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Dear Friend,
Let's talk about how to make some money.
Better yet, let's talk about how to start
your own "kitchen
table" direct
response business... even if you don't have any money to get started.
That's not EXACTLY true. You do
need a little money to get things going... about $200 or less.
If you're so broke you don't have $200
bucks,
(Believe me, I've been there) sell your television to raise the seed
capital you
need.
Even if your project doesn't work out,
you'll STILL be better off, in my most humble (but accurate) opinion.
Your TV isn't doing anything but wasting your time and lowering
your I.Q.
Successful people have big libraries. Broke
people have big TV's.
Put that in your pipe and smoke it cuz it's
true.
Let's move onward, my soon to be kitchen
table entrepreneur amigo.
What exactly is a "kitchen
table" direct
response businesss, you ask?
Simple.
It's a business you start "boot strap-style"
at your kitchen
table with very little money, equipment, inventory or... actually...
without much of anything at all... except that rarely used gray matter between
your ears.
I started my business with nothing but a
yellow notepad
and ball point pen... literally. And
13 years later, it's STILL supporting my bad habits of sleeping indoors
and eating... along with a few other guilty pleasures.
Knowing what I know now... if I had to do it
all over again...
This
is EXACTLY
how I
would
start again today...
But with a few little tweaks I'll reveal
later.
Let me take you back a few years to my
exploits as a teenager in Barberton, Ohio.
(Actually... more like a
couple
DECADES... but let me delude myself, OK?)
I was the typical skinny kid tired of
getting sand kicked in
his face. I wanted to bulk up so I could kick some ass when
necessary...
and hopefully attract a few ladies. (I've accomplished both, by the
way.)
So I started buying muscle magazines,
bodybuilding courses, nasty-tasting protein powders... and other
assorted "goop" that was supposed to transform me into a mini
version
of
"Aaahnold" in 6 to 8 weeks.
None of that stuff actually did that... but
some of it DID get me closer to my goals. So I was hooked... and was a
rabid mail order customer of bodybuilding products.
When I discovered this mail order/direct
response business stuff, naturally, the first niche I chose was
bodybuilding. After all, I was already a customer in that market and
I understood the
hopes, dreams and desires of the customers.
Plus, I figured I was going to continue
reading bodybuilding publications and buying products in that niche
anyway... so I might
as well make a few bucks, too.
Make sense?
If I would have chosen a niche like mini
donkeys (which is probably a pretty good niche) I would be
bored to
tears. As profitable as that niche might be, I have no interest
whatsoever
in it. No matter how much money I make, it would feel
like a J-O-B.
But the bodybuilding niche was FUN.
My very first little project was initially a
dismal failure. But after some
tweaking, it was a success. Not a HUGE success... but it put
some extra coin in my pocket and eventually grew to where I was able to
quit the dead-end civil service job I had grown to hate.
But enough about me. Let's talk about what
YOU think about me.
No, seriously... enough small talk. Let's get
down to business.
Here's a "blow by blow" of...
Doberman
Dan's First
Kitchen Table Entrepreneurial Venture
It all started when I wrote a little
bodybuilding manual called A
Genetically Average Joe's Guide To
Gaining 20 lbs. of Muscle In Eight Weeks.
Stupid title, I know. That's what my friends
said, too.
See, I made the mistake of sharing my little
project with a few friends and co-workers. They made fun of
it.
But hey... at least I was
doing SOMETHING. They weren't doing anything
but MEDITATING about their "great business ideas"... but accomplishing
NOTHING.
It's interesting... those same people are
STILL thinking about that business they're gonna
start "some day." And they're still broke, in debt and stuck in
dead-end jobs they hate.
A bit of advice from your old pal,
DD...
You probably don't want to share your
plans about starting a kitchen table
direct response biz with
your friends and family.
In most cases, their response will be less
than
positive.
Issue 5 explains all about the dream stealers and how to
handle them. If you plan on "raising your head above the crowd" I
highly suggest you read it.
But I digress.
So to sell my little self-published manual, I
took
out
a classified ad in one of the muscle magazines.
I wrote some
spellbinding copy which I was SURE would whip my market into a rabid
buying
frenzy...
and the checks would come swooping into my mailbox by the thousands.
The classified ad said...
How
a genetically average Joe can gain 20 lbs. of muscle in 8 weeks.
Send $7 for manual to P.O. Box 69, Flunkyville, OH 44203
The magazine had a stated circulation of
100,000. I was really "conservative" and expected a 10%
response.
I only printed up twenty copies of the
manual because that's all I could afford. I planned on printing the
other 9,980 copies as
soon as the orders started rolling in.
Hmmmm... let me do some advanced direct
response calculations here:
10,000 orders x $7 a copy =
$70,000...
Minus $75
for the classified ad...
Minus $30,000 for printing the manuals =
$39,925 left for me! Woo hoo!
That was a lot of money for me
back in 1995. I was dreaming of telling my boss to "shove it", buying a
Porsche, Rolex... and paying my rent on time.
Guess how many orders I actually got.
Go ahead... guess.
One.
One pathetic little order.
And it was from a patient at a state mental
hospital.
After all my time and effort writing the
book, slaving away on my brilliant classified ad copy... and waiting
two
months for the ad to come out... only one
person was crazy enough (literally certified crazy) to buy my book.
But did I get discouraged and give up?
Nooooooooo... not by a long shot.
Heck... if you had seen the string of failed
business ventures and moneymaking schemes before this one, you'd
probably be shocked. (I'll share those in a future issue.
I've learned WAY more from my failures than successes.)
Maybe I was just too stupid or too stubborn
to give
up... but I KNEW I could start a successful mail
order business.
So I plodded along at least trying to fall
FORWARD.
I posted my experience with
this failed project in an old mail order discussion board on AOL. A guy
named
Tony
Blake told me to call him if I wanted some help... free of
charge.
A half-hour phone conversation with him
helped me turn things around.
Thank you, Tony.
One of the most important things he told me
was I didn't want to sell a book...
I wanted to sell a "system."
So I added some bonus reports, software, an audio
recording and eventually a video. The price was bumped up to $49.97
then $77, $97... and finally $177.
Instead of trying to sell directly from a
classified, I started doing small two-step display ads
in the muscle magazines. The ad directed prospects to a 24-hour
recorded message
where they could request a free report.
I'm sorry I don't still have the exact ad I
used...
but it was something like this:
Attention
Hard Gainers...
FREE report reveals how to gain
20 lbs. of muscle in only 8 weeks.
Call the 24-hour FREE recorded message
800-777-7777
I'll never forget how excited I was the first time I checked my
voicemail and had 44 messages.
I wasn't as excited two hours later after
transcribing them all by hand. That
sucked out loud.
I got smarter down the road and found a
voicemail service that transcribed the messages every day and sent them
to me by e-mail. (That was really cutting edge stuff back in '95.)
I sent the callers my free report which was
a sales pitch in disguise. It was just a simple letter with a headline
at the top and the body copy typed in a courier font.
If you promise not to make fun of it, I
MIGHT let you see the actual sales letter.
Promise?
OK, here it is.
I
know there are a lot of things wrong with it. When I wrote it I knew
practically NOTHING about copywriting and I hadn't
read ANYTHING about how to write copy. I didn't even know there
was information available about copywriting. I just modeled my
letter
after the ones I saw Dan Kennedy using.
But it converted 10% of the
leads into buyers.
Not bad, huh?
Oops... hold on a sec. I forgot an
important part of the story...
About six months before all this... when I
was struggling with one of my
previous business ventures that later crashed and burned, I had gotten turned
onto Dan Kennedy through some kind of lead
generation ad.
I don't remember the details but I
DO
remember he sent me this long sales letter crammed full of copy. The
headline was so compelling I immediately
plopped down in my nasty, broken down second hand sofa to read it word
for word.
I bought Dan's Magnetic Marketing System for
$397 which I thought was a FORTUNE at that time. I mean... who in their
right mind spends 400 bucks on a crappy-looking book in a 3-ring binder?
Me and several hundred thousand other smart
people... that's who.
Anyhoo... I carefully observed how Dan sold
me his
$397 Magnetic Marketing
System and I figured I could do the same thing
with my bodybuilding product.
So I swiped some of Dan's ideas. Most
important... sending the same free report to the non-buyers a few weeks
later with a big "SECOND NOTICE" stamped in red at the top like this:

And then sending the same free report to the
non-buyers a few weeks after the second one with a big "FINAL NOTICE"
stamped in red at the top like this:

The combination of the "SECOND NOTICE"
and "FINAL NOTICE" reports brought in an additional 8% sales.
I probably could have gotten more sales if I
would have kept following up with the leads. I stopped after the "FINAL
NOTICE" mailing because I didn't know any better.
Dumb mistake. Don't do that, OK? Keep
following up with your leads until it is no longer profitable.
So I had a little system going... all
operated from my kitchen table.
I
transcribed the leads... addressed the envelopes by hand... stuffed the
sales letters into the envelopes... and made my daily trek to the post
office.
I created something from nothing... armed
only with my
wits, a yellow notepad and a ball point pen... and had perfect
strangers sending me money every day.
It was sooooo exciting.
I was bitten by the bug and realized I would
probably be in this business for the rest of my life.
Let's
review the investment and materials needed to get this going...
- Kitchen
table and chair - My Mom had given me these so my
investment was zero.
- Yellow
notepad - I bought a 3-pack for a $2.99
- Ball
point pen
- I think I used one
that was left in my work shirt... so total investment...
zero.
- Small
lead generation ad in the muscle magazine
- approximately $100. The rate card for that size ad was about
$400... but I begged and cried about how broke I was and got a better
price.
- Initial
printing of the sales letter, stamps, envelopes, etc. -
$50 or less.
- Voice
mailbox - $12.95/month. (They run about $20/month these
days.)
Total
investment - $165.94
Is this how I would start today?
Yup... but with one additional step.
I
would test my two-step campaign with Google Adwords BEFORE running it
in the magazines. The call to action would be to have the
prospect opt-in with their e-mail to
receive the free report.
I would test and tweak everything online
until
the lead-gen ad and free report were all humming along at "concert
pitch"... and THEN I would start rolling it out in the magazines like I
described earlier.
I would also test and roll out in direct
mail... but that's a subject for another newsletter.
I just recently completed this entire
process with a new lead generation campaign.
I tested it online using Google Adwords and
the results were really good. The conversion to buyers was OK, too.
But when I took it OFFLINE in the
magazines... the response was overwhelming!
And so
far... with only the very first follow-up mailing (snail mail... NOT
e-mail) the conversion to buyers is 300% better than the online results!
With
my ongoing direct mail follow-up sequence, I fully expect to bring in
at LEAST another 50% to 60% more buyers than my initial mailing is
converting.
So look at how much money... and how many
new customers I'd be missing out on if I ONLY did this online.
I've said it before and I'll say it
again...
If
you limit yourself
to ONLY online marketing...
you're leaving a HUGE amount of money on
the table.
Dumb, dumb, dumb.
Don't do that, OK?
All the best,
Doberman Dan
P.S. Things have been going really well
for me the past few years... and I want it to continue.
Gary Halbert used to tell me the way
to keep things going well in your life is to always give back. So how
can I best do that with you?
I've got an idea...
How about I do a free
teleseminar?
I was
kinda hoping to teach you more about how to start kitchen table direct
response businesses... and how to grow them once they're up and
running. You really can start "boot strap" style like I described above
and
grow it into a multi-million dollar business pretty quickly.
But what I want really isn't important. I
want to do what YOU want.
Do me a favor, OK?
Click here and send me an e-mail telling me what you'd like
me to teach in a free teleseminar.
If I get enough responses, I'll do it.
And when I say FREE... I mean it. 100%
content... no sales pitch.
Heck, even if I WANTED to sell you something I
couldn't.
You can't hire me for copywriting or
consulting anymore and I don't have any products to sell. I'm too busy
doing what I taught you in this newsletter to become a "guru" and sell high
priced marketing products. Anyhoo... I look forward to hearing from you... and hopefully we'll speak soon on a teleseminar.
Oh... and thanks for reading the
newsletter.
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