And of course it's true; more sales are made from lists than any other form of promotion.
But how and where do you make a start on building huge opt-in lists on autopilot?
It took me three years to build a list for just one product using conventional methods like website opt-in forms and email signatures, etc. Today that list has just over 1000 subscribers which works out about one new opt-in per day over the period.
Friends tell me this is a reasonable result but with the inevitable drop outs it will never be huge.
I looked at a myriad of systems and software on offer but found them either too pricey or too complicated to operate; time is money and vice versa and I only have so much of both at my disposal.
Then just recently I happened across the slickest and easiest tactic for building multiple opt-in lists on complete autopilot that I have ever seen...
Best of all, I found the whole concept incredibly simple to comprehend and I didn't need finished produce, lots of money, expertise, whatever, to get it up and running.
And so, as I have several new products in various stages of production, I decided to put my new-found tactic to the test on one of these by inviting subscriptions to a list for a product that has still to be launched.
Within just ten days it had attracted 500 subscribers with an ongoing average thereafter of not one but twenty-five opt-ins daily…
Thus heartened, I set about applying the tactic to the remaining embryo products (they won't see the light of day for time yet) and was rewarded with a similar set of results.
So now instead of just one list I have six with the facility on tap to produce as many more as I like at little or no cost.
Consumer Reports Blue Ray With more special features and high definition video and audio, this format is the clear choice for the next generation home theater experience