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Seven Tips For Successful Solo Ad Marketing

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by Scott Dudley

If you do have some sort of a marketing budget, then one of the cheapest and most effective ways to generate leads is solo ad marketing.

A solo ad is simply finding someone in your niche or industry who has a large list, and asking them to send out an email to their list. 

You can find these people in forums, by searching for keywords in Google, or by searching for people that advertise that they provide a solo ad service. 

In general solo ads are much cheaper than pay per click advertising or banner advertising, and if done properly can generate a lot of leads in a short amount of time. 

Here are my seven tips for successful solo ad marketing:

1. Only contact list owners that are in your niche/industry.

As I mentioned earlier it is important that your solo ad is being sent to your target market. 

If your niche is dog training, then there is no point in sending out emails to a list that is interested in car racing. 

The more specific the niche the better, and the more appealing your offer is, the more chance you have of getting a lot of clicks.

It is always a good idea to opt in to the list owners list, and check them out before you pay them any money. 

2. Make the headline as interesting as possible.

If you provide a poor subject headline, then you will find that not too many people bother to open your email. 

The emails needs to get the attention of the reader and entice them to read the message. One good idea is to pretend that you are writing the email to a friend, because that way people don't get the impression that it is advertising. 

The headline also needs to be relevant somehow to the the body of the email, otherwise people will feel tricked into opening it. 

One classic example of this is the headline "You have just earned a commission". This headline gets the readers attention, but unless the body of the email is relevant to them earning a commission, you will find that people quickly hit the delete button.

3. Always put the link in the first few lines of the copy.

To give yourself the best possible opportunity to have your link clicked on it, it is important that you place the link in the first 10 lines of the email so that people can see it immediately. 

A common mistake is to write a long message and then put the link at the end of the copy, but unless people scroll down the page – they never see the link.

And the other common mistake is to make the link a different colour to the standard dark blue. People are used to seeing dark blue links and recognise it immediately. If your link is red, green or any other colour than dark blue, then some people will not even realise that it is a link. 

4. Keep it relatively short and to the point

A solo ad should be short and to the point, because the primary objective is simply to sell the click. The only objective is to get people onto your landing page, and if you write a long piece of copy then you risk the reader becoming bored, confused or distracted. 

The landing page should also be short and to the point, because in this case you are simply selling the opt in. Long copy and long videos are not necessary and generally result in much less opt ins. 

The only place where long copy is necessary is on your sales page. This is where you want to illustrate the benefits of purchasing your product, and also show examples of other satisfied customers. 

But, as far as the solo ad is concerned get to the point immediately and motivate your reader to click on your link. 

5. Always send people directly to a lead capture page

A solo ad should always lead the reader straight to an opt in page and collect the details of the prospect. 

You never want to send people to your blog or website, because that is just a waste of money. The whole point of a solo ad is to build your subscriber list, and the only way to do that is get as much targeted traffic onto your landing page as possible. 

The landing page should have no other links or pages on it, purely just an opt in page by itself. It sounds obvious but some people do not realise this, and waste their money.

6. Always track your clicks, conversions & cost per lead

To find out if the campaign has been successful or not is extremely important to know your statistics. 

You should generate unique URL's for each campaign and track precisely how many people clicked on your link, and out of these people how many of them opted in. And if you can also see how many sales the campaign produced you should be able to determine your profit and return on investment. 

A good tool to use for your tracking is Hypertracker

7. If a campaign is profitable, keep using it.

solo ad marketingOnce you know if your campaigns are profitable or not, you can then decide whether to place another solo ad with the same person or to try someone else. 

As a rule you should keep using the same person's list for as long as it remains profitable. 

Keep in mind though that sometimes your subscribers will not buy straight away, and if you are using follow up emails with your auto responder they might buy further down the track. Or some of these people may buy other products from you in the future. 

And also, usually the clicks keep coming in for about a week or so, until the agreed amount of clicks has been provided by the list owner. 

So if a campaign produces zero sales but you get a lot of subscribers cheaply, then you may still consider that to be a good result. 

And also on the other hand, if a campaign produces barely any leads or sales then you don't bother using them again, and look elsewhere. 

But the most important thing is to do a lot of solo ads and learn from your experience. Don't just do two or three, and then give up and say that it doesn't work. This is just a wate of time, and you never get anywhere with this sort of attitude. Patience is the online marketers most deadly tool

Keep testing and measuring, and over time you will become an expert at solo ad marketing. 

Image Copyright (c) from  123RF Stock Photos

 

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Charles Peavy February 10, 2012 at 4:02 pm

Thanks so much for these tips. I do have a concern though, about emailing to a list of prospects who have never heard of me. Perhaps someone can advise or correct me on my views about a one-time Solo Ad to a list of prospects.

1) Should one expect expect to receive an opt-in on the first Solo Ad? My understanding is that it takes at least 5-6 followup emails to get a response. At say, $100 per Solo, I see a $600 investment right up front. (In the above example, I am mailing to a list of say, 30,000 subscribers to an ezine in my niche.)
2) Although these would be targeted prospects, would not the “6 followups rule” still apply?
Of course, I would happily invest a few hundred if I had reasonable assurance that my generated list would result in future sales which would cover my investment.

Thanks again.
Charlie

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2 Scott Dudley February 10, 2012 at 10:01 pm

Hi Charles,

Thanks for stopping by.

You need to write the email as if you were the list owner. Put yourself in the list owners shoes and introduce yourself as a friend of the list owner. I think they call this “writing as the third person”.

This strategy is not that much different to pay per click or banner advertising, as far as you are paying for people to click on your link, which takes the prospect straight to your capture page.

So, you only get once chance to get them onto your list – and that is where your landing page is so important.

If you landing page is appealing enough, and if the list owners subscribers are part of your target market you will get opt-ins.

If you try a solo ad and it works out to be profitable, then by all means use the same person again.

But there are no guarantees in internet marketing, and the only way to learn is by experience. In time you will get better at copy writing, and understanding how to motivate people to do what you want them to do.

Your first few solo ads may result in losing money, but every successful internet marketer has to go through this and learn what works (and what doesn’t work) by experience.
Scott Dudley recently posted..The Ultimate Seven Step Formula To Write Great Content With A Wow FactorMy Profile

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3 Charles Peavy February 10, 2012 at 10:18 pm

Thanks very much, Scott. I feel that Solos may be the best way for a beginner to start building an email list. As you said, one learns through experience. :)

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4 Scott Dudley February 10, 2012 at 10:22 pm

Yes Charles, you hit the nail on the head.

One good place to start looking is here: http://soloaddirectory.com/
Scott Dudley recently posted..The Top Six Low Cost Marketing Strategies To Use On A BudgetMy Profile

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