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Will You Add? - Ask One Question to Drive Traffic to Your Website
Discount Business Checks ice like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com.The first checks, known as sakks, have been issued since the first century. It is from this word that the word cheque was derived, which later on evolved to check, signifying what banking institutions have been doing through time: ?checking? for fraudulence.Checks are basically bills of exchange drawn upon a bank or a trust company. Checks are used by banks or other drawees to pay cash to the bearer or to a specified person. Checks made by the maker are usually funded by their deposit (checking account). The same is true with checks issued by businesses.Companie 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make an Project Management - I Want It ALL Asking your visitor a question and strategically using the responses that you receive is a low-cost yet effective method to help you drive traffic to your site. I have been using this strategy now for about 8 months and it has helped to sell products, develop relationships, and further establish my expertise.The knee-jerk response to prioritizing requirements is to mark everything as a must-have . “I need everything before the product becomes generally available. I want it ALL!” Give me a break.Granted, if a requirement is written in the SRS, then it must be because you want it. But the reality is some features are more important than others and a good product manager can tell them apart.If everything is high priority, then there are no priorities. Let me repeat that statement once more. If everything is high priority, then there are no priorities.Unle The way in which I've implemented this strategy is to create a one-page website that asks my visitors a question, and they respond via an online submission form. I receive the submission via email and take action from there. Check out examples here at AskChrisKnight.com (getting subscribers to his ezine), AskDaveTaylor.com (get new ideas for articles and create a revenue stream), and Ask-Leo.com (create an entire newsletter, site or blog comprised of questions and answers). Here's what you need to do to set up this option on your own site: 1. Pick your domain. With your domain name, pick a name that will help you with branding or name recognition in some way, like using your name or your business name, i.e. AskJohnSmith.com or AskBugPatrol.com. Or, you could give yourself a title and that then becomes the domain name, like AskSquidooGuru.com. I buy the version of the domain name that incorporates the word "ask" so that I'm clear (and my visitors are clear) about my purpose of this site. 2. Determine your question. Typically you want to ask something like, "What's the most important question you have about (topic area)" or "What's your most burning question about (topic area)" or "What's your most pressing question about (topic area)". Make it compelling and keep it simple. Use only one question on this form. 3. Brainstorm how you'll use the answers. Will you use them as a basis for ezine articles, blog postings, or podcasts? Are you trying to determine keywords your visitors might use to find a business like yours? Do you need to determine the challenges faced by your target market so that you can tailor your services to better meet their needs? Are you seeking ideas for information product development to support your business? I actually do all of these with the question that I ask. In terms of interaction with my visitor, however, I immediately use the Q&A format as a post on my blog. 4. Choose your form submitter. I use the forms creation tool that comes as a part of my shopping cart program to create the submission form. I simply go into the shopping cart, pick out the information I want to collect (name and email address, for example), and then cut and paste the HTML code into my web page. My shopping cart permits me to link these visitors to an autoresponder if I choose, as well. You can also create the form through a web design program or use a free service like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com. 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make ano Marketing Your Therapy or Coach Business - Give to Get stream), and Ask-Leo.com (create an entire newsletter, site or blog comprised of questions and answers).There are hundreds if not thousands of ways of marketing your therapy or coaching skills. Some cost just pennies and others require a bigger investment and are maybe more of a risk. The risk being that you won’t regain your investment. There are some marketing methods that require something other than your hard earned cash and this article is about those particular methods.Instead of parting with money to promote your therapy or business, give your time. Your time is valuable and in a profitable business should not be wasted. So unless this is an altruistic occasion yo Here's what you need to do to set up this option on your own site: 1. Pick your domain. With your domain name, pick a name that will help you with branding or name recognition in some way, like using your name or your business name, i.e. AskJohnSmith.com or AskBugPatrol.com. Or, you could give yourself a title and that then becomes the domain name, like AskSquidooGuru.com. I buy the version of the domain name that incorporates the word "ask" so that I'm clear (and my visitors are clear) about my purpose of this site. 2. Determine your question. Typically you want to ask something like, "What's the most important question you have about (topic area)" or "What's your most burning question about (topic area)" or "What's your most pressing question about (topic area)". Make it compelling and keep it simple. Use only one question on this form. 3. Brainstorm how you'll use the answers. Will you use them as a basis for ezine articles, blog postings, or podcasts? Are you trying to determine keywords your visitors might use to find a business like yours? Do you need to determine the challenges faced by your target market so that you can tailor your services to better meet their needs? Are you seeking ideas for information product development to support your business? I actually do all of these with the question that I ask. In terms of interaction with my visitor, however, I immediately use the Q&A format as a post on my blog. 4. Choose your form submitter. I use the forms creation tool that comes as a part of my shopping cart program to create the submission form. I simply go into the shopping cart, pick out the information I want to collect (name and email address, for example), and then cut and paste the HTML code into my web page. My shopping cart permits me to link these visitors to an autoresponder if I choose, as well. You can also create the form through a web design program or use a free service like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com. 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make an How To Write A Killer Press Release u want to ask something like, "What's the most important question you have about (topic area)" or "What's your most burning question about (topic area)" or "What's your most pressing question about (topic area)". Make it compelling and keep it simple. Use only one question on this form.One of the primary tools still used by PR professionals to garner media coverage is the press release. Now understand the purpose of a press release is to grab the attention of an editor, not to offer a word for word story to a publication. Most professionals as well as small business owners misunderstand this concept and are therefore frustrated when they can't seem to make it work for them.If you understand that the purpose of a press release is to grab attention then you might also begin to realize that there is a bit of an art to writing an effective one.Thi 3. Brainstorm how you'll use the answers. Will you use them as a basis for ezine articles, blog postings, or podcasts? Are you trying to determine keywords your visitors might use to find a business like yours? Do you need to determine the challenges faced by your target market so that you can tailor your services to better meet their needs? Are you seeking ideas for information product development to support your business? I actually do all of these with the question that I ask. In terms of interaction with my visitor, however, I immediately use the Q&A format as a post on my blog. 4. Choose your form submitter. I use the forms creation tool that comes as a part of my shopping cart program to create the submission form. I simply go into the shopping cart, pick out the information I want to collect (name and email address, for example), and then cut and paste the HTML code into my web page. My shopping cart permits me to link these visitors to an autoresponder if I choose, as well. You can also create the form through a web design program or use a free service like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com. 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make an Work At Home Inbound Call Centers elopment to support your business? I actually do all of these with the question that I ask. In terms of interaction with my visitor, however, I immediately use the Q&A format as a post on my blog.Call centers have become an important aspect of any successful business. They fulfill the need for communication between a company and its customers. Businesses usually have their own in-house call centers, while others employ the services of other call center solutions companies.Usually, call centers have outsourced their operations to other countries. But now, because of the advancements in call center technology and the widespread availability of broadband Internet, inbound call center agents can now work at home.Employing the services of work-at-home inbound 4. Choose your form submitter. I use the forms creation tool that comes as a part of my shopping cart program to create the submission form. I simply go into the shopping cart, pick out the information I want to collect (name and email address, for example), and then cut and paste the HTML code into my web page. My shopping cart permits me to link these visitors to an autoresponder if I choose, as well. You can also create the form through a web design program or use a free service like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com. 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make an Push or Pull? ice like FormDIY.com or MyContactForm.com. Or, if you want to do some significant tracking and statistical analysis of these questions, buy the YouAskThem.com program or subscribe to AskDatabase.com.It's the same old tune.I sat there listening to a man with good ideas who was nevertheless stuck trying to get them to market. His short-cropped, grizzly grey hair and the lines on his face told a dozen stories about his trials and tribulations."You know why most businesses fail?" Ron said. He didn't wait for my answer. "Undercapitalization. They can't get enough money together to kick things off and hang in there until they get enough customers."I nodded. "Sure. I've heard that one a hundred times. Ever wonder why?"Ron blinked. "Well, I always tho 5. Create your thank you page and autoresponder. If your form submission service permits you to do this, create a followup autoresponder to let your visitor know that you received her question and what happens at this point. I tell the visitor that I'll respond to the question in my blog and that I'll protect her identity. Then, if permitted by your form submission service, create a thank you page to which the visitor is sent upon asking the question and use that page to make another request of the visitor. I use my thank you page to request that they subscribe to my email newsletter. 6. Create one page website. For this site, I don't actually buy a separate hosting account, as that's not necessary. I simply create a unique page within my current site and mask and point my domain name to that internal page. So, then the visitor sees AskBugPatrol.com in the browser window rather than something like BugPatrol.com/questions/ask.html. I then just create a table with a simple graphic header that includes my photo and my name and the form to ask the question. You can also include a simple audio or video welcome, as well. 7. Publicize this option. Let all of your visitors know that you will answer their questions. Put an icon on your blog or on your website to link them to your Ask page, tell your ezine subscribers where they can ask a question, and note the URL in your email signature file. Creating a value-added option like permitting your visitors to ask an important question is a very simple, inexpensive way to drive traffic to your site and help you sell products and services, develop relationships, and develop your expertise.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
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