015: Get Buyers Flowing Into Your Low Ticket Membership Site With Little $7 Products

Sponsor: Membership Cube

Break down big goals into manageable chunks.
Disrupt the marketplace. Do something helpful that gets you to stand out.
Speed to implementation: get it done this month, not in 6 months.

Strategy

  • Don’t start with $7. Pull a piece out of your $97 or $197 product. 20 page PDF, 1 hour video, software tool or calculator
  • Reasons to go low ticket: get the buying juices flowing, build a buyer’s list by undercutting the market, recycle all those low ticket sales into your ad budget
  • Recruit buyers into affiliates to make it viral: offer 100% if possible (JVZoo) or the highest possible commission (Clickbank), even 110% or 150% if you have the accounting for it

Implementation

  • Reasons to use Wishlist Member: you control it (self hosted), easy installation (one WordPress plugin), connects to most autoresponder and shopping carts. Little things like it asks for registration after payment. Levels instead of “products” or “packages.”
  • Extra level, after login page (upsell with payment button and “no thanks” link), priorities on levels, link to become an affiliate
  • Affiliate tools: banner ads, swipe copy. Call or email affiliates. Training materials. Automatic email reminders. Know your numbers, especially conversion rate.

Closing Thoughts

  • Beware of offering it all “peacemeal”: only create a few front-end products
  • $7 bump: keep walking the price up (while promoting it) if you get bored
  • Don’t sell a $7 report on how to make money selling $7 reports
  • Don’t fall in love with the number 7. Solve a real need in the marketplace.

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Is it really possible to sell a membership site on the front end instead of as an upsell?

Many people teaching membership site marketing have lied to you. They’ve told you it’s only possible to sell a membership site on the back end, meaning as a bonus offer, as an upsell. But you need to know better. And that said, membership sites can be sold on the front end – meaning they can be sold directly, as long as you use the right terminology and the right positioning, so that a membership site looks even more attractive than a one-time payment deal.

So how do you position a membership site correctly? Well, a few things for you to think about. First of all, how do you think people buy cars, homes, things like that? The next thing is to sell them not on the total payment but on the individual payments themselves, what will it cost to get their foot in the door. And finally, instead of selling them a membership site, talk about it like a payment plan, like financing which it is because you’re giving them a fixed-term membership option.

So, the way the whole entire world works, if someone is buying a car, if they’re buying a house, if they’re getting a loan, if they’re paying off their credit card, they have a certain balance and they make payments against that balance until it’s done. And if they stop making payments at any point, then they just simply don’t get it. If you buy a house and you make all the payments except for the final one, then you lose your house. But if you make all the payments for your house, then you own it, it is yours forever.

So, that’s how you have to think about the way you are selling your membership site, they make certain payments. Once they make all the payments, it’s theirs. In the meantime, you are doing them a favor by giving them basically an interest-free loan to go and use your membership site.

That brings me to my next point. If you have a $1000 course and people are making $97 payments for 10 months so it’s all paid off, then they’re not paying $1000 dollars, they’re paying $97 now and then $97 every month for the next 10 months. It seems a lot easier to swallow that they only have to pay a small chunk at a time until they have the whole entire thing.

Now, are some of your customers going to totally step up in their head and think, “okay, well that’s $1000?” Sure. But it’s an easier way of presenting it and they don’t have to make all the payments. They can quit it anytime and just for when they first joined, you’re giving them a much easier way of getting in, a much lower point of entry because they only have to put less than $100 down to get started with your $1000 training course. And of course, the vocabulary, the terminology, the words you use are very important.

So, I like to tell people something like this. You make a payment every month for six months and after that, it’s free. After that, if I add in an extra month, you get that for free. You can get come back to it forever. At any point, you can come back to the site after all the payments are made. Present it as a payment plan. So, even though there’s over $1000 worth of value and people pay $1000 to get in, you’re giving them a plan. They can make smaller payments over time and go at a slower pace and only pay for things as they use it. So, if they need to get $1000 back to pave back their investments, they only have to worry about making more than 100 bucks back ever month.

And above all, it’s financing. It’s if you buy a house, you have to pay a mortgage but a bulk of that payment goes towards interest. You’re being a nice guy, you are not charging interest at 0% interest, and you’re financing their way in.

So, is it possible to sell a membership site on the front end? Yes if you position it in the right way, if you’re a good marketer, and you explain it as a payment plan, as financing, instead of all these extra payments or a total lump sum.

Now that you know how to present your membership site, let’s focus on creating the site, on keeping members, and on writing copy, getting traffic, and doing all the things you should be doing yesterday to market your site. Join right now.

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Are free methods of list building really worth it?

I don’t care if we’re setting up a membership site or a one-off product, you need a list, it’s just given. If you’re not building a list, then anytime you need traffic, you’re starting from scratch. But when you do have a list, then you can slowly add to it by getting this extra traffic and anytime you want to pull clicks and opt-ins and sales out of from there, simply send a message to your autoresponder opt-in list.

So, there are many ways you can build that list, by paying for pay-per-click traffic, by joining JV giveaway events, by joining SafeList – so the question is, are free methods of list building really worth it? And it’s not a simple yes or no answer but I do have a few pieces of advice for you. First of all, you need not just subscribers but responsive subscribers, you do need to weed people out of your list and you need to focus on high quality sources of traffic, not just the ones that give you lots of numbers.

So, subscribers are great, and you do need to be always building your list because if you’re not building your list, it’s still slowly dying and your monthly income is slowly dropping. I don’t care what your offer is or who you are, you always need to be building your list at least by a little bit. So, you need not just fresh subscribers but also responsive subscribers. I would rather have a list of 100 buyers at any price, even $10. I’d rather have a list of 100 buyers than a list of 10,000 people who have never bought from me – because, at least some one who’s bought from me can prove they have a credit card and they trust me enough to type in those details.

So, you need people on your list who read your emails, who click on your links, who respond to your emails, and most importantly, actually buy from you and buy from you over and over again. So, starting off by building your list using some of those free methods is fine to start, but you need a list of responsive subscribers, and it’s better for you to have a small responsive list than a large unresponsive list because you can mail it a little faster, you get less spam complaints, and overall, it’s just easier for you.

So, how do you turn a non-responsive list into a responsive list? Email them. See who buys. Mail on a regular basis. Mail consistently. Mail often. And if people complain, who cares? They have not bought from you. They probably would not buy from you anyway. So, don’t be afraid to remove none-buyers from your list who have never bought if you can replace, if you have new leads coming to your site over and over.

So, when you’re replacing those bad subscribers, where do you get the new ones from? Get them from forums. Post on forums. Have a signature link. Write articles. Post them to your blog. Post them to article sites. And most importantly, sell stuff and capture the opt-ins after they buy. Your buyers are going to be way more valuable than your freebie opt-ins. So, ad swaps and giveaways are good to start but don’t live in ad swap and giveaway (03:33) for the rest of your life because you’re not going to get people to buy into your membership site and you’re not going to get people to stay in your membership site if they can afford it or if they don’t care enough to actually purchase.

So, are free methods of list building really worth it? Sort of. It’s a good place to start but move towards better sources of traffic. Because, you do need to be always building a list, always getting new subscribes, but you also need to be weeding out the bad subscribers and replacing them with new ones from better sources such as forums, articles, article directories, and from people who have bought from you.

Now that we have that issue out of the way, let’s get you starting your first or next membership site.

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Should I create one huge membership site or lots of little ones?

When you are putting together your membership site and hushing out the exact solution you’re going to provide, you’re probably confused about should you cover everything or should you cover only one specific problem. In other words, should you create one huge membership site or should you put out lots of little ones.

Now, normally when I create one-off products, I just like to say one problem, one solution. But when you’re making a membership site, it can get really crazy, especially if you offer things like upsells and different extra offers. People have to log in to these different membership sites.

The cool thing about a lot of membership software, such as Wishlist member, is that if somebody already has an account and they purchase access to an additional membership level, like an extra product, they can click on a special link and have that extra level applied to their existing account. For that reason, I would recommend to you that for a recurring membership site, I would only create one membership site per sub-niche.

Now, what’s a sub-niche? A sub-niche is a niche within a niche. This means that I would never have a membership site just on internet marketing. That’s too big of a space. But I would have a membership site covering everything I know about list building. So that way, if I have upsells about list building, people use the same exact membership site. That way, I have enough content to charge up to $97 per month for access to that. So, have one membership site per sub-niche.

But the problem with having one membership site for all of your information is that it will be hard to navigate. So, another example, I am also in the programming niche that includes things such as PHP, WordPress, JavaScript. Would I have one membership site for all things in programming? No way. I would have one membership site for PHP, one membership site for WordPress, and one membership site for JavaScript. So, you kind of have to have a membership site that’s not so big, that you can’t explain it, you can’t give an elevator pitch for. So, these would be small enough that you can give an elevator pitch, but big enough that you can store multiple products and charge a recurring monthly fee.

Now, think about this. Think about the drip content. If you give a product that has extra bonuses, extra lessons dripped out, think about how confusing that would be if somebody joined the site about internet marketing, which again is far too big of area for you to have a site about and for the first, where they got list building week one, they got product creation week one, they got article writing week one, they got site building week one, they got AdSense week one – all the stuff that’s flooding into that, it would be very confusing. But if you had a site just about site building, then you could very easily give them week one, week two, and week three lessons.

So, keep those rules in mind when deciding if you want to have one huge membership site or lots of little ones. Pick a niche and then for each sub-niche within that, create a membership site but don’t go too small or too big – because if you make a site too small, people will have to join multiple sites, and if you make it too big, people won’t be able to find anything once they joined your site.

Now that you have your membership idea, I want you to type in to your browser right now, www.membershipcube.com, to take that idea and turn it into a reality by setting up a membership site of your very own.

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Do I really need to create a sublist for each membership level?

If we ever have used an email autoresponder, you know that you don’t have just one list. You have multiple sublists. The idea is that if you have multiple products, then if someone buys your first product, they end up on your first list. If they buy your second product, they end up on your second list. That way, if you want to mail to just one of your sublists and send out an update to just one of your products you can. But if you want to send a broadcast to all of your sublists, you can do that as well, which gives you the most control.

But then, I hear around, “Well, should I create a sublist for different levels of my membership site as well?” And the answer to that is usually but not always no. Most of the time, you just make a separate sublist for each individual product. But if you have a membership site with different levels that are drastically different, then you would make a sublist for that.

For example, let’s say you had a membership site, you had a full level and you had an advanced level. And when they join the advanced level, they get an extra bonus for signing up but that other than the extra sign-up bonus, both levels are exactly the same. For that situation, I would have just one sublist for both of those because when somebody joins, they can just get a generic message telling them where to go. When you get updates, the updates after that initial purchase are going to be exactly the same. So, in that scenario, I would only have one autoresponder sublist for the different membership levels.

Now, what if the levels were drastically different. Let’s say you had an audio version of your membership site, so you had the level called “audio,” and then you had a video version of the membership site – now, let’s call it video – and they are different prices. One of them is audio only, one of them is video only. In that case, the videos might have a different content or you might use a different language like “watch this video versus listen to this audio.” So, for that reason, because all of the content is going to be completely different depending on which package they’re in, in that case, I would have a different sublist for the audio and video levels.

So if you have completely different products, that’s a separated sublist. If the products are similar enough so that your email updates can apply to either one, then don’t even bother setting up a sublist. There is such a thing as having too many sublists in your autoresponder, especially if you hardly have any subscribers in each one. You want to keep your autoresponder structure as easy to manage as possible, so only make the bare minimum number of sublists that you need to manage your individual products.

Keep in mind that this also depends on how often you’re mailing. Do you mail a once-per-week reminder or do you give out a daily update? If you have a simple once-a-week reminder, you might be able to get away with combining more of your sublists; whereas with the daily update, you probably have to have more sublists than with weekly reminders. So, one more time, sublist different ones for different products. If the products are similar enough, have the same sublists.

Now, having different autoresponder sublists is going to require you to first have a membership site. Let me show you how to set that up.

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Do you need to split test emails, track open rates, and integrate autoresponders with your membership?

If you are the kind of person who has a membership site or wants a membership site, you probably like to have fancy stuff, like to have the bells and whistles. And if a certain feature exists, if a certain marketing tactic is possible, you’re definitely going to want to try to pursue it. Right? Wrong. You need to keep your site simple – because most people who will avoid keeping their site simple never get the site launched in the first place. So, the answer to most of the fancy stuff such as split testing emails is you do not want to do it and there are many reasons why.

First of all, instead of split testing your emails, you should be focusing on split testing your sales letter. You could spend all day testing and tracking and figuring things out, but at the end of the day, you have the same 24 hours that everyone else in the world does. So, why would you waste it testing out silly things?

If somebody is on your email list and you’re going to be sending out emails to them regularly and you’re going to be launching a product properly, meaning sending out 5 to 10 emails whenever you launch something, then they’re going to open up your email and click on your link sooner or later. And if not, then they are simply not a responsive subscriber. So, it doesn’t really matter if you split test emails just so you send out a lot of emails.

What about open rates? Let me tell you something from a technical standpoint. When you test email open rates, what your autoresponder service does is embed an image in your email messages. Unfortunately, spammers also use this technique to figure out if the junk mail messages they send are actually opened. For this very reason, many email clients block these types of trackers, so your open rate tracking is not going to be very accurate at all. If you get a 50% open rate, that doesn’t necessarily mean that only half of your subscribers have opened up your email, the number could be much higher but the tracking image is simply blocked in their email client.

So, things like subject line split testing, things like open rates are not very accurate anyway. So, just stay away from the fancy stuff. As far as integrating autoresponders with your membership site, you should integrate an autoresponder with your membership site. This is one of the things that is very important.

So, have an opt-in box inside your membership site and have some kind of auto-subscribe functionality to automatically get somebody who buys into your membership site to get on your list and this is included with most membership software such as Wishlist member.

Now, why would you want to have both? Why would you want to have the auto-subscribe feature plus the manual subscribe feature inside the membership site? There are many reasons. Somebody might join your membership site and then accidentally unsubscribe from your autoresponder sequence and they want to get joined back in. So, make it easy so they can log in, enter their name and email address one more time and get back on the list. Another reason is that some people have one email address dedicated only to processing their payments and another towards receiving emails. So, if they happen to use their payment email when they sign up for your membership site or they just type in the wrong email and for whatever reason, they’re not getting your messages, they can opt in using that form on the inside to the email address they are used to for receiving messages. Pretty simple.

So, most fancy things like split testing emails and tracking open rates are not important but some fancy things, the basics, like integrating your membership site and your autoresponder is very important. It’s one thing to be told how to do some of these things, but wouldn’t it be nice to see a real how-to step-by-step video, taking you by the hand, and walking you through every step of the way? I think so.

To get access to those videos, visit www.membershipcube.com right now.

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What are the do’s and don’ts of membership site list building?

If you’re on more than a few people’s email mailing lists, you’ve seen people do a lot of things right and a lot of things wrong. I want to shortcut your success by just telling you exactly what you should be doing with your autoresponder opt-in list and what you should be avoiding like the plaque, especially when it comes to promoting membership sites.

Do create free and paid lists, separate free and paid lists. It’s really going to help if you only market within one specific niche and your different offer and your list are in sub-niches related to that, but the idea is that if somebody is on one list, you could try to upsell them to some other offer. So, for every product you have, for every membership that you have, create a paid list for updates and a prospect list for free promotions. This way, you can mail to just one or a small group of sublists or you could mail to the entire bunch of sublists. It’s up to you. But this should go without saying what I see all kinds of marketers trying to get by on just one list for everything and it simply does not work.

Do update regularly and be consistent. Again, a big tragedy is marketers build up a giant mailing list and then they let it go for two, three, or even six months. If your mailing list is neglected for even a couple of weeks, it will very clearly wither away and die. People forget. They forget that they know you, that they signed up for your list, even if they bought from you. So, it’s up to you to be interfaced and in their mailbox as often as possible.

So, send messages to your email list. If you’re good at writing follow-up sequences, do that. If you have a lot of say and you want to simply broadcast everyday, do that. Here is a secret. If you broadcast on a regular basis – let’s say a few times a week or even once per day, you can later on save those sent messages and schedule them as follow-up sequences in a specific list. So, you think of the message now, send it out now, but then see save that for later. So, anyone new coming onto your list gets those emails as well.

And it’s also important that when you do update, you update on a very regular basis. If you’re the kind of person who updates every week, then always update every week – because if you change it to once a day or once a month, you’re going to have people either overwhelmed or forgetting about you. I personally prefer everyday. So if you can manage it, email your list every single day, at least until they purchase.

Don’t try to announce to all the different lists separately – because if you’re a good marketer, if you have upsells and follow-ups in place, then people should be on multiple lists of yours. So, when you send out a broadcast, your autoresponder should have a D duplication feature. This means that if someone is on the list for products 1, 2, and 3 and you send an email to all the lists at once, they only get one email and not three copies of the same email. So, when you go and try to send a different message to each list, not only is it time consuming, but somebody might get the same email multiple times just because they are on this different list.

Don’t chicken out and limit yourself in the terms and conditions when somebody signs up. I see all the time in opt-in forms, “Oh don’t worry. I will only use this list to notify you of updates for this product. I will never try to upsell you.” Why not? You worked hard to get that sale, to get that opt-in, they’re on your list, let them know upfront that you will be giving them other offers in that same niche that they will be interested in. There’s nothing wrong with being a good marketer.

So, when building a list, when marketing to that list, make sure you create separate free and paid list, make sure you update regularly, but avoid announcing to small lists. If you want to announce something big, send it to all the lists and don’t chicken out, be a real marketer. Tell them upfront that you may be sending them future offers.

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How many email autoresponder lists should I have when hosting membership sites?

You need to have an email list, that’s given. You also need to have a separate even list for every product and every membership site you have as well. But it doesn’t even stop there. You should have a prospect list and a buyer’s list. That way, you can give people who are slightly interested in your offer but have not yet bought more reasons to get in and you can give messages to people who have bought and send them reminders to consume your content on a regular basis. Fortunately, with most modern autoresponders, you can even set up several rules so that if somebody is on your prospect list and joins your buyer’s list as well, it removes them from the prospect list. What this does is it keeps on bugging them to join until they do join and then it stops.

So, always have at least one pre-sell and post-sell list for your membership site. When creating the follow-ups for your pre-sell lists, and these are more reasons to deliver it every few days to purchase, just look at your sales letter. Look at the reasons you give for somebody to join your membership site. Look at the problems you lay out and how you solve those problems. Look at the common objections people usually have for membership sites and how your sales letter resolves them. Your email sequence is just your sales letter cut up into little tiny pieces. You should have at least 10 follow-ups sent out every single day to your prospects. If you need more than that, then add more at the end, send out every few weeks, and then every few months, just to make sure that people are reminded even weeks or months later, why it’s so important that they join. Then, add your post-sell lists and all you need to do is simply tell them upfront what to look forward to, what’s coming, and then send one message per week telling them what they missed or participated in that week and then a link back to the blog where they can log in and consume more of the content.

I’ve said in the past that if you have different membership levels that are drastically different, have those be sublists. But most of the time, for one single membership site, you can get away with just having one single email sublist and just one single set of follow-up messages. But when you have free offers, don’t get carried away creating lots and lots of sublists.

Let’s say you have one single membership site and it’s about real estate, you have a membership site about how to get started in real estate. And you create a simple audio interview that you use as an opt-in bribe as a gift to get people to get on the list. So, that’s one of your sublists. That’s just your pre-sell sublist. So, the bribe gets them on your pre-sell sequence. But then you make a report, a 5-page report, also about something getting started in real estate. Do you need to create a separate sublist for that? The answer is no. You send them on the same sublist because the message is the same, and you still want them to have more reasons to get into your paid membership site. So, why make it complicated? Why event all these extra sublists when you can put your effort into more marketing? When you can put your effort into more opt-in bribes?

So, have the same pre-sell sublists for these different bribes. Just create more bribes and create more sales letters, send more emails, focus your energy on that. But bare minimum, for your membership site, you should have at least one post-sell list to keep them updated and one pre-sell list to give them reasons to buy.

I hope I’ve opened your eyes to the real focus you should have on your membership sites. It’s on the marketing, not on the content. Give me permission to help you out and get you making a membership site much faster.

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Should I use an autoresponder built into membership software or use my own autoresponder?

Most membership software wants to give you all the features you need to successfully run a membership site. For almost everyone, this includes an email autoresponder, the ability to send an email to your entire membership with one click. But just like with any feature, there’s good and bad things for that. The biggest problem is that you’re not sure if you’re going to ever use a different membership software. You’re not sure if the membership site is going to exist forever and you still want to have those opt-in leads.
So, what do you do? Do you use the autoresponder built into your membership software or do you use your own? How do you decide and how do you even accomplish such a thing?

I want you to have a separate membership software and email autoresponder. They are two separate things – because you’ll never know if you have to use a different autoresponder service, you’ll never know if you want to be able to log into one place and send one message to everybody who’s bought from you, everybody who’s opted in for a free gift, and everybody who has been in the membership site with you.

So, I definitely recommend you use the AWeber autoresponder, that is not my autoresponder, but I want you to have it separate from the membership site. This way, your subscriber list is not stuck inside your membership site. So for now, go to AWeber and you’ll never know if you have to move – if you have to move autoresponders, if you have to change membership software – but at least you have the list and at least it is in one location, so you can log in and blast to all the lists.

One other thing I like is that you can take advantage of the advanced features in autoresponders such as AWeber including the name personalization, including the ability to schedule messages in the future, including the ability to schedule follow-up messages. A follow-up message is somebody gets on the list and you have autoresponder emails that are going to be sent on day 2, day 3, day 5, day 10. So that way, you can line up your autoresponder content with the actual content on your blog. So, you know that if somebody joins your site and they get a certain post 7 days in, then guess what – you can schedule an email to be sent out on day 7 after joining that list, so they will automatically get an email notification telling them to log in the blog and check out your newest edition to the membership site. So, have your autoresponder list separate from your membership site. Luckily, most modern autoresponder software accomplishes this including Wishlist member.

Robert Plank is the creator of several profitable Wishlist membership sites, and he wants to show you how to duplicate his success.

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How should I build up my membership site list?

I’m going to assume that you already have some kind of traffic coming to the sales letter for your membership site? I am going to assume that you’re already building some kind of a list but how do you make that even bigger? Well, even if you think you have your site pretty well monetized, you might be missing out on a few very important steps. Those include an email opt-in process after they register, a squeeze page before they see your sales letter, and even a two-step order form between the sales letter and the payment checkout page.

The no-brainer improvement you can make to your membership site is to have an opt-in process after registration. Most membership solutions such as Wishlist member will integrate your membership software with an autoresponder such as AWeber. So, if somebody signs up to your membership site, they also get on a mailing list.

If your membership software does not have this functionality, also put your opt-in code on the sidebar for your blog. In WordPress, this is very easy. Simply go to the appearance area and add what’s called a widget. A widget is a block of something on your sidebar. So, you can add a widget called the Text widget, but the secret about the Text widget in WordPress is that you can also add any HTML code you want including links, images, and most importantly, your cut and paste autoresponder code. So, add a Text widget to our sidebar, drag it over to your sidebar and paste in your autoresponder opt-in code. And now, magically, you will have a place for people who have already bought your membership access to get on to a mailing list.

Another very popular way of getting people on a list is a squeeze page or a forced opt-in page before seeing your sales letter. So, if someone wants to go and they want to read your offer, well you stop them. You have a page that they see first with the forced opt-in. They have no way of getting to the sales letter unless they put in their name and email address, they get on your list and then they are redirected to your sales letter. You don’t necessarily have to bribe them with anything. You could bribe them with the information contained on the sales letter. You can bribe them with the 100% free details they are going to get just as soon as they fill out their name and email address.

If you don’t like the forced opt-in page or you’re advertising somewhere that does not allow forced opt-in pages, there is a loophole, and that loophole was called the two-step order form – because many shopping carts require people to type in their first name and email address before making a purchase. So, what you do is you have your sales letter, they click on what they think is the buy button, which is really a new page that has nothing but a forced opt-in on it. So, they read the sales letter first, they click over to the forced opt-in, and the forced opt-in says something like “step 1 of 2, enter your details here.” Then it has the forced opt-in page and after they fill out that forced opt-in, then they are sent to the checkout page, where they can pay. The idea behind this is that many marketers report a 50% or higher shopping cart abandonment rate. This is people who click over and/or about to buy but then for some reason, checking out and leave.

So, you can build a list based on people who are simply checking on the price or who almost buy it but don’t and then market to them afterwards. So, those are three techniques that you should be using for your membership site. Most importantly, an opt-in after registration and optionally, either a squeeze page which is a forced opt-in before your sales letter or a two-step order form, which is a forced opt-in after your sales letter but before the checkout process.

Take the next logical step. Claim your membership training right now at www.membershipcube.com.

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