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	<title>Kelly Felix&#039;s Off-The-Cuff Blog &#187; rants</title>
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	<description>I&#039;m just wingin&#039; it.</description>
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		<title>Being Honest is Not As Profitable</title>
		<link>http://kellyfelix.com/being-honest-is-not-profitable/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Jun 2011 05:36:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[bring the fresh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[affiliate marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[internet marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kelly felix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mike long]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kellyfelix.com/?p=493</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So over the past 18 months or so, I&#8217;ve been running a membership site at BringTheFresh.com &#8211; its a community for people interested in making a living via internet marketing. This basically means you create your own products (software, info-products, etc) and sell them online, or you create websites that sell other people&#8217;s products, as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So over the past 18 months or so, I&#8217;ve been running a membership site at <a href="http://www.bringthefresh.com">BringTheFresh.com</a> &#8211; its a community for people interested in making a living via internet marketing. This basically means you create your own products (software, info-products, etc) and sell them online, or you create websites that sell other people&#8217;s products, as an affiliate.</p>
<p>I run it with Mike Long, and we try our best to be unlike any other internet marketing site out there. </p>
<p>What I mean is:</p>
<p><strong>1) We don&#8217;t lie.</strong> </p>
<p>This is VERY difficult to do as a marketer. Lies and hype are what this industry is built on. Preying on people&#8217;s hopes. Trying to influence them with psychology, to buy something they don&#8217;t need. To make them feel like they DO need it, and to convince them that if it doesn&#8217;t work, its THEIR fault.</p>
<p>The most prevalent lie is false statistics. These are fake results, or results gained by using a different method, such as selling the very &#8220;system&#8221; they are trying to convince you to buy. Commonly, someone will sell an ebook or marketing course, and do a &#8220;launch&#8221; for it, where they get a lot of friends and partners to promote it. They may make $100k, or even $1 million in just a few days (before gigantic refund rates). But no matter what, they net a nice payday. </p>
<p>Then with their next product, they will convince you that you can use their amazing new course or software they created, and it will make you $100k &#8211; $1 million dollars. They fail to mention that the only way they really make money is by selling &#8220;how to make money&#8221;, via product launches. This is frequently referred to &#8220;fake it til you make it&#8221;. Selling a course about how to make money online, by selling a course about how to make money online. Very rarely do these people actually make any money online by &#8220;doing&#8221; anything. They just teach you how to fake it like them.</p>
<p>Many marketers feel this is a grey area, and hang around others who do the same. That way they find solidarity, and feel less guilty about it. There is a common excuse that, &#8220;Hey the product has some good stuff in it, so lying to get them to buy it isn&#8217;t really a big deal.&#8221; Its kinda like if you bought a car that was said to get you 100 miles per gallon on &#8220;autopilot&#8221;, but after you buy it, you only get 10 miles/gallon. But hey, it does have some nice cupholders, leather seats, and navigation, so the salesman wasn&#8217;t really THAT shady was he?</p>
<p>Again, its just really tough to get someone to buy an online info-product or course without making it sound like the greatest course out there. The only guaranteed way to do that is by ACTUALLY making it the greatest course out there! And then relying on your customers to get the good word out for you.</p>
<p>That is a great way to do it, but it takes a lot of time &#038; effort. And while we&#8217;ve spent 18 months doing this, others have launched 4 or 5 products during that time, and made millions of dollars. And many use fake names, so they are dis-associated with it. There are little groups of &#8220;players&#8221; and they all promote each others&#8217; stuff no questions asked. They only care about numbers. They have zero interest in what the customer actually gets.</p>
<p>Right now Bring the Fresh converts pretty well, but not near as well as some of the latest launch products built on hype and lies of &#8220;push button&#8221; success. As a marketer I&#8217;m jealous of their numbers. As an empathetic person, I&#8217;m not.</p>
<p>When we work on our own sites, its very hard for us to balance what is hype and what is real, AND what is typical. We edit our sales letter almost daily, to try to find the sweet spot where we can tell the truth and optimize conversions at the same time. Its an ongoing, frustrating thing. Sometimes a few words can change everything. But many times the best words are misleading. And don&#8217;t get me started on false scarcity! (fake countdown timers, or &#8220;only 7 copies left&#8221;.)</p>
<p>For certain audiences we need to &#8220;dumb down&#8221; our approach. For others, that&#8217;s not gonna fly.</p>
<p><strong>2) We don&#8217;t sell our customers down the river (filled with piranhas).</strong></p>
<p>The bread and butter of most internet marketing products/courses is lead generation. Many times an offer can afford to pay $100 to acquire a $50 customer, because they are going to sell that customer&#8217;s data to a boiler room in Utah. The boiler room will pay 25%-35% of whatever money they make from the leads, and these guys are good at selling over the phone!</p>
<p>That boiler room is gonna call you with promises of making thousands of dollars a month by working with one of their &#8220;success coaches&#8221; on a weekly basis. Nevermind that your &#8220;success coach&#8221; has never made more than $15-$20/hr himself&#8230; as a success coach. And before that, he was a frustrated wannabe marketer like you. He knows a few catch-phrases like SEO, squeeze page, optimization, ROI, etc., so at least he sorta sounds like he knows what he&#8217;s talking about. But ask him for an example of one of his own sites. Then check it out on sites like Compete.com, and you&#8217;ll see that his only &#8220;success&#8221; is the paycheck he gets from his boss at the boiler room.</p>
<p>They promise everything from setting you up with a website, to helping with your taxes, to helping you setup a corporation. And charges go from $1k to $20k. The difference in price really only depends on how much money you have available on your credit card. If they ask and you say you have an $8k credit limit, well then the price of their service just happens to be $8k.</p>
<p>These coaching floors and boiler rooms are seeing more and more scrutiny, and some get taken down by the FTC. Others just disappear when leads dry up, and conveniently forget to pay commissions, or provide the service to the customer that they were paid for.</p>
<p>I know a lot about this sort of thing because as I&#8217;ve said before, I sold my leads to these coaching floors back in 2007. The money was great. The whole customer getting no value thing pretty much sucked.</p>
<p>Again, trying to compete with guys who use boiler rooms is tough. They typically see an increase of $100-$300 per customer when they sell their leads down the river. We don&#8217;t have that luxury, so we have to resort to other high quality offers of our own to try to make up the difference. These would include offering additional products or services we create, or those our friends have created. </p>
<p>But our competitors do this as well, in addition to selling leads, so we need to compete even smarter.</p>
<p><strong><br />
3) We don&#8217;t burn &#038; churn our prospect and customer lists.</strong></p>
<p>I see this so many times and believe it is the most short-sighted thing a marketer can do.</p>
<p>Its very important to build trust with your lists and provide them value. Yet many marketers mail them every day with the next shiny object they MUST buy. But mostly, this is the marketer paying back the guys who helped him do so well on his launch. Lots of guys won&#8217;t mail their list for you unless you promise to mail their next offer (whether its good or not). So after the launch, you have to hammer your list as a thank-you to all of the guys who mailed for you.</p>
<p>Its unsubscribe city, and reputation game over. (if you used your real name)</p>
<p>I get joint-venture offers daily, asking me to mail my list to someone&#8217;s next great converting product. But its always an appeal to my greed. They never tell me whats in it for my customers. Call me old fashioned but I want to know what it is, what it does, see some proof, and try it myself. Otherwise my list will hate me. </p>
<p>Even when I do end up promoting an offer I think will be good for people, I cover my ass by giving a bonus that will make it worth the customer&#8217;s while, even if the product ends up being a nightmare. And I let them keep the bonus even if they refund. I want my customers to stick around for 10 years, not 10 days.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p>In summary, this post is just meant for food-for-thought. I&#8217;m no whistle-blower, and I don&#8217;t consider myself holier than thou, or someone who should judge others. I&#8217;m still tempted to this day to return to my grey area ways of 2007, but in the end I can&#8217;t do it. It just doesn&#8217;t feel right. I just have to live with a bit of a lighter wallet! </p>
<p>I&#8217;m still friends with many of the guys who do things the grey way. I think a lot of them are very bright, and I actually learn quite a bit from them. And some of them are just damn fun to hang out with!</p>
<p>If you find yourself in a similar situation, where you want to be known as one of the &#8220;good guys&#8221;, I&#8217;d love to hear from ya.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m open to working with anyone who has similar views, good products, real testimonials, and consistent results. I think a good group of like-minded individuals, with good products, and good intentions for the customer can make a difference, AND help us compete with everyone else!</p>
<p>Until next time,</p>
<p>Kelly</p>
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		<title>Just Thoughts (and why most marketers probably won&#8217;t promote my stuff anymore)</title>
		<link>http://kellyfelix.com/just-thoughts/</link>
		<comments>http://kellyfelix.com/just-thoughts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Feb 2010 23:29:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[rants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hunky pictures of brad pitt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[i like avocados]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kelly felix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sex lies and videotape]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kellyfelix.com/?p=233</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been talking to a lot of customers and marketers lately, and there seems to be a common thread &#8211; people are STILL buying and selling FEAR &#38; LIES. Big shock right?
The FTC may have made it a little more difficult &#8211; requiring marketers to jump through a few more hoops to continue using shady [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been talking to a lot of customers and marketers lately, and there seems to be a common thread &#8211; people are STILL buying and selling FEAR &amp; LIES. Big shock right?</p>
<p>The FTC may have made it a little more difficult &#8211; requiring marketers to jump through a few more hoops to continue using shady business practices, but it definitely continues. Sure some marketers made a bundle and got out before the crackdown, and somehow they are able to justify the money in their bank account to themselves, perhaps with an &#8220;every man for himself&#8221; type of view. Others are continuing to evolve in order to keep selling deceit &#8211; whether its by posting certain disclaimers, or moving their business offshore, or using loopholes in the law, or by rotating merchant accounts, staying one step ahead of government bodies, etc.</p>
<p>Heck, even big affiliate networks created their own in-house scam offers once they saw how lucrative it could be. Does acai berry ring a bell? Colon cleanse anyone? I actually purchased these products to see how far the scam went. It wasn&#8217;t pretty. Especially when I tried to refund before the continuity charges started.</p>
<p>I choose not to name individual names because I&#8217;m not here to cast stones at my fellow marketing sinners. These people know who they are, and you can easily find them yourself. A little tool called Google makes it really easy. You are likely on some of their lists as we speak.</p>
<p>But what happens to marketers who sell in a competitive mindset, through fear tactics, false scarcity, and rationalization, is that they are putting it out there to the world that they expect to live in that kind of world themselves. Where they too should live in fear. Where they too should expect to be sold with lies, and treated as sheep. Where they too should fear that their money will disappear any day now, when they are &#8220;found out&#8221;.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t live that way. Not anymore.</p>
<p>Prior to 2008 I considered myself &#8220;driven&#8221; to compete with every other marketer out there to make the most money, so that when we had our big guru masterminds, I could get my ego stroked by my fellow snake oil salesmen, and feel like I was &#8220;the man&#8221;. And their approval would help me rationalize the selling practices any way I could. It was simply all about numbers to me, not value to the customer. Sure I thought my stuff was pretty good as far as ebooks go, and further from the &#8220;scammy&#8221; side than most. But I also knew less than 5% of my customers were successful. I would rationalize it by thinking those sub-5% were the only people who took action, as so many other marketers do. But this simply isn&#8217;t true. It&#8217;s just a cop-out.</p>
<p>After all, the people who bought the $10k coaching that I outsourced sure &#8220;took action&#8221;. A $10k committment is a HUGE &#8220;action&#8221;. And I simply got my $3k cut from the coaching floor and passed the responsibility onto them to fulfill upon their promises. Rarely did I check up on any of those individual customers or receive a glowing testimonial about the coaching. But I didn&#8217;t care. I rationalized it by convincing myself that if I wasn&#8217;t hearing complaints, then everything was ok. And I hid behind the character I had created (which interestingly enough, made it hard for me to figure out how to actually talk to my customers 1 on 1). But I figured that as far as scammy ebook stuff goes, I was one of the good guys. Looking back now, I was far from a good guy. I provided *some* value, but I could have done so much more. It seems most of the success stories came from people who ended up selling get-rich *secrets* themselves. It reminds me of an old Saturday Night Live clip &#8211; where an infomercial guy sells a book about &#8220;How to get rich by selling a book about how to get rich by selling a book&#8221;.</p>
<p>And many of those &#8220;success stories&#8221; are now people who sell with fear and live in fear.</p>
<p>Selling with scarcity tactics, such as &#8220;only 12 copies left&#8221;, or &#8220;only 5 minutes left&#8221;, or &#8220;re-opening the doors for a short time&#8221; &#8230; it&#8217;s all garbage marketing. Even if the statement happens to be true, why limit perfectly abundant information?</p>
<p>And here&#8217;s an insight for you: at guru masterminds, do you think we talked about how wonderful our customers were? I wish that were the case.</p>
<p>Looking back&#8230; how dare I talk sh*t about my customers. As if I owned them and was doing them some huge favor. It&#8217;s disgusting. And not only was there customer-bashing, but we literally complained about how new rules constantly made it tougher for us to sell people using bullsh*t tactics. Oh, woe-is-me, I&#8217;m only making $1 mil a month now instead of the $2 mil a month I could have made if the stupid FTC wouldn&#8217;t have made me start telling the truth a *little* more.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s really obscene is that I am still on many lists as a super affiliate, so I get the insider emails during launches. BUT, I also get the emails that the prospects get. And it&#8217;s appalling at how contradictory the 2 emails are. One email tells the prospect how great everything is, how much they will be taken care of. And the other email brags about easy money, how well its converting, how many copies have *really* been sold, when the miraculous re-opening will happen, and what prizes are involved for marketers who *pound* their lists. Zero mention of the value to the customer, other than *perceived value*, otherwise known as the *thud* factor. The 2 contradictory emails alone could probably get so many marketers in hot water, and I don&#8217;t know if they realize it because they are caught up in their own hype machine.</p>
<p>I realize this blog post probably won&#8217;t do me any favors as far as getting my fellow marketers to eventually promote my &#8220;Bring the Fresh&#8221; video series, but in the end, maybe that&#8217;s a good thing.</p>
<p>But I digress. I guess this turned into more of a rant &#8211; but to be clear I am not singling out anyone but myself. And I&#8217;d like to put it out there for you to ponder however you want. I&#8217;d like to recommend one thing to you &#8211; <strong>Be suspicious. </strong></p>
<p>Be suspicious of push-button solutions. Be suspicious of products with names like &#8220;Underground grim reaper autopilot gold bar instant millionaire wealth generator.&#8221; Be suspicious of anything that says &#8220;earn up to 8 billion dollars per second&#8221;. I know it all seems like a no-brainer but people are actually still buying this stuff. Be suspicious of product launches. Be suspicious of cut and paste emails you receive from 42 different people. Be suspicious of anything that &#8220;everyone is talking about&#8221;. Be suspicious of anything with a bonus or &#8220;downsell&#8221;.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong>Be suspicious of ME.</strong> Be suspicious of this post! And finally, be suspicious of lines. One of the craziest things I&#8217;ve realized is that people love lines. I&#8217;m not kidding. If you go somewhere and you see a line, don&#8217;t people typically just get in that line without asking questions? And isn&#8217;t that what a launch waiting list is? Or a huge launch thread on Warrior Forum? They are digital lines.</p>
<p>And to be clear, what I mean by suspicious is not necessarily that it&#8217;s a scam&#8230; I just mean that the trend seems to indicate there&#8217;s a high percentage chance that it is. Do your own investigating and come to your own conclusions.</p>
<p>Oh, and one more thing &#8211; be suspicious of a P.S. in an email.</p>
<p>Maybe I&#8217;m way off topic at this point, whatever the topic is, but I felt some of these things had to be said.</p>
<p>Good luck out there,</p>
<p>Kelly</p>
<p>P.S. Buy lots of stuff from me.</p>
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