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Article Title:
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The Most Important Ingredient for Info Product Success (is You)

Article Description:
====================

Last week I was attending a conference and mentioned to someone I
help small business owners create information products. The other
person was very friendly until I said "information products."
Then the temperature in the room dropped about 10-degrees


Additional Article Information:
===============================

981 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-04-15 11:48:00

Written By:     Judy Murdoch
Copyright:      2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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The Most Important Ingredient for Info Product Success (is You)
Copyright (c) 2008 Judy Murdoch
Highly Contagious Marketing
http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm



Last week I was attending a conference and mentioned to someone I
help small

business owners create information products. The other person was
very friendly until I said "information products." Then the
temperature in the room dropped about 10-degrees.

When I asked her why she seemed less than enthusiastic, she told
me how disappointed she was with most of the information products
she bought. In her experience, the products seemed like they were
"just slapped together" and that "all the business owner
seemed to care about was making money."

When people tell me this, I feel sad.

One reason I feel sad is because I've had the same experience. I
buy an information product that seems to be what I need and what
I get is a poorly written data dump. Even if there's useful
information, I have to work so hard to figure out what it is and
how to apply it, I give up in frustration. The other reason I
feel said is because it doesn't need to be this way.

======================================= Why Information Products
Suck =======================================

You see, the reason these products suck is not so much because
they're information dumps or even because they're poorly
written. It's because they're missing the essential ingredient
that customers want: connection with the business owner.

Usually, when I buy something from a small business, it's
because there's something about the business owner that
resonates with me. It may be their take on business, or their
sense of humor, or their way of explaining something. When this
happens I want to hang out with them and learn more. If they
offer information products such as books, articles, podcasts, and
so on, this is a great way for me to get my daily, weekly, or
monthly dose.

When a small business owner slaps something together and calls it
an information product without investing themselves in the
product, they may be

providing some helpful information but they're not providing
customers with what they really want: a bit of themselves. When
this happens, customers feel cheated.

======================================= How to Make Sure There's
a Little Bit of You in Your Products
=======================================

1. Tell a story --------------- Stories also allow you to
personalize your experience and knowledge and allow others to
experience you as your customers do. There's nothing better than
a story about how you used your experience, knowledge, and
resources to illustrate how add value.

2. Be real ----------

One of the greatest assets you have as a small business owner, is
the human face you give your business.

When you can be real which means revealing your quirks and
imperfections, you give your client permission to trust and ask
for help. When I returned to school to get my MBA, I felt
overwhelmed and scared for the first few months. All the other
first year students seemed to be doing well and I assumed there
was something wrong with me feeling the way I did.

Lucky for me, I was in a class taken mostly by second year
students. I remember one of them asking me how things were going.
"Oh, just great," I lied, "everything is going really well."
"Really?" the second year student said. He was genuinely
surprised. "Man, I hated my first year, especially the first
semester. I almost dropped out." He then went on to say that as
he got to know and trust the other students, the program got a
lot easier.

Hearing this was a huge relief. It gave me permission to stop
acting and start being myself. And when I started being myself, I
began making friends with other students and actually enjoying
school. The point is, you don't need to be perfect and your
information products don't need to be perfect either. If you
struggled to learn what you're teaching, say so. If you make
mistakes and typos, apologize, fix them, and move on.

3. Take a stand, even if it's controversial
-------------------------------------------

A few years ago, I spoke to a group of local business owners
about guerrilla

marketing. I could tell the presentation didn't go well but I
wasn't sure why. Over coffee, I asked the woman who booked me,
why the audience seemed "less than thrilled." She told me a few
people complained that when they asked me questions I kept
qualifying my answers with "this is just my opinion." "We
brought you in because you're an expert. We assume you're
giving us your

opinion based on your experience in the field," she said, "when
you apologize it sounds like you don't know what you're doing"

It's scary to take a stand on an issue when you're a business
owner because you worry about losing prospective customers who
disagree. But you are also demonstrating leadership for those who
do agree and are looking for someone willing to speak up. There
are issues in every industry that people have strong opinions on.
If you sincerely have a position, and it's relevant within the
context of your products, speak up and let your customers know
where you stand and why.

4. Use your voice -----------------

You know when you read an article or listen to a podcast and you
can just tell author is trying to be someone he or she thinks
their customer wants them to be?

I'm not saying they sound bad. They just don't sound like
themselves. The best thing that ever happened to me was when I
stopped trying to write like a Corporate Marketing Android and
started writing the way I would if I were explaining something to
a respected friend or colleague.

======================================= Bottom Line
=======================================

It's not hard to create information products customers love.
Provide a bite-sized solution to a problem that they can easily
implement. And put a little of yourself into your product using
stories, being human, taking a stand, and writing in a
conversational tone. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Judy Murdoch helps small business owners create low-cost, 
effective marketing campaigns using word-of-mouth referrals, 
guerrilla marketing activities, and selected strategic alliances.
To download a free copy of the workbook, "Where Does it Hurt? 
Marketing Solutions to the problems that Drive Your Customers 
Crazy!" go to http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm 
You can contact Judy at 303-475-2015 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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