can take a positive step in that direction today to start moving forward in a better way.

I think it’s the same thing with data. Maybe you’ve had analytics on your site for five years but you’ve never done anything with it and now you get in there and you’re intimidated because there’s all this old data and you don’t know what to do with it. Start today. Take a step today to understand something better or to set up just one simple test to get going.

You’re going to be a lot further along in six months if you take that first step today than if you continue to lament the fact that you haven’t started yet and continue to allow that to keep you from getting going. Again, it’s basic but it’s an important mental hurdle for some people to get over. Whatever you’ve done in the past, it’s okay. Just start today moving forward in a better way.

Loryn Thompson: Yeah, I want to add to that. Even if you don’t think that you really need the data right now or anything, or now is not the best time to devote the energy to putting everything together. It can be really time consuming to get set up. tThe important thing to remember is that with data — having the historical data, having three months of data — that puts you way ahead already. It’s always good to just go ahead and get it set up, even if you think, “Oh, Well I need to devote more time to this right now.” Just put the data in place. You’ll be glad you did in a few months.

Jerod Morris: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Brian Clark: Yeah, that’s good advice. The next thing I want to talk about here is something I’ve seen over and over. When a company decides, “Okay, we’re going to embrace testing. We’re doing this.” The first thing they then do is look for some turnkey off-the-shelf system that they’re going to slap onto their particular business. Silly or not?

Context is Everything

Jerod Morris: I think the number one thing that you have to realize when you’re going to start doing this is you’ve got to understand what you’re tracking and what data and what reports and what numbers are going to be important for you. I think back to my time when I was running Midwest Sports Fans five or six years ago and all of our monetization was based off of display ads.

For Midwest Sports Fans the page view number was huge. Having Google Analytics driving page views — that’s how we were going to drive revenue, because we weren’t doing anything else with it. But you think about what we’re doing now and think about all of our properties — page views are a nice number and they can tell us something, but it doesn’t tell us very much. We need to convert people onto an email list. We need people to start trials of the Rainmaker Platform.

You’ve really got to start with where you want to end up. What your business objectives are, what numbers drive those objectives. And then what’s going to allow you to track that. The context is everything. I think that’s why you really need to start thinking there and that will help tell you what you need then to be tracking and what tools will help you do that.

Loryn Thompson: Definitely. One thing, when you start looking at that data it’s really useful to start breaking that down into different kinds of segments. You had one session number, you got ‘X’ many sessions last month. That’s great, but what does that actually mean? Maybe you start by looking at people who came from a certain email, or people who landed on the home page, or people who landed on a different page. Looking at how their behavior compares to behavior of people in other segments on this site — breaking that down and figuring out what those sessions mean will get you a lot more mileage out of your data.

Brian Clark: Mm-hmm (affirmative). Yeah, it’s interesting. I think page views are completely irrelevant to a content marketing-driven business. With the state of online advertising they may before irrelevant to everyone. But there are certain key metrics that I think anyone who’s following along with this series … Converting the email, that’s key. Converting to customers based on various adaptive funnels that you create — the kind of stuff that we’re going through here with this series. These are all the things you have to not only see what approach works best, but then you’ve got to be able to tweak and optimize. You can’t do that blindly. You don’t just decide to change a word, you see what word works better.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, exactly.

Loryn Thompson: Yeah.

Understanding What Your Tools are Telling You

Brian Clark: All right, what about tools? People get a little bit hung up on that. What’s your advice about understanding how to use this technology to best effect?

Jerod Morris: Yeah, this is such an important one. Loryn, this is where I’ve learned a lot from just in the time that we’ve been working together. Especially this concept of, “your tools are telling you certain things, but there are also things that they are not telling you.” It’s very important to understand this. Because you can be getting this number, but if you don’t know where this number is coming from and what data is coming in to give you this number, there could be giant glaring holes that mean that it’s painting you an incomplete picture. Again, I’ve learned a lot from you in this sense. And you’ve got a couple of good examples as far as this goes which help illustrate that.

Loryn Thompson: Yeah, for sure. One of the main things is that looking at website data, you really do want to focus on users. It’s nice to know how many sessions you have, how many page views, but really what you’re looking for is when people get to your site, what are they doing? One of the biggest limitations with Google Analytics — which is a super popular website analytics tool — is that the tracking is cookie-based, which pretty much the best we can do right now.

But that means that each user, when you look at that user’s number, it’s only recognized with the exact same browser and device configuration as they were the first time. If you are on Firefox and go to our site one day, and then the next day you go on Safari, Google Analytics isn’t going to know that you’re the same person. That’s why it’s really important to do things like … There are a few things you can do to your website like user ID tracking.

Whenever you look at that user number if you don’t have user ID tracking in place it’s likely over inflated. My best suggestion with things like this is you can’t always fix these huge holes, you just have to be more aware that they exist. As you’re moving through the data if you see something that indicates that, “Look, we had so many more users this time,” it’s, “maybe people are switching from their desktop to their phone to access our site because we started putting more podcasts on,” or something like that.

One of the other things that I want to touch on is that there are a lot of platforms that will give you proprietary metrics that they don’t really tell you how they came up with them. They’re like, “This is the magical impressions reach engagement number that you need to be paying attention to. It’s fantastic.” Okay, what does it mean? If you only have that number and you don’t really have anything to compare it with, then it doesn’t really do anything to help your business. I personally would never rely on any metrics that I don’t know how they got to be there, how they were counted.

Jerod Morris: I think what’s important there is it doesn’t necessarily mean that the metric itself is bad. It could be good, but for you to make an informed decision on it you have to know what it means. It’s very important that you can wrap your arms around it, embrace it, understand what it means so you can use it to make a smart decision.

Loryn Thompson: Exactly. A lot of these companies it’s like a whole ‘business secrets’ thing, and that’s fine. But if you don’t know what’s behind it then how do you know what that number’s limitations are? How do you know what it’s really getting at if you can’t know how it’s calculated?

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Balancing Qualitative and Quantitative

Brian Clark: That’s interesting. Okay, so everyone is obsessed with big data, the quantitative side of things. Is there still room for qualitative data?

Jerod Morris: Yes, and you need it. I think you can fall into that trap when you start talking about data and start talking about testing. That all you do is look at things from a numbers perspective. Numbers can tell you a lot. They should tell you a lot. But that doesn’t mean that asking questions — having actual conversations — doesn’t matter.

We started putting up a survey on the Rainmaker Platform site to get some information on people when they left a certain page to find out why they were or were not doing something, and we’ve gotten some good insight from that. Now that, obviously, gets boiled down to into data. But it’s not just tracking how someone comes and goes from a site, it’s asking them a question. Brian, just 15 minutes ago we got off the call and we were talking about reaching out to some people to get a testimonial. In that email that I sent out to a few folks I asked them, “Hey, how are things going in Digital Commerce Academy so far?”

I’ve already gotten three replies with people telling me a little bit about their experience and things they liked and things that they wish that it had. It’s really good information, because we’re reaching out to our most active people. Are we going to jump and go do something with that? No, but it’s the kind of information — hearing it from people who are clearly engaged and really using the product.

Now we take that, we combine that with quantitative data that we have about usage and different things, and now you really inform that intuition, which we’re going to talk about here in a minute. But I think you really need both. If you just rely on one or just rely on the other you’ve got an incomplete picture. Incomplete information that you’re making a decision with.

Loryn Thompson: Definitely. I think one of the major things when you’re looking at data and you’re looking at testing, the tests you can do are kind of limited to your perspective and what you can come up with. When you ask those open-ended questions you might be completely blindsided and say, “Oh, this actually what’s really important to our customer.” You are only now giving them the chance to speak up about it, whereas if you had just decided to test things and you came up with a bullet point list of five things you wanted to test, what’s the likelihood that the thing that the customer wanted would actually be on that list? It really does matter to get out there and talk to your customers and know your customers because that’s what’s going to inform which tests you actually should run.

Brian Clark: It’s amazing that I went a decade with never doing surveys. I really prefer to observe people in the wild, if you will, and comments in social media and forums — all of that stuff. It worked really well for us. Yet now that we’ve started doing this — now I’m still against multiple choice questions that aren’t carefully crafted because you can suggest answers. But the open-ended question thing? I love it. It’s unwieldy. It’s not scalable to a certain degree. But that’s where its power is. It’s real people telling you real stuff and you can figure things out from that.

Like Jerod said, one answer is not going to make you go act, but when you start seeing the same kind of pattern recognition that I would see out there in the wild, that’s where the answers come from. We’ve gotten to the point where we have more customers — 170,000 now — we have more customers than some people have prospects, so we have to talk to them. We made that shift starting a couple years ago, and it’s really intensifying now. Yeah, I totally agree with you guys on that one.

Intuition Still Matters

Brian Clark: Then finally, we’re shifting to a true data-driven company, yet we got here on intuition and creativity, which really stems from knowing your market. Knowing your audience. Knowing who these people are and what their pain points are, and doing your best to try to help them with that. Are we compromising what got us here with this data approach?

Jerod Morris: No, I think we’re informing it better. It’s like you said, you’ve done so much off of intuition, and that’s still important. You’ve got to know your customer, because ultimately you still have to make a decision. It’s not like we’re turning the decision making over to the data. These are reports, and you read the reports and you allow them to inform your decision. But it’s really important with data — it’s like the reports that Loryn sends us. These are reports of past events which we’re then using to predict the future events as much as we can, but there’s no guarantee.

A lot can change from the time that the data was collected to when the decision that you’re going to make is going to have its impact. There may be different environmental factors that change. Shifts that you’ve seen. Things that happen. “Okay this works with this data, but we know that this has changed. So let’s tweak this, but this stays the same,” and you move forward. That intuition and that knowledge of what to do is still extremely important.

We go back and we talk about that qualitative information that you gain. All of that goes into it and is combined into that gut, that instinct, that intuition that eventually helps tell you what the best decision is. But you do yourself a disservice to close yourself off to all the good information that you can get. We’ve drawn a distinction between good and bad in here. As long as it’s good information then you’ll be able to make a well informed decision, but I don’t think there’s any replacement for good intuition. But intuition is not just something you’re born with or that you wake up with, it’s …

Brian Clark: It’s informed creativity. We’re just informing ourselves better.

Jerod Morris: Exactly.

Loryn Thompson: Exactly. That’s why it’s so important to look at your data as real events. What does ‘sessions’ actually mean? It means that your website was opened and viewed this number of times. When you start to break down the data into the concrete real world as close as we can get to events that actually happened, that helps your intuition that much more. When you start looking into some of your tools you might get, “What does this mean? What does time on site mean?” It’s important to know how all of that is calculated, what all that means, so that you can go forward and say, “Yes, this is what my instinct was before we did this promotion, or this campaign. This is what we learned from the campaign. And this is how I’m modifying my instinct to move forward.”

I definitely think that that’s the way forward. You can’t really just rely on the data or just rely on going off on your own. You have to be able to marry the two and have a feedback loop where you start a campaign, a promotion, or some sort of event and then you execute it. And then you come back and say, “Okay, were those presumptions we had at the beginning correct? Were those the right ones? If not then why? If they were then cool, how do we take that and move forward with it?”

Brian Clark: Yeah, it’s interesting because from a very simple standpoint when you do iterative content development you’re really looking at very simple data — social sharing, comments — just indications that it resonated. Then you do more of that and less of the stuff that didn’t get that kind of response. It’s really not that alien to me, it’s just better data. More sophisticated predictive analytics.

Loryn Thompson: Yeah. The important part of intuition for me is the exploration. Because if you just follow what the data says about what you’ve done in the past to a T, you’re going to end up doing the same things over and over that work, and it’s going to end up not working in the end.

Brian Clark: That’s so key, because you have to try new stuff to see if it’s going to work. And if you’re completely married to the data, you truly are non-creative in a literal sense because you stop innovating. You stop moving forward. Great answers. Loryn, we talked briefly about tools and I think people get hung up at this level. We use the testing tools built into Rainmaker, Google Analytics, and what else?

Loryn Thompson: As far as website data goes, we use Google Tag Manager so I can easily implement things without bugging developers.

Brian Clark: So another free tool from Google.

Loryn Thompson: Yes.

Brian Clark: Okay, my point being here that you do need the set of testing tools but you don’t need necessarily a fancy analytics package. If you know how to work with Google Analytics it’s all there for you.

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Loryn Thompson: Definitely. Then we also use Hotjar, which is what we’ve been doing our surveys with.

Brian Clark: Cool, okay.

Loryn Thompson: That’s been working really well. They also have heat mapping which is pretty cool.

Brian Clark: Interesting. Cool. All right. Well, I think that covers the 5 elements that we all agreed needed to be covered. Jerod, what do we have today for the folks at home as a free offer?

Jerod Morris: We have the free membership at Digital Commerce Academy, which, if you have not yet started, you really should get over there and get started today. You can do that at rainmaker.fm/digitalcommerce. That’s where you can go get your free membership activated.

Once you do that you have access to a wealth of content, including free lessons in Brian’s course on Building an Online Training Business the Smart Way. Free lessons in Chris Garrett and Tony Clark’s course on marketing funnels. As well as some case study webinars that we’ve done that you have access to. You want to get in there and start seeing everything that’s available, because again as soon as you register — it’s free — then you’ll also get a newsletter from us every week which has very interesting and useful information in it as well.

Brian Clark: Which includes these very podcast episodes, right?

Jerod Morris: Exactly. Yes.

Brian Clark: Also, if you are listening over at iTunes, if you would — before you head over to get your free registration — if you could leave a rating or review for us over at iTunes we would most appreciate that. Helps us out to find new people in the iTunes ecosystem and we definitely appreciate any help you can give us on that. All right.

Jerod Morris: Hey, Brian, real quick, we probably should let people know the reason why we have the URL rainmaker.fm/digitalcommerce is because we’re tracking conversions from this podcast episode. Instead of saying digitalcommerce.com/free, or whatever it would be, we have that URL which will then redirect you. That way we can track whether people are actually paying attention to it.

Brian Clark: It’s a little inside baseball right there.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, exactly.

Brian Clark: Okay. Well, Jerod, where are we going from here? We’re done with our series. I guess we’re going to have to come up with some new topics.

Jerod Morris: We are. I think this is where Loryn takes over the show.

Brian Clark: Yeah, Loryn, you don’t have stuff to do right? Just remaking the culture of the company, it’s not a big deal. All right, we will be back next week with a new episode and we promise to come up with something good. Until then, take it easy, keep going. Jerod, Loryn, get back to work.

Jerod Morris: Thank you Brian.

Loryn Thompson: Always a pleasure.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

5 Compelling Reasons Why You Should Use Free Online Courses as Lead Magnets

by admin

5 Compelling Reasons Why You Should Use Free Online Courses as Lead Magnets

This is the fourth episode in our ongoing series on the essential elements of the modern marketing website. Today we take the next step after access, and break it down by using free online courses as the perfect lead magnet for digital entrepreneurs.

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In this 22-minute episode, Brian Clark and Jerod Morris discuss:

  • How free online courses help you carve out attention (and authority)
  • What the topic of your course allows you to learn about your prospects
  • Why a free online course helps you solve the identity issue
  • How you can adapt the experience for the people who take your free course
  • What this all means for conversion

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

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The Show Notes

  • Episode 1: How Email (Still) Creates the Profit Engine of Your Digital Business
  • Episode 2: How Adaptive Websites Deliver an Exceptional Experience While Accelerating Profit
  • Episode 3: 5 Benefits of the ‘Access’ Approach to Online Marketing
  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris

The Transcript

5 Compelling Reasons Why You Should Use Free Online Courses As Lead Magnets

Voiceover: You are listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs.

DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce.

Jerod Morris: Welcome back to The Digital Entrepreneur. I’m your host Jerod Morris, the VP of marketing for Rainmaker Digital, and I am joined this week by Brian Clark, the founder and CEO of Rainmaker Digital.

Brian, the last time we talked, you were preparing for a trip to the Philippines. How did you manage the long flight? Did you get as much work done as we had hoped for?

Brian Clark: Not really. It’s interesting because I also didn’t really sleep. I was just so exhausted the whole time that I watched a whole bunch of movies. Going over there, I was just trying to make it. That was, by far, the longest series of flights I’ve ever had. Coming back was easier. I guess once you understand what you’re in for, and the long leg of the flight this time was 10 hours instead of 13. That makes a difference, trust me.

Jerod Morris: Oh, I’m sure it does.

Brian Clark: But I got back, worked it so that I would go to bed early the day I got home and start waking up really early, which was one of my goals coming out of the conference. As you know, I’ve been up at four and five in the morning pummeling you with emails. But you also get up early, so it actually works out.

Jerod Morris: It did. It worked out great.

Brian Clark: With you in Central time zone, I actually have to get up an hour earlier than you just to be even with you, but it’s all good. I’m feeling back to normal a bit but, actually, more productive now because I’ve implemented this new morning routine. I’m just much more productive in the morning, but by three in the afternoon, I’m pretty much done. Just stick a fork in me.

Jerod Morris: I’m the exact same way. I get so much done when I get up early, so I like to do it. We had some fun while you were gone. Robert joined us. Chris joined us. We had a really good discussion on last week’s episode really linking together what you and I talked about before with adaptive websites and what we’re going to talk about today with free online courses.

Talked with Robert. He took us back to the beginning of the New Rainmaker strategy, talked some about that. We got some of Chris’ insight on adaptive websites. So you and I now, we’re going to take the next step in the conversation that we’ve been having about these elements of the modern marketing website.

We talked in episode six about the power of an adaptive website, and today, we’re going to talk about why people should be using free online courses as lead magnets. We’ve got five really compelling reasons why this is a good strategy. Any kind of overview statements before we dive in to these five reasons?

Overview

Brian Clark: Well, after we did the adaptive episode, we did the access episode. Access is a broad concept with a whole bunch of benefits that we went over in that episode. A lot of people, that seemed to really resonate with them. Then it’s what kind of access should we provide? There’s all sorts of different things that you can provide access to.

In this episode, we’re really going to make the case for you that, from a marketing standpoint, you really can’t beat providing access through registration to a free online course as the best way to not only begin a relationship with the right prospects, but to convert more of them.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, access. You’re right. I got my A words mixed up. Speaking of A words, that’s the first reason why people should be using a free online course: attention.

How Free Online Courses Help You Carve Out Attention (and Authority)

Brian Clark: Yeah. Even dating back to the old-school funnel, created by a guy named St. Elmo, by the way. I don’t know why no one says ‘St. Elmo’s funnel’ because it just seems perfect, but they don’t.

Attention is the top of the funnel, regardless of the metaphor that you want to use. This is one of the key beginning reasons why we migrated to this type of strategy. Part of the reason why it’s so effective is perceived value.

The days of the crappy PDF ebook or some other kind of marginal lead magnet, in a lot of industries, it just doesn’t work as well because people are like, “Eh, it’s probably not going to be that great. I’m probably going to get spammed and I’d rather just not.” Great content marketing means giving away something–in this case, information–worth paying for. We’ve made this point before.

People are definitely paying for online courses to the tune of $15 billion a year and growing rapidly, so the perceived value of this type of giveaway is much higher. That’s a constant battle that we’re all in–how do we create more perceived value for our prospects, and how do we deliver more actual value?

It begins with perception, and perception is a function of attention and whether or not that attention leads to the next step.

Jerod Morris: Couldn’t you also add another A word here, authority. If you have that perceived value of the course, then when people actually get in the course and they get value and they see your knowledge, you’re also building authority here, too, aren’t you?

Brian Clark: Yeah, I think so. You establish the authority after they’re involved in the course–let me say, demonstrate authority. In your landing page copy and with your other content, you’re going to have to give indications of authority that way as well for people to find the offer attractive.

But it’s a true authority enhancer once you get them to actually finish the course. As we’ll go through these elements, you’ll see that the fifth one is really compelling, and that’s a big part of it.

Jerod Morris: It is. So attention is the first reason. Let’s move on to the second reason now, which is interest.

What the Topic of Your Course Allows You to Learn About Your Prospects

Brian Clark: Right. Any time you’re trying to get someone something, whether you want to call it a ‘lead magnet,’ an ‘ethical bribe,’ or whatever terminology, you’re offering something to establish what this person is interested in–and by that, I mean what problem are they trying to solve?

By using these very strategic assets based on topical interest or problems to be solved, you’re learning something very important about them. That tells you what content you have to deliver to match up with your business objective at the end–whether that’s selling a product, getting them to call you for consulting, or some other kind of client engagement. You get the idea.

Interest is the bridge between attention and conversion, but it also informs, “What do I have to teach these people in order for more of them to want to do business with me?”

Jerod Morris: We often talk about how one of the benefits of digital products and an information product like a course is that the marketing is really baked into the product. That really comes out here–which, again, helps you develop the product that people are going to need. Then you already understand who those people are, so it’s easier to get it out to them once you have it done.

Brian Clark: Yeah. So my interest is learning how to create online courses. I know what I have to teach you as a preliminary matter to get you to take my broader course. Or you’re selling software or software as a service, and that functionality accomplishes something for people.

But let’s say with Rainmaker Platform, if you’re not well-versed in some of the strategies that the platform allows you to execute on, you’re going to feel lost. That’s just a perfect example of someone has an interest and you’ve got a solution–but what needs to happen in between those two things?

Why a Free Online Course Helps You Solve the Identity Issue

Jerod Morris: Now we move on to a topic that we’ve talked about before on previous episodes. We’ve got attention. We’ve got interest. Now it’s about identity, and again, we’ve talked about how every buyer’s journey is going to be different, and we’ve got to treat them as such. This concept of identity helps us take that first step toward doing that.

Brian Clark: Yeah. Identity is the fundamental opposite of one-size-fits-all marketing blast (you just send out the same message to everyone). Identity really allows adaptive content and automation principles to be used. In this context, it has an advantage over some of the more traditional uses of marketing automation, which rely on cookies.

Again, with an access concept, and specifically with an online course, the registration process provides identity–just like Facebook knows who you are, or Twitter, or Basecamp. Yet because you are experiencing this content marketing–which, make no mistake, that’s what this course is–inside a logged-in experience, then no matter where you come–whether it be your iPad, your iPhone, your desktop, your laptop–the identity piece is always there.

You don’t have the infamous cookie drop where your automation just falls apart because they switched devices on you, and you got this disrupted experience. That’s got to be jarring for everyone, but I definitely think that it impacts the ultimate success of that funnel.

How You Can Adapt the Experience for the People Who Take Your Free Course

Jerod Morris: Yeah. And when you have identity, this then allows you to take the next step. This is the fourth reason why creating a free course is a great thing to do and a great product to use as a lead magnet. You can adapt the content.

This is one of the reasons why creating a free course–for example, using an LMS is so much more beneficial than doing it if you just create it via email–is because you understand who the people are. Then you can adapt the experience to them, which is obviously quite beneficial.

Brian Clark: Yeah. This goes beyond even an access concept. For example, you give away an ebook, some other kind of process map, or a free download of some kind. All you know is, basically, did they opt-in, and did they download it.

If they don’t download it, you can adapt a little there and say, “Hey, don’t forget to download your free strategy guide because you haven’t yet, and we want to make sure you get the blah, blah, blah”–but you know nothing about what happens after that. It’s probably sitting on my hard drive, on my desktop

Actually, I have a reading file in Google Drive that has so many PDFs in it that I have not read. That happens, right? I opted-in. I got the thing. I never consumed it, and your follow-up emails I probably got annoyed with. I hadn’t achieved the benefits of knowledge that I was looking for from that download, so I just opted-out at that point.

With a course, it’s a very different thing, especially in a learning management system, because you know if they’ve consumed the content. Did they take lesson one? Yes. Check. Go on to lesson two. Lesson two, they got halfway through it and stopped.

Now, at that point, you can send a different kind of message that says, “Hey, I know life is distracting and things happen, so I just wanted to give you a gentle reminder that your lessons are still there available to you. Maybe you can pick it back up, blah, blah, blah.”

You see the power there. Could you watch someone with an ebook to find out if they were actually progressing through the information, but were they also progressing through chapter by chapter or page by page? We do have that ability with an access concept married with an LMS-style course.

I know you have done this kind of stuff with your Showrunner course, where you see where people get stuck, and you have tailored messages for them. That’s an amazing thing. That’s real adaptive content. You just can’t achieve that with just a static download.

Jerod Morris: Right. Well, you can even take it to the next level where, if you introduce something like quizzes, not only can you find out if someone’s progressing through the material, you can actually find out if they’re understanding the material and really getting it.

Brian Clark: Yeah. That’s actually a teaching strategy, too. If you test them, they will actually retain better than if you don’t. But you’re right. At the same time, that’s another indication of engagement that is very valuable to how you treat that prospect, someone who’s that highly engaged even at the quiz level–which, by the way, coming in Rainmaker very, very soon, I can’t wait to implement some quiz strategies. We’ll talk about those in the future.

When you see that level of high engagement, you might be more inclined to make an offer sooner than someone, obviously, who’s kind of poking through it, nitpicking here and there, skipping around, or just kind of fell off.

Again, every buyer’s journey is different. Yet if you don’t have the information about what they’re actually doing, consuming, engaging with, then how do you actually tailor that journey for them?

What This All Means for Conversion

Jerod Morris: Yeah. We’re talking about five compelling reasons why you should use free online courses as lead magnets. We’ve hit four of them so far: attention, interest, identity, and adaptation, and of course, now we go on to the fifth one. This brings us back to the ultimate goal with what we’re really trying to accomplish with all of this, which is conversion.

Brian Clark: Yeah. So often, this is really a mystery to me. It’s only because I’ve been doing it a long time, and I’m not being critical of anyone. But content marketing is about educating a prospect, so they can do business with you. It’s not enough to have attention, interest, or any of these other really important things on the way to conversion if you’re off the mark on what you’re teaching and how that is married up to what you’re selling.

When you understand what their problem is and you understand how your solution solves that, a course is like a laser-focused educational experience that can better convert a prospect into a customer or existing customers into repeat or recurring customers.

Now, this is the reason why we say that you need to understand your prospect and your customers almost better than they do. We have all of this information and data that we’re generating through a more adaptive content approach to where you can be constantly refining and testing.

Once you get to a point where you understand that they need to know boom, boom, boom, boom, five lessons, whatever, and that more people convert at the end of that than otherwise, that’s one of the more compelling reasons for this format.

Again, we’ve evolved along the way ourselves. Blogging every day hoping that day’s article connects with the right segment of people, and then maybe tomorrow the next one will connect.

When you create these type of very focused funnels using online courses, you’re going after a specific type of person in a very concentrated period of time with a sale in mind. This is going to be liberating to a lot of content marketers and digital entrepreneurs out there. The days of heavy-duty blogging are kind of over. I’m not saying blogging’s dead. I’m saying that laser-focused content is more effective and, ultimately, when you look at volume, easier to create.

Jerod Morris: Yeah. Like you said, you’re teaching people exactly what they need to know to, and you’re giving them little wins along the way. As you also mentioned, it’s a process then of adapting and figuring out what’s working, figuring out what’s not, adapting the message, adapting the content also to the people that you’re serving and the people that you’re trying to move through and get to take that next step.

The Importance of Testing and Understanding What’s Working, What Needs to Be Tweaked, and What to Double-Down On

Jerod Morris: That’s going to lead us into the fifth element that we’re going to talk about, which is about testing and really understanding what’s working, understanding what needs to be tweaked, understanding what needs to be doubled down on so that you really are, in a sense, creating a machine that is educating people, giving them value, giving them something that they really need, and at the same time, moving them along with you so that they can take the next steps with you–whether that’s business for the first time or becoming recurring customers. Then when you put it all together, it’s a beautiful thing.

Brian Clark: Yeah. All the elements we’ve talked about right now are incredibly important and incredibly powerful, but without testing, you’re still flying a little blind. I will say that, if you did steps one through four as a strategy and left off testing, as long as you executed well, you’d do better than you would do with another approach–but why not do your best?

That’s what testing allows you to do–the right word, the right button, the right case, the right that. It’s all discernible, and the technology is easier than ever. I know you and Lauren have been running tests I don’t even know about, but you guys are like kids in a candy store right now going, “Ooh, let’s test this.”

Jerod Morris: Yeah. Hey, if you can get a 20 percent bump in conversions for the same effort, why wouldn’t you do it?

Brian Clark: Absolutely.

How to Take Your Digital Commerce Education to the Next Level

Jerod Morris: Yeah. You might as well, and I do want you to know, if you’re listening to this right now, and obviously you are because you just heard me say that, if you want to take your digital commerce education to the next level and if you want to learn more specifically about courses and how to put together courses that really work, then you want to go get your free taste of Digital Commerce Academy if you haven’t already.

When you do that–and you can do it by going to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce–as soon as you sign up–and again, it’s free–you get four lessons in Brian’s course on how to build an online training business the smart way.

You also get three case studies, and one of those case studies is a story of Danny Margulies, who we featured on a previous episode of The Digital Entrepreneur–who went from soul-crushing job to six-figure freelancer, all the way to creating the mega-successful Secrets of a Six-Figure Freelancer course.

Now, that was a paid course, but the elements of what make courses work–whether they’re free or paid–there are obviously similarities there. There’s a lot to learn from both in Brian’s lessons, in that case study, and in some of the other content that you get in your free taste that will really help you, that you can apply to your situation and business. All of it’s available as soon as you register. Plus you get our free weekly newsletter, too.

As I said, it’s free. Go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce and get activated, get your free membership today, and start learning more, so you can put this into practice for you. The sooner you do, the better off you’ll be.

Brian Clark: Yeah. They also get some free access to our marketing funnels course–which, when you think about courses in the context of lead generation and conversion, as opposed to paid courses, that’s what you’re creating. You’re creating an adaptive content funnel. You’re just doing it in a very methodical way with some very powerful learning management technology on your side, which is pretty cool.

Jerod Morris: Yeah. All right, Brian. Stay warm. I’ll see you on email at 3:30 tomorrow morning.

Brian Clark: I slept until five today, man. I’m just slacking off.

Jerod Morris: I’ll talk to you next week, and we’ll talk to you next week on another brand-new episode of The Digital Entrepreneur.

Brian Clark: Take care, everyone.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

A Rainmaker Case Study on Using the Access Approach to Drive Business Results

by admin

A Rainmaker Case Study on Using the Access Approach to Drive Business Results

Robert Bruce and Chris Garrett join Jerod Morris on this week’s episode to discuss some real-life examples of what we discussed on last week’s episode.

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In this 37-minute episode Jerod, Robert, and Chris discuss:

  • The evolution of the New Rainmaker strategy to sell the Rainmaker Platform
  • The power of repurposing
  • Why creating a logged-in course experience beats adding people to a simple email list
  • Why the access approach is essential to setting up marketing funnels that work
  • They key components needed to set up an access experience that works

Brian will be back next week, and we’ll be diving into the fourth episode in our five-part series on the necessary elements of the modern marketing website.

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below …

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The Show Notes

  • Free New Rainmaker course
  • Digital Commerce Institute
  • Brian Clark
  • Jerod Morris
  • Chris Garrett
  • Robert Bruce

The Transcript

A Rainmaker Case Study on Using the Access Approach to Drive Business Results

Voiceover: You are listening to the Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs. DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce.

Jerod Morris: All right, do you guys just want to jump right in?

Chris Garrett: Let’s do it.

Jerod Morris: Cool.

Chris Garrett: Yeah, no idea what we’re talking about. I know you said something, but …

Jerod Morris: Hey, Chris, you know what? We’re just going to try and recreate our Monday afternoon call for the Digital Entrepreneur audience.

Chris Garrett: You mean, get us fired?

Jerod Morris: Right. Brian’s gone, so let’s have a little fun out of the Digital Entrepreneur while he’s gone.

Chris Garrett: We re going to talk about politics for an hour and a half, right?

Jerod Morris: That was my plan. We’re recording this on Super Tuesday number three. A lot of important things are going to happen today in the Republican primaries and the Democratic primaries.

Chris Garrett: Watch it, don’t say his name, don’t say his name.

Jerod Morris: Let’s give Brian something exciting to listen to when he gets back. Okay no, this is not politics talk, this is episode number seven of the Digital Entrepreneur. I am Jerod Morris, the VP of Marketing for Rainmaker Digital, and Brian is not here this week. But I have two very special guests with me to continue the conversation that Brian and I have been having.

We’ve been talking about the elements of the modern marketing website. Last week, we talked to you about the benefits of the access approach to online marketing. When Brian gets back next week, we’re going to be talking about using online courses as lead magnets. This is kind of an in-between-isode, to talk about both of those topics with two guys who know a lot about it.

The first gentleman is Robert Bruce. You know him well from Rainmaker FM and the earliest incarnations of the Rainmaker podcast. Robert, welcome to the Digital Entrepreneur.

Robert Bruce: Thank you, Jerod. I’m only here to talk about one thing today, and that is Donald Trump.

Jerod Morris: Toby, edit that. We are also joined by Chris Garrett, the chief digital officer for Rainmaker Digital. Those of you who have been inside of the Digital Commerce Institute or participate in our Q&As, you’ve gotten a lot of insight from Chris. He has a lot to share about this topic, so I’m excited to have him here as well. Welcome, Mr. Garrett.

Chris Garrett: Thanks for having me. I didn’t realize we were going to talk about Trump on this call. I didn’t come prepared for that.

Robert Bruce: Apparently, my first amendment rights are going to be taken away from me here if it’s edited out, but I’ll just keep saying it

You know what I was thinking? Isn’t it about time that, like in my case, you just start calling me robertbruce.com? Talk about the master marketing stroke. Why aren’t children being named after URLs yet? I mean, just take it straight there.

Jerod Morris: That’s interesting. Wasn’t there that one guy who sold his last name? It was something SurfrApp, and he just sold the rights to his last name. But you’re saying, like when my child is born, just …

Robert Bruce: You get the URL and you just name him the URL. Now, if you can’t get a real name URL, you’ve got an issue.

Chris Garrett: Bob.info.

Robert Bruce: But you know, then you’ve got 20 years of preparation. See, this is where Garrett gets into the conversation saying that in 20 years, URLs won’t even be around.

Chris Garrett: I was thinking cruelty laws. Surely there are laws against that.

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Robert Bruce: You’re probably right.

Jerod Morris: That poor child who has to have an underscore or a hyphen in her name.

Robert Bruce: Yeah, with a bad URL, that’s a good point. All right, sorry, just thought I d throw it out there.

Jerod Morris: No, it was a good idea.

Robert Bruce: I’m trying to think, you know …

Jerod Morris: Robert, this is a safe space. All ideas are welcomed here.

Robert Bruce: Okay, thank you.

Chris Garrett: It might get edited out.

Robert Bruce: I don’t want to trigger anybody.

Chris Garrett: You said Trump, so

Jerod Morris: Robert, here’s a question that I wanted to ask you. I wanted to lead off with it, because one of the examples that Brian and I have been talking about is what you guys did in the beginning with the New Rainmaker podcast and how that led into selling the Rainmaker Platform.

We’ve obviously been doing stuff with membership sites and with the access experience for a while, with My Copyblogger and some of the other things that we ve done, but launching the Rainmaker Platform was something really different. It was a brand new product, it was off site. We were building new properties and a new SaaS application. There was a lot of new stuff going on, and you guys had a new strategy for us, which was to get into audio and start doing this podcast.

Can you walk the audience through just how that came to be? And the conversations you guys had? The big picture strategy there with what you were doing in the beginning with the New Rainmaker podcast?

Robert Bruce: Yeah, you know, for the main strategy, Brian thought it up. And I actually struggled with it for a long time, with the idea of launching what would become our main line of revenue, hopefully, from what was essentially a brand new podcast. At that time, of course, we didn’t know.

I got it, and I knew what we were doing in terms of the podcast and the content and all of that, but I had my doubts as to whether this would work based on how we had done things in the past. So yeah, the idea was, from the beginning, we start this new podcast And anybody can do this, by the way. You can go register for free at Rainmaker.FM and go through the free course. We’ll talk about this later, but there are essentially seven episodes of that podcast.

We launched this podcast, put everything we had into it. We decided to do a couple of things differently, which were, in the beginning, more high-end production value. We wanted to move at least a notch or two toward kind of that NPR idea of things and see how it worked. But really, what we were doing was not talking about the platform, although we did do that too. Instead, we were talking about the things that you could do in your business and with your business via the platform.

And as those episodes went on and on, this bigger picture appeared of what could be possible with the use of the Rainmaker Platform, for instance, the objections to it and the ways that you could go with all kinds of different things in regard to the functionality that we were going to have.

So in one sense, it’s very simple. We started this podcast and we talked about the way to build a business. I think the main line we used back then was how to build an audience that builds your business. And that led directly and literally to the launch of the Rainmaker Platform. I think later we’re going to talk about what we did with that initial content.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, and that’s what I want to talk about next, because that’s what has always been so interesting to me about that strategy. That you created this podcast and those initial episodes, correct me if I’m wrong, but those just went out as podcasts as normal through iTunes. And they were all freely available so anybody could just go get them.

When did you repurpose those podcasts into the free course and then require people to actually register? Instead of just opting into an email list, they actually had to register. And they got those first seven episodes plus three webinars as a free course.

Robert Bruce: Yeah, the timing is a little fuzzy to me. I’m not really good with dates and times and things, but generally what we did was we took the first seven episodes of the podcast, and then Brian did another three more intensive webinars, like you said, and we packaged those all up in really just a basic repurposing play.

We did not re-record anything, we did not do any special editing, so there’s some stuff in there that you’ll see if you go again and register and listen to that course. It’s all really, really great information. We didn’t overdo it in terms of reproducing it as a course, necessarily, but it’s all laid out in there.

Chris, on the back end, on the dev end, and all of our developers working on the actual functionality of the membership site and delivering courses in that way — that was all being worked on in the platform. Then we could demonstrate it. Rafal, obviously, designed that course.

When you register at Rainmaker.FM, it s a free registration. You go in and you can see all of this displayed out, and what that is, again, is the first seven episodes of that podcast plus three webinars that Brian did. What this is, at this point, is an actual demonstration of what the Rainmaker Platform can do. You’re in there experiencing this content and this free training course, and you’re going through it, but you’re also in an environment which is, in real time, delivering the experience of the Rainmaker Platform to you. That was the idea.

Jerod Morris: Yeah.

Chris Garrett: It also told us what we needed to add to the platform to make it easy to do these things. A lot of it actually worked as education for us because it was a real thing rather than a hypothetical. It was a real use of our features. It also tells us that it’s really important to use your own stuff. It’s called dogfooding, eating your own dog food. I was saying, How do I do this and how can I make this better? And so it fed back into the platform as well. It was a demonstration of the platform, but it improved the platform too.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, I mean, there were myriad reasons why setting it up this way was so smart for us, and really necessary in a lot of ways. What I want to ask you, Chris, is for most of the people listening who want to create a course and kind of set up a funnel like we did because that’s what we were doing here. People signed up for that free course, then there was an autoresponder email sequence that went along with it. So as the lessons got dripped out, they got emails with the lessons. And then interspersed in that autoresponder, there were calls-to-action to the platform.

Obviously, there were lots of reasons for us to do it, just from learning more about the platform, improving the platform, using it as a demonstration for a platform. But this idea of requiring a log-in to create this access approach, and then using an online course as a lead magnet, even if you’re not developing a SaaS app. If you don’t have a learning management system that you’re trying to improve, this is a tried-and-true, a smart strategy. Why does this approach work so well and why is the access part of it so essential?

Chris Garrett: I will tell you now that if you just change your existing email opt-in form into a registration form, it won’t work. That confuses some people because there are people who say, Well, doesn’t it add friction? Doesn’t it give you a barrier? Won’t it lower conversion rates?

We always refer back to the My Copyblogger free member library over at MyCopyblogger.com, where we had a 400% increase in conversions. Some people say, Oh just changing it from an email opt-in to a registration increased conversions. No, it wasn’t just changing the form that increased conversions.

There’s a higher perceived value when you actually justify the registration, when you tell people what’s on the other side and what the future outcome is going to be of signing up. That’s the big difference in terms of the conversion. If you don’t give people an incentive, if you don’t tell people exactly what they’re going to get and what the experience is going to be like — make it easy, explain it, and then tell them what to do and show that it’s going to be valuable — you’re not going to get an increase in activity and action. You’re going to probably just confuse people.

Robert Bruce: I think you can argue too that creating that natural barrier of registration can be and is a really good thing, although it is not necessary or optimal for all digital businesses. Like you said, Chris, you’re not going to get the kind of activity and drive and numbers that are so impressive, that so many people talk about online.

But what you’re getting when you create a barrier like that or even a simple registration is the people who really, really want to be around what you’re doing. And ultimately, they will hopefully want to do business with you. Instead of high numbers, you’re getting high quality in terms of the type of people who are actively seeking you out and have probably come through word-of-mouth, which of course, as we all know, is the most powerful marketing there is.

Chris Garrett: They re more serious because they’ve taken the extra step. Actually, it’s custom something, even though it s not custom financially, it’s custom a little bit of effort, so they value it higher and you only get the serious people. It filters out the people who would just put an email address in just to get rid of the pop-up form. People do that, you know. If they can’t find the close box on a pop-up, they’ll just put their email address in, thinking that’s how to get rid of it. In this way, you’re filtering out the wrong people. They know what they’re signing up for. They have a little bit of a hoop to jump through.

But also, it feels higher value. It has a higher perceived value from the start because you’re registering as a member for this thing, and Look at all the things that I get. They know they can have it in the future because it’s not going to get lost in their email. It’s not just going to get foldered away somewhere, it’s going to actually be somewhere that they can come back to. They can reset the password if they forget it. It’s going to persist, and hopefully, you’re going to add to it or there’s going to be something substantial there. It’s not just sign up and get this crappy video.

Robert Bruce: Yeah, I echo that. Your log-in experience allows for a much more rich media delivery, and, as you say, so does keeping it there in a place that’s always going to be there.

Jerod Morris: It does, and what you guys are saying begs the next obvious question. Chris, I’ll direct this to you first. How do you decide, then, what you’re going to give away in, say, a free course or a free registration, and what people should eventually pay for?

Because you can make something really, really compelling for a free registration, but sometimes people fear that they’re giving too much away. And sometimes people are giving too much away. But I think for the most part, people probably underestimate how much they should give away for free. How do you make that determination for what you can give away for free and what ultimately needs to be held back for some kind of paid product or paid registration?

Chris Garrett: I always say there are a couple of large categories of what you should give away. The one that’s unusual, that we don’t really talk about much in this context, is you can test your audience with free content. You can see what they really like and want from you and what they need you to provide them so that you can solve their problems and help them achieve their goals.

Before creating a paid product, before going down the line of a full course or getting too deep into it, you can test your particular slice of the market to see what they respond to. You should be giving away webinars, ebooks, videos, even just testing with blog content to see what they respond to.

The problem with just a blog article is they can like it, they can share it, and they can comment, but that doesn’t really give you a big idea of what they’re going to eventually need you to create for them as a product. But something closer to the product would be webinars or something like a small course, like we’re talking about with Rainmaker.FM. It wasn’t a huge undertaking. It was already a podcast, and we packaged it up.

That can test the market and say, Okay, this is something people don’t just sign up for, but they actually consume and take action with. Now, free content, when you register for it, you can actually see what they do, so it’s another bonus for you as a site owner. You can see what they actually consume. What are they downloading? What are they responding to? What are they actually consuming and taking action with?

Jerod Morris: Chris, what’s the difference between being able to see that in a logged-in experience of a membership site versus the stats that you get from basic email marketing? Is it that much of a difference? Is it that much better for the business owner to be able to see that stuff?

Chris Garrett: Yeah, the problem with basic stats like your Google Analytics or email system is you can see if they click on an email, you can see if they do a page view, but it’s hard to connect the activity to a human being. Whereas if they re logged in with a user name, you know who they are. You know the progress of that person, regardless of device.

I am the same person logged in regardless of whether I use my phone, my iPad, my laptop, my desktop computer or whether I logged in from the library or am on vacation. Whereas Google Analytics finds it very hard to tie all those visits into one visitor who is a human being.

So you get a lot richer stats, but also, with the stuff that we have built into the Rainmaker Platform and some of the other marketing automation technologies, if they re logged in, you can actually apply tags and information to their user account. So you can say, Jerod has viewed this video for more than 30 seconds. Jerod took this quiz. Jerod completed the quiz and passed that quiz.

There’s a lot of stuff that we’re adding which builds on all of this, that’s going to make it even more rich, and obviously, you can then do automation based on those things. Everybody who passes this quiz gets module two. You can’t really do that very well with any other way than registering and logging in.

To answer the original question, the other side of what you should give away and what you should sell is, it’s really good to give away the what and the why, a little bit of the how, but you should definitely sell the detailed step-by-step how as a course or as a deeper, more detailed book or video series. Because the free stuff should be inspiration, it should give them some tips and some quick wins so they know you can help them, but you don’t want to overwhelm them with detail.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, and when we look at the New Rainmaker course — and Robert, I want to ask you about how that asset has evolved — ever since that course came out, we ve talked about how this is good enough to charge people for, and we haven’t. A lot of the reason for that, I think, is because it had a bigger business purpose, which we’ve talked about. And Chris, I think as you just described, it does a lot of what you want a free course to do.

What I found really interesting about that, Robert, is how that has evolved. Because originally, that free registration also built an email list, obviously, because everybody who registers is on an email list. And when we first had the platform ready, that email list was a big part of how we launched. And now, that list has really evolved since it originally was built. Can you talk a little bit about how it’s evolved and how you can do that? As your business changes, as things evolve, these assets that you’re building, they can evolve too.

Robert Bruce: In the spirit of the 2016 presidential race here in the United States, Jerod, I’m going to not answer your question, and I’m going to talk about what I want to talk about One thing real quick before I go there is that Garrett is obviously the expert in this kind of stuff, and I have nothing to add to what he just said.

But I would like to go back around to this idea of repurposing. I think this is super, super important in many different ways for people doing stuff online in any serious way. One thing that we don’t understand, and it’s really hard to wrap your head around, is this idea that when you put a piece of content out online, even something, say, that gets shared and gets spread around really, really widely, people actually don’t see or hear that piece of content.

Now, of course, many will comment, many will share, all of that. You know, there’s that aspect to it, but generally, people really don’t see that thing the first time. There’s this idea in advertising of the power of seven repetitions. Sean McCabe, who was just on the Unemployable podcast — I think that just came out today — he has a great article and podcast episode about the power of seven. If you go to seanwes.com, he talks about this concept in depth, the power of seven, the power of repetition.

So that means repeatedly sending your stuff out, which many people are against, myself included. I’m not comfortable doing it, but this idea that people don’t actually see it, especially when you get into environments like Twitter — you know, email and RSS are a different kind of thing — but certainly in what has come to be popularly known as the social networks, stuff goes by and people don’t see it.

There’s the repetition aspect of it, but there’s also the repurposing aspect of it, which is, we literally did those seven episodes, packaged them up, and put them into this free registration, behind the wall. And they’re sitting there, the very same episodes that we had out publicly for a couple of months beforehand, and people register for the free Rainmaker course, and they experience it either again or really for the first time, all the time.

I think that’s really important for people to understand, because we have this sense of, If I publish something and I put it out, great, everybody saw it, and on to the next thing. That’s really not how it works. It’s really not how to powerfully get through to people.

Jerod Morris: I’m glad that you made that point, especially as we’re talking about these elements of a modern marketing website and we’re talking about the benefits of the access approach and using an online course as a lead magnet. I know, because I’ve talked to people, and a lot of them get intimidated at what the content creation part is going to be.

It s possible that you already created the content that you would need to create the online course that you can use as the incentive to get people into your logged-in experience. Now, you may need to update it, and maybe you have ideas for something new that you can create, but if you can use this power of repurposing, it can really help you work smarter, not harder, which is huge. Time is valuable for all of us. I’m glad you doubled up and made that point.

Robert Bruce: Sorry I didn’t answer your question. To briefly, quickly answer your actual question, I ll say that it’s evolved a bit and it kind of hasn’t evolved at all. We still have that same free course in there. When you sign up to register at Rainmaker.FM, you’ll see that there. What is happening now, though, is we are also pointing towards the Showrunner course, which is actually a paid course within the Rainmaker.FM environment.

A lot of things are going to be changing over the course of the next year in terms of how that works, but when you register at Rainmaker.FM, you get the free course. You are also put onto the email list, which you’re notified of. It doesn’t just happen without your okay. That email list has become and is becoming more important to us.

What was initially the New Rainmaker podcast email list has become the Rainmaker.FM email list, the weekly newsletter. In that newsletter, we send out the best stuff from the week, and it’s really simple right now. We’re going to start expanding that with some more content as we go along.

It’s evolved, and it hasn’t. I mean, what you see as the registration over at Rainmaker.FM now is carried on in a lot of what you guys are doing over at DigitalCommerce.com. That’s, I think, the real story.

Jerod Morris: Chris, as we kind of wrap up here, you’ve seen so much of this and you’ve done so much of setting this up for yourself, these logged-in experiences. And you talked a little bit earlier about some common mistakes that people make in feeling like they can just turn it into a registration and it’ll work. Are there any other mistakes that you see people making consistently when they’re trying to do this that maybe you can point out and help people avoid as they set out doing this on their own?

Chris Garrett: I think one of the biggest mistakes I see experienced people make is going from this idea of giving stuff away and being generous to having a scattered approach where each individual piece is valuable, but it doesn’t make sense as part of the whole.

You need to have a flow from what you’re giving away and what you’re writing about through to the stuff that you sell. And that has to fit into your prospects, goals, and problems. As we said before, it has to solve a problem or help them achieve something. It has to flow instead of, Try this and take a look at that and sign up for this, and it all being good, but not making sense and not fitting together.

I think we’ve done a good job, as Robert’s just said, of leading from one thing to the next. You get some ideas, and the New Rainmaker list certainly helped a lot of people get their head around some really key concepts, but then it led naturally into the first launch of Rainmaker.

We didn’t even put it on Copyblogger.com, the initial call-to-action. We just sent it to this list to say, Hey, do you want to check this thing out? It made sense to people. And now as well, we lead people to DigitalCommerce.com, but then we lead people back to the Rainmaker Platform. It has a flow, and that means you can see progress, you can see if everything you’re doing is leading to the next step.

When all you do is have the scattered, ooh shiny, distracted approach to content creation, you don’t know if you are actually progressing anything or if you’re just distracting yourself and making more work for yourself.

So that’s the big problem I see with experienced people. And if you’re just starting out, don’t overwhelm yourself. Get the basics in place, get those foundations in place, get some sort of a call-to-action that leads people to sign up to your list. And get the people from your list to understand the problem you’re solving, where you’re going to take them, and what to do next. Get fancy afterwards, do the advanced stuff afterwards.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, well, we have come to the end of this episode of the Digital Entrepreneur, but I would like to give each of the candidates now 30 seconds to sum up their main argument in favor of using this access approach to online marketing, combining it with online courses as your lead magnets for building your registration. Mr. Bruce, I would like to give you the floor first.

Robert Bruce: I’d like to thank the listeners for this opportunity for me to be here. My strategy for making this work for you comes down to two simple words based on the experience that we have had over the last year, and that is: it works.

Jerod Morris: Excellent. Mr. Garrett?

Robert Bruce: That’s not very compelling, actually, sorry. Let me think about this for a second.

Jerod Morris: I thought you were going to say make marketing great again.

Robert Bruce: Yeah, I know. Sorry, I blew it. It needs to be more of an emotional appeal. I ll work on it.

Chris Garrett: I thought Robert was going to say, People asked me about this and we’re going to make it great. Don’t worry, we’re going to make it great.

Robert Bruce: Well, I’m already fired, so I might as well go for it.

Jerod Morris: Right.

Chris Garrett: Well, that’s repurposing, this podcast is going to be repurposed in our performance appraisal.

Jerod Morris: Yeah. Mr. Garrett, your final thoughts as we lead into next week’s episode, really digging in more to using online courses as lead magnets? Your final thoughts on why people need to be doing this?

Chris Garrett: Well, the first thing is, you need to stand out from all of your competition. Everybody else in the market is trying to get the same email addresses. So what are you going to do that’s different? And how are you going to take that initial attention and really engage them, really help them get some results that they can see with their own eyes? So that you don’t have to just say, Believe me, it’s awesome. Believe me, we’re going to make it great. They can see for themselves that it’s great and it works.

To me, there isn’t another option that works as well. It helps you differentiate and it helps you get real results for your prospects so that they’d want to be customers. They’re asking you, How can we go deeper, how can we take this to the next step? That’s the position that you want to be in. You don’t want to be just getting people onto a list that they’ll just tune out of or they don’t really participate with. You can really help people with it.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, you can. Well, if you want to take your digital commerce education to the next level, definitely make sure that you go get your free taste of Digital Commerce Academy. As I’ve been telling you in these last few episodes, you get free lessons from Brian’s course on building an online training business, and you also get some free lessons from Tony and Chris’s course.

And Chris, do you want to give folks just a brief overview of what your course inside of Digital Commerce Academy deals with? Obviously, there’s the paid version inside of the academy, but for those folks who do the free registration, if you go to DigitalCommerce.com/Register, you will actually get three free lessons in Chris’s course. And you can see how we’re doing exactly what we’re talking about here on this podcast.

Chris Garrett: Yeah, and the three lessons tell you the basics of everything you should be thinking about when creating funnels. And that’s those sequences that take people from being mildly interested through to really believing you can help them get ready to take the next step.

Jerod Morris: Yep, so go to DigitalCommerce.com/Register and get those free lessons. You ll also get three incredible case study webinars with Nathan Barry, Danny Margulies, and Brian Gardner. All of them are a must-watch for anybody who is a current or aspiring digital entrepreneur.

We’ll be back next week. Brian Clark should be here. We will move on to the fourth element of these essential elements of the modern marketing website that we’ve been discussing. We will dig in more to using online courses as lead magnets. Chris, thank you. Robert, thank you. It was a pleasure having you guys here today.

Robert Bruce: Thank you.

Chris Garrett: I approve this message.

Jerod Morris: All right, and we will talk to you all next week in another brand new episode of the Digital Entrepreneur.

Filed Under: Management & Marketing

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