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Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Ryan Deiss Job Promise Promotion Draws @FTC Eyes

Posted: 07 Jul 2012 10:19 AM PDT

Disclaimer: I am not an FTC Attorney or any kind of attorney.  I have no relation to the FTC other then consulting. These thoughts are my own and not condoned or endorsed by the FTC.

I get a lot of spam,  as I am sure you do, with crazy offers of promises of instant employment if you buy some info product.  But all of them I have ever gotten are well hidden behind fake names, proxies, and lots of other stuff.

I know this first hand because of the many lawsuits we have had to protect our images and trademarks.

This is the first time that I have ever seen a well known internet marketer, who is very easy to find, has put his face and brand on an offer challenging the FTC’s rules.

But he is doing it in a interesting way that will set a precedence for the future.

A while ago I got this email from a well known affiliate marketer that really troubled me at the time.  Mostly because I wondered if anything came down if he would be on the hook for promoting this…  But I will get into that later.

Lets look at the strict FTC rules named specifically at “work at home programs”,  amended March 2012,  before we even read this email:

To help consumers make informed decisions about work-at-home programs, there are five key items work-at-home businesses must now disclose using the FTC approved disclosure form:

1. Its identifying information (i.e. the name, business address, and telephone number)
2. If earning claims are made, the basis for that claim
3. Whether the company, its affiliates or key personnel have been involved in certain legal actions
4. Whether the company has a cancellation or refund policy.
5. A list of people who bought this business opportunity within the previous three years.

Subject: $24-$77/hr. jobs available

URGENT JOBS ALERT:
22,982 positions JUST BECAME available
START IMMEDIATELY
!

Click the video link below now:

Click here for this video

Dear Underpaid & Frustrated Worker,

Are you looking for a job but can’t find one?

$24 – $77 an hour is the base pay for this new new job that has been created by Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

Here are all the details, click below:

CLICK HERE NOW FOR ALL THE DETAILS!

There are currently over 22,982 positions available and you can work remote from your home.

You can learn this job in a single weekend and be working by next week. Seriously!

-OR-

You can start part-time, so if you have a good job, you can keep it.

You set your own hours.

You really need to see this…

CLICK HERE NOW FOR ALL THE DETAILS!

To Your New Job,

Ryan Deiss
TheStrangestJob.com

P.S. I will be closing this out soon so you MUST go now.

$24/hr. to $77/hr. jobs available seriously – if you want in on this, you must CLICK HERE!


When visiting the website you do not see any such disclosure required by the FTC on a “work at home program”.

But does it even apply?

After emails with people with a lot of FTC experience we kind of all have the same thoughts.

Reasons on why this might not fall under violation of the work at home jobs section:

  • You are just giving up your email address.
  • You are not asked to pay money  for any of this information.
Reasons on why this could fall under violation of the work at home jobs section:
  • The website does not contained the require FTC disclosure for “work at home jobs”.
  • For those who don’t know how this works – this is the first “bait” to get people’s information to sell them a product.
  • The email does have value.  If you look at my earnings in past promotions of product launches you can see its over $20 per click.  Lets say 50% opt in then that is a value of over $40 per email ($80) if there was no affiliate commissions.
  • The emails collected from that website will be used for future promotions.  Count another $100 per email collected.
So in the end this could be either a genius way to promote or Ryan could be the “poster child” of what is crossing the line.
Curious what you think

Trying to increase your Google rank that is like no other?

“Weekend Project 1: Fix a Mess of a Multi-topic Blog” plus 1 more

“Weekend Project 1: Fix a Mess of a Multi-topic Blog” plus 1 more

Link to @ProBlogger

Weekend Project 1: Fix a Mess of a Multi-topic Blog

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 10:00 AM PDT

This guest post is by Natalie Webb of Leave Me to My Projects.

You started your blog because you were passionate.

You wanted to write about everything you love. You wanted to inspire people with your passions and your well-rounded knowledge in all of your areas of expertise. You wanted to put yourself out there and bring real value to the lives of your adoring readers.

Mess

Image courtesy stock.xchng user shelead

The love spiral would continue until the internet was throwing money at you like a pre-fame Channing Tatum up on stage. And yet…

Your traffic numbers are decent, but people aren’t sticking around on your blog. They aren’t interacting, with you or each other.

They certainly aren’t subscribing. Your readers aren’t connecting, and you aren’t helping.

So you scour the big meta blogs (blogs about blogging) for advice. They all tell you that to be successful in the blogosphere, you need to niche down and specialize. Micro-niche, even.

Here are five posts by very savvy and successful bloggers that will tell you all of the reasons why you should pick a topic and stick to it.

It makes sense, right? Less clutter, more focus. It’s business 101.

But let’s get real, shall we?

You. Don’t. Wanna.

Anyone who has caught an episode of Hoarders knows they these people don’t set out to have the mess in their homes eat them alive. They really do have the best of intentions. They love these belongings so much they cannot bear to part with any of them.

Although real-life hoarders are an extreme example, in a way, you understand them. You love each of your topics like one of your hoarder feral cat children. You know that to have a happy, balanced blog and life, you need to simplify and get back to basics.

But again, you don’t wanna. Your blog is you. It is your home, where you keep all of your most precious projects, ideas and musings. So you plod along, scattered and disorganized, believing that your passion will shine through and earn you a loyal following.

But it’s not going to happen. Blogs without focus do not have sticking power. They will not encourage readers to engage, and they will not make you money.

After all, how is anyone going to connect to your blog and stick around if they aren’t even sure what you do? Are you even sure?

If you suddenly found yourself standing in an elevator with Darren and he asked you what your blog was about, would you be able to tell him before your short ride was over? More importantly, would he exit those doors interested in knowing more?

If you cannot sum up your blog—what it is about, what you do and who you are—in a nice, succinct elevator pitch, you probably have a big, idea hoarding mess of a multi-topic blog on your hands.

I’m here to help you clean it up. That’s right. You can have your blog, and make it work, too. Consider this your intervention.

Let’s get to work

To make your multi-topic blog focused and relatable, I will walk you through five steps:

  1. Taking a blog inventory
  2. Creating a customer avatar of your ìOneî reader
  3. A little self-analysis
  4. Keep, Sell, Toss
  5. Finding your unifying thread.

After that, we get to put it all together. Are you ready? Here we go.

1. Take an inventory

Before you can figure out what you need, you have to figure out what you have. Start by making a list of all of your main topics or categories. Now go through your posts and find out two things:

  • Which categories seem to be most popular with your readers? You can use post comment counts, page views, or whatever metric works for you.
  • Which categories are the most filled out? While you may love all of your topics, there are bound to be some you do not write about as often as others.

Rank your categories in order from best to worst, but do not ditch any under-performing categories just yet.

2. Weed out your one perfect customer/reader

Much has been written lately in blogland about messaging and customer avatars. The idea is to write as if you are writing to only one person in the world.

Even if many of your real live readers do not precisely match this avatar, your messaging is clear, focused, and personal. That is what makes a blog great to read.

Danny Inny over at Firepole Marketing wrote an incredibly insightful post about this, complete with a beautiful checklist for finding your one perfect reader. You can get it for free by tweeting or sharing the page, and I highly encourage you to do so.

This is the sticking point for a multi-topic blog, isn’t it? Because you have so many topics, you have essentially been writing for everybody! How are you going to be able to narrow down your ideal reader traits to a single avatar? Relax, you don’t have to. Initially.

Instead, pretend that you have split each category of your blog from the previous exercise up into its own niche site, independent of the others.

Write out a customer profile for each niche, using Danny’s checklist. Do this for each of your main topics. Make a spreadsheet if you like.

Now look for similar customer traits between each of your niches. Do you see any patterns jumping out? Age, marital status, kids, interests, professions? Make a list of any traits that occur more than once, and how often.

At this point, you can start constructing your overall reader profile—the kind of reader that really does love and connect with all of the random things you write about.

But we’re not done yet. Now it’s time to breathe life into your ideal reader.

3. Analyze yourself

The common thread to pulling an unorganized blog together, surprisingly, is often found in you.

Pull up Danny’s customer profile sheet again. Fill it out again, answering these questions for you personally.

Using both your own profile and the list of most common traits, you can begin to cobble together a much more accurate profile of your ideal reader.

After all, you are writing this blog based on your own passions and experiences, correct? Why shouldn’t your ideal reader include a bit of yourself?

You see, that’s where the connection happens.

4. Keep, sell, toss

Now it’s time for the hard part. Just like any hoarder rehab, you are going to have to let some things go.

Keep: Set your new reader profile and your Inventory from Step 1 in front of you. Do any of your best-performing topics fit your reader profile particularly well? Good! Those are your absolute keeper topics.

Sell: If you have the time (and understandably, not many of us do) consider splitting off a topic or two that does not fit your blog into a separate blog.

Toss: Now you have to get ruthless. You’re going to have to do some soul-searching and figure out which extraneous topics you can let go. Chances are there will be one that you just can’t bear to part with. In that case…

5. Find your thread

Maybe that is your thread.

Perhaps you write a blog about crafts, DIY, cooking, gardening, hair, beauty, photography, wellness, and more. You have gotten rid of your Haute Couture and Blogging sections, but the one you cannot bear to let go is video games. Your love of MMORPGs is too intense.

Things just got real specific, folks.

Maybe your thread is craft-loving fantasy geeks. And boy are there a lot of them out there. Just look at anything Felicia Day posts on social media.

Put it all together: picture your publication

Everything is falling into place now. All the junk is cleared away, and the hoarder house is clean. Now you just have to put it all together so that you don’t lose your way ever again.

With what you now know about your reader and your topics, it’s time to find your message.

Your blog is an online publication. Start treating it that way. Sure, it may be personal, but it’s also your business (or so I would assume—you are reading Problogger, after all).

Publications, like books and magazines, have to have a flow, a layout, or in the case of magazines, an editorial calendar.

Right now I only want you to picture your blog as a book. It doesn’t matter if you want to write a book eventually or not. For this exercise, you do (and after this, it might not be a bad idea!).

Why a book and not a magazine? Magazines are ongoing, with constantly updated content, and are certainly more akin to how a blog works. But books have permanence. They can stand the test of time. And isn’t that what you want your blog to be?

  • What is the title of your book? Maybe a subtitle too!
  • Mentally (or physically) design your book cover.
  • How would you divide up the chapters and sections?
  • Write your book jacket copy. What is your book about, and how can it help that ideal reader of yours?

And now, just like on any good A&E show, the big reveal.

  • Your book title? That’s your new tagline.
  • Your book cover? That is what your pages should look like.
  • Your chapters and sections? Let them guide how you organize your site’s pages and menus.
  • You jacket copy? That’s your message.

Extra credit: guest posting

Even after all of this, I know there are some topics that you will have trouble letting go. Take heart, because you don’t have to.

When you have items that you don’t have room to keep in your home, what do you get? A storage locker, a.k.a. guest posts.

Keep writing those posts on topics that you love, but do not fit with your blog. The trick is to keep your overall message in mind when you write—not your ideal reader, but your message.

The idea with these guest posts is to pitch them to blogs that you enjoy, but are not the ideal reader of. This post is one such example.

I’m sure the ideal Problogger reader is not a 29-year-old barber stepmom, obsessed with Martha Stewart, wishing she lived in Rivendell. And that reader almost certainly does not frequently sport a peacock-colored mohawk. And yet…

What it all means

Like hoarders, we bloggers can get so used to the mess we see around us that we lose all objectivity as to the impression our blog makes on new readers. With every additional topic you cover, it gets exponentially more difficult.

The key is focus. If you follow the process I have outlined in this post, I guarantee that you will arrive at a clear and accurate customer avatar, strong unifying thread and clear, compelling message.

Tomorrow I will be back to show you five blogs that have mastered the ability to convey a clear, strong brand while juggling a wide variety of topics—and I’ll clue you in to their five secrets to killing it in the Pinterest niche.

What struggles have you had with focusing your multi-topic blog? Share in the comments below!

Natalie is a truly Edward Scissorhands living in a Martha Stewart world. A Chicago-based writer, barber and obsessive DIYer, she blogs over at Leave Me to My Projects about her adventures in the DIY lifestyle with loads of how-tos and inspiration. She also spends way too much time on Pinterest.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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Weekend Project 1: Fix a Mess of a Multi-topic Blog

Weekend Project: Get Focused With Your Multi-topic Blog

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 07:07 AM PDT

It’s standard professional blogging wisdom that to succeed in blogging, you need to choose a niche. This is a point that I’ve made many times, and it’s advice I still stand by.

That said, there are many, many bloggers out there with multi-topic blogs who aren’t about to “niche down” any time soon. They love their blogs, topics, and readers too much to narrow their focus. Take, for example, Dooce. It’s not just a multi-topic blog, it’s a personal blog too—and one that’s monetized. Also, it’s just one of millions.

So there are plenty of bloggers out there who thoroughly enjoy multi-topic blogging, and many are making a living from it.

This weekend is designed for them: we have a weekend project that will help all the multi-topic bloggers out there get their blogs in order, help them focus on those topics they love, and assist them to gain more readers and followers through more creative, strategic thinking.

Though it seems like this weekend project is just for multi-topic bloggers, I have the feeling it’ll help any blogger who has more than one content category on their site. Like me, you might have been running your focused blog for a few years, and you might be finding that a topic spring-clean and strategic re-focus might help.

In that case, this weekend project is also perfect for you.

Today’s article, the first part in the series walks you through the process of conducting a topic inventory, and working out where your passions lie, who your readers are, who you are, and how you should focus your efforts.

Tomorrow’s article, the second part, looks at the way multi-topic blogs can really excel on certain platforms. Author and blogger Natalie Webb will profile five multi-topic blogs that are making the most out of Pinterest (as well as other social platforms). It’s an intriguing case study even for those with the most niche-specific blogs.

I think you’ll find this a really intriguing project. And if you have—or have ever had—a multi-topic blog, we’d love to hear about it in the comments. What’s your blog about? How long has it been going and where’s it heading? Share your stories with us in preparation for the first post, which will publish later today.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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Weekend Project: Get Focused With Your Multi-topic Blog