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ProBlogger: How Our eBook Launches Have Evolved (after 235,000 eBook Sales)

ProBlogger: How Our eBook Launches Have Evolved (after 235,000 eBook Sales)

Link to @ProBlogger

How Our eBook Launches Have Evolved (after 235,000 eBook Sales)

Posted: 02 Oct 2014 08:17 AM PDT

This week on my main blog – Digital Photography School – we launched our 24th photographic eBook (a guide to post production of portrait images) and it got me thinking back about some of the changes in my blogging since I started back in 2002.

Over the last five years I’ve completely changed the way that I monetise my blogs. Up until this point my focus had very much been about making money through advertising (with some affiliate marketing) but in 2009 I began to experiment with eBooks (read more on this evolution in my blogging income in this post).

Screen Shot 2014 09 22 at 2 09 08 pm

A Few Stats on our eBook Sales

  • On ProBlogger, SnapnGuides and Digital Photography School we’ve now launched 34 eBook based products (including two printable collections).
  • Last time I checked we’d made over 235,000 individual sales of these products.
  • This 235,000 sales includes quite a few ‘bundles’ of eBooks so the individual number of eBooks sold would be much higher.

To say that I’m happy I took a step out of my comfort zone and created my first eBooks back in 2009 would be an understatement!

I still monetise my blogs through advertising and some affiliate marketing – but to have this newer and larger income stream is a bonus (although, it’s worth emphasising, was a lot of hard work).

The Biggest Lesson I’ve Learned In Selling eBooks

While that’s a lot of products when you look at them all together I’ve learned heaps since 2009 when I launched my first two eBooks and have many many mistakes a long the way.

One of the biggest lessons I’ve had is that the ‘launch’ of a new product is super important.

Today I looked back on my first product launches and was amazed just how much the approach to launching our products has evolved.

Note: Next week we’ll be running a fuller webinar for ProBlogger.com members on this topic that will walk you through the way we launch eBooks on dPS and ProBlogger.

My First eBook Launch

In 2009 when I launched my first photography eBook I wrote about the launch here on ProBlogger. To save you the read – the launch was pretty simple.

Once the product was created and loaded into our shopping cart system with an early bird 25% discount we launched with:

    • an email to our newsletter list
    • a blog post
    • a handful of tweets and Facebook updates

emailing a handful of potential affiliates to ask them if they wanted to promote the ebook

  • halfway through the 10 days I mentioned it in our weekly newsletter – very subtly
  • 10 Days later I ended the launch I again emailed and wrote a blog post saying that the discount period was coming to an end.

 

The result in sales looked like this with two spikes of sales around the two emails/blog posts:

E book sales

I was pretty amazed by the launch – 4800 eBooks sold and an income of around $72,000.

I wrote about some of the lessons from this first launch in a post on ProBlogger after the launch – in that post I wrote about a few ways that I’d change it next time – one of which was to not only have an email at the start and end of the launch but more in the middle – to try to stimulate sales in the middle (and to change the shape of the chart from a U to a W).

This is exactly what I began to experiment in the launches that followed. In fact today as I look at a typical launch of an eBook things have evolved a lot!

Our eBook Launches Today

Typically now when we launch an eBook our launch happens over a 4-5 week period (as opposed to the 10 days of that first launch). This enables us to promote the product numerous times in different ways over the month.

Note: if we go for a five-week launch it usually means we have a week off in the middle of the launch – so after week two, we wouldn’t email on week three. We do this if a product is going well naturally just to let our affiliates have a bit more time to promote it.

Here’s a graphic from a recent talk that I gave that lays out what a typical launch might look like (click to enlarge):

Screen Shot 2014 09 22 at 8 51 34 am

You’ll notice some of the same elements as the first launch outlined above but see that we’ve added a few new things including:

Pre Launch

Preparing readers for what is to come can build anticipation and whet their appetite for your product. Also getting readers familiar with the author/creator of the product (if they are not already) is important.

Showcasing the Author/Creator

If the author is not you – the blogger – getting them involved on the blog during the launch is important – it can help you build credibility and gives you natural ways to mention the product. As you’ll see in the graphic above we involved the author in guest posts and interviews on the blog but there might be other ways to showcase them including webinars, videos etc.

Competitions

We don’t always do a competition but will sometimes introduce one in week two which puts anyone who purchases our eBook in the draw to win a prize. Note: this is something you’ll need to check your local regulations on as not all countries allow competitions that require a purchase.

Testimonials

Week 3-4 usually involves an email and/or blog posts that involved testimonials that we’ve received from readers who bought the eBook. This of course relies upon you getting them – we typically find them in reviews that people have written or comments people have left on social or on the blog.

Mix it Up

Each of the weeks have a different focus. So instead of each week us emailing the same message ‘check out our eBook’ we’re emailing some kind of update that gives a different message and hopefully hits a different trigger point to purchase.

  • Many of our readers simply buy everything we launch so week one is all it takes.
  • Others need an incentive of a competition so week two hits the spot.
  • Others like to see what others think about the product so the testimonials work best.
  • Others still just need the incentive of the price rising, a competition ending or a bonus offer finishing to get them to buy.

Minimise the Annoyance Factor

It’s also worth noting that if someone buys the eBook that we are able to stop them receiving further emails – so they’re not being emailed another 2-3 times about something they’ve already bought. We do this simply by putting any purchases of the eBook into a new list on Aweber and then excluding that list from the next emails we send.

It’s also worth noting that over the launch period I’m very conscious of keeping everything on the blog as normal as possible.

Over the launch we still do the same amount of regular blog posts, our newsletters continue to mainly be about sharing great tips and tutorials and the vast majority of our social media updates are not about the product.

This means anyone who is not interested in the eBook still can be engaging with us in the way that they always do – so as to minimise the annoyance factor.

What Have You Learned About Launching Products?

The way that we launch our eBooks has evolved a lot over the last five years and will no doubt continue to change. It’s also something that we no doubt do differently to others.

So… I’d love to hear what you’ve learned about launching products on your blogs? What have you tried that has worked well for you?

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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How Our eBook Launches Have Evolved (after 235,000 eBook Sales)

5 Dead Simple Tactics For Those Struggling To Get Traffic From Twitter - DailyBlogTips

5 Dead Simple Tactics For Those Struggling To Get Traffic From Twitter - DailyBlogTips


5 Dead Simple Tactics For Those Struggling To Get Traffic From Twitter

Posted: 01 Oct 2014 09:18 PM PDT

For some people Twitter is simply a way to put their thoughts out about what's going on in their world. But for us bloggers Twitter is a valuable tool to get more people to read our content.

I won’t be able to count all those hours spent learning the trendiest Twitter Marketing tactics and then trying them out on my blog. But I can easily tell you how many of them brought me some results – no more than 20%.

So if you’ve been struggling lately to get some nice traffic from Twitter don’t lose your motivation just yet. Most of the tips that Social Media experts preach are nothing but a waste of time, but there are a few golden nuggets that are totally worth your time and effort.

1. Twitter Lets You Tweet Images – So Tweet Them!

Using Twitter for text is so passé! Most people are going to be drawn by a stunning picture rather than a great headline. But if you have both, you'll be golden.

Find the right visual to go along with your post and you're going to have people going to your website. This is particularly true if you are advertising a new product line, but it goes with any kind of update.

2. Make Your Content Easy to Share

The urge to tweet doesn’t last long. Once your reader feels he’d like to share your piece of content with his following, he will either do it the same second of forget about it forever.

If you don’t have a tweet button in a place where it’s easily accessible by your readers – you’re missing out. If you ask me – I prefer those that float with you as you scroll down. You can add them to your articles by using a plugin like Digg Digg.

3. Nail It With Your Headline

Think about the newspapers. What kind of headlines do they have? What makes you want to read them? Usually the catchy titles, right?

  • A Few Ways You Can Make Money Fast
  • 5 Easy Ways You Could Make Money Today. #3 Will Blow You Away!

Those two headlines are basically about the same thing, but the second one is more attention grabbing, right?

An average Twitter user is bombarded with hundreds of headlines per hour. Can you win his attention in this cruel war? If your headline is not enticing enough – you’re going to lose plenty of potential readers.

If you ask me – I’d use the dirtiest headline tricks to win some attention on Twitter. Go read some tips on writing killer headlines and practice them till you become a true ninja!

4. Give Them Some Evergreen Content

People always appreciate helpful content that never expires. If the content you publish will be relevant years from now – you’re going to enjoy a steady flow of Twitter traffic for just as long.

But creating this kind of content alone won’t break the deal. You should send some readers at it from time to time, so that they could tweet it out bringing even more readers to the piece.

You can do that by:

  • frequently referencing your evergreen content in newly published articles;
  • placing a link to it in the sidebar of your blog;
  • creating a “resource page” and listing all of your evergreen content there;
  • tweeting it manually or using a plugin like Revive Old Post or any other twitter automation tool;
  • scheduling it with tools like Hootsuite or TweetDeck.

5. Motivate People to Share Your Content

Don’t know if you’ve already noticed, but many bloggers have adopted a brand new tricky way to motivate their readers to tweet more often.

Other than having those floating tweet buttons to make their readers tweet the actual article they place short catchy takeaways within the article itself and make people tweet those as well.

This tactic is now known as “tweetable quotes” and I bet you’ve already seen some articles with tweetable quotes in them.

You might also noticed bloggers talking about ClickToTweet online service or TweetDis plugin for WordPress as ways to create those fancy-looking “tweetable quotes”.

But in case you’re new to this concept, I strongly recommend you to research it further.

All of these tips work together to help you drive more traffic from Twitter to your blog. Whether it's creating interesting and inspirational headlines, making it easy to tweet or motivating your readers to take action – you will find that they can provide you with a lot more traffic to your website than you were expecting to get.

Tim Soulo calls himself an MMA marketer (which stands for "Mixed Marketing Arts") and his focus is tactics and strategies that bring you either money or clients. Make sure to visit his personal blog at: BloggerJet.

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!