Episódios
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What do you recommend for Book funnels in terms of advertising? Alright. Specifically referencing my Intent Based Branding methodology. And so I will give that answer regardless of methodology. So if the objective of the campaign is to sell a book, you first have to look at what is the objective of selling the book.
Do you want to make an immediate profit during that?
Do you want them to consume the book and then become fans and then buy more stuff later.
What's the end result?
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Estão a faltar episódios?
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The question is how do you script your videos?
And the answer is I personally don't script my videos, but I do have a framework...
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I know the types of people that I was attracting before aren't going to be the ones that work with me at the level that I do, these new ones. And so it begs the question, how do I get more qualified prospects in the pipeline?
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He's running some ads and he's not getting any sales. And to that I reply, welcome, sir, to the club.
And so I don't really understand the question. It says is it only sales conversion that count? Or should I check for some other stats? I'm not...
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Is high-end continuity still a significant part of your business model? No, high-end continuity isn't and it never really has been. By high-end, I'm assuming you mean multi-thousand dollar consulting engagements...
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Here's a pretty good question. Samuel asks, is SEO dead? How much should I worry about it for a blog/biz website?
Well, I'll give you my answer with a disclaimer.
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One thing I've really appreciated about you over the years has been obviously, you know, you're one of the most intelligent marketers out there, but something about understanding human behavior, positioning and dynamics.
So for example, however many years ago, maybe you remember what year it was, you did the first state of the internet address. You did it in an office that looked pretty fancified, you sitting at the big desk and what people didn't realize, and I know you explained this later...
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We're recording this for you in this little wooden room of the California place where we are staying for the next couple of weeks, here in the summer, and just had the craziest health thing happen...
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This morning, I read a pretty powerful marketing lesson written by a Saint. I'm pretty sure he didn't intend for it to be a marketing lesson, but it's a good marketing lesson nonetheless. The Saint's name is Nikolaj Velimirović and in his writings, he says that we are better off if we do not engage others in lengthy debates and fruitless discussions. We can better change their hearts by our love and good deeds.
If we take that sentence and we apply it to marketing, it really makes a lot of sense because one of the most effective ways to persuade someone that you can help them is to demonstrate that you can help them by actually helping them.
I know this sounds really, really basic and really, really simple.
Usually the most basic and simple things are the things that work the best. So here's why this technique is so powerful... -
Things are without question rarely as they seem. So here's what that means...
As marketers, it's very, very easy for us to make assumptions about our prospects based on our own personal experience or what we observe in our immediate day-to-day life. However, a lot of times those assumptions are completely wrong. And a lot of times those incorrect assumptions cost us a lot of money in lost sales.
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I think I'm going to name this episode PROOF that you can do ANYTHING online. Of course there's a caveat to that. I don't literally mean anything, but in business, online especially, we sure do have a lot fewer limitations than we might think.
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Hello everyone. Frank Kern here. I hope you're doing well. I'm recording this for you front of the fire once again, in my little office. It's about seven in the morning, beautiful morning here, and now to live up to the title of today's podcast...
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Any advice about what ad to run, to have people apply to a webinar? Okay, so this question is, I'll rephrase it like this. I want to have someone do a certain thing. What should the ad say? Alright, that's really what the question is saying.
In this case, Mark is saying, I want to have people go to a webinar, register for a webinar. What should the ad say? The question could be...
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That question could be translated into "do fancy videos work better than non-fancy videos?"
And you know, what?
The non-fancy videos work better.
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