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....with "Information" products....is to offer "Bonuses" with HIGHER "Perceived Value" than the main product.
Potential customers see the "High Perceived Value" of the Bonuses and feel "compelled" to order. I once failed to include a certain "FREE Bonus" in one of my programs and people got all "pissy", even though I explained it was "coming in a few weeks". They wanted the "Bonus" more than the "main" product so...I made the "Bonus" the main program in my next sales material. Don Alm > I just got in an email from one of the > marketing folks, and it is similar to many > that I get on a daily basis. > Here it is...then I will make a comment. > "Perceived Value - The Art of Making > Your Product Look Like It's Worth 20 Times > What You Are Charging For It" > Here's another technique that is perfect for > Internet marketing. > Increasing the perceived value is easily > done by simply adding bonuses that cost you > little or nothing to add and create a > 'package deal'! > Let's say you are selling a book on getting > to the top of search engines.... > You could add 2 or 3 web marketing reports > you found as bonuses. You could add some > free software you discovered that made your > job 100 times easier, you could add this > e-book you're reading now and so on. > Write down every benefit the reader will get > from theses bonuses and make a bulleted list > of them! > This can make your $29.95 book seem like > it's worth $229.95! > Look for things that can go along with your > product as bonuses but yet cost you very > little to produce. With a little effort you > can easily make your current product seem > like it's worth 20 times what you are > charging for it. > It will actually be worth more than you are > charging if you put some good bonuses > together. And that's great - it cost you > nothing extra and will blow your sales > through the roof. Everybody wins. > I am probably old fashioned, but I just had > to get this off my chest. > I feel the concept of "perceived > value" is being overdone. > What happened to actually giving real value > versus "perceived" value. > It seems that in the end, people will (or > maybe they already have) become so > "innoculated" to sales pitches, > because like advertising, it just isn't > trusted by the majority of folks anymore. > Maybe I'm not "getting it". > Oh well... > I feel better now. > Regards, > John Palma $800 A Day Removing Oil Stains from Parking Lots and Driveways |
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