Purely Impressed By Being Purely Experimental
January 16th, 2009
A few days ago I posted about being experimental, trying everything to succeed and running with those things that actually do work. So I set up my “experimental” site and as of today it is already reaching 30+ visitors a day. No extra work on my part. Tonight I will submit it to the directories and let it go from there.
It is about the 16th of the month and I am well on target for this months goal. From creating multiple products and upsells (I successfully created an upsell for a OTO) I am well on my way. And the best part of it, is that it is starting at point zero or $1 and will eventually work it’s way up to sell a real life $300 product.
And the best part, once the in between products are up and created, we are on autopilot. I have already loaded almost a month’s worth of tips and tricks into the AR and will be going from there. Right now I have the $1 product, just simply to qualify those as buyers, no more freebie seekers this go round. The upsell is currently $5 while it runs as a WSO and will be $7 afterwards. From there I will be creating a $17 product, using the tips and tricks I outline in the OTO of www.yourhomebasedbusiness.info Basically, it shouldn’t take me more than 24-48 hours to create this one, so if all goes well it should launch before the end of the month and has the potential to fill in the rest of the income I need.
After the $17 product I will shoot for a $27, $47 and $97 to fill in the middle. I really want to create the perfect cash funnel for the big purchase item. I figure I can have the entire funnel completed by the end of February and it should help me to create my cash goal for Feb as well.


April 24th, 2009 at 12:29 am
Interesting blog post. What would you say was the most important marketing factor?
April 24th, 2009 at 12:48 am
I’m not sure there ever really was just one important marketing factor. I wanted products with unique selling hooks and things that really were more true to myself. I felt if I put out my own products and gradually eased up the price level from one product to the next it would do fine. Unfortunately, even the best laid plans go astray. And so I moved onto other projects.