Personal Private Minisites Pave Paths To Profits!

Jul 15
21:00

2002

Michel Fortin

Michel Fortin

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

A recent, growing trend on the Internet is the private ... it's a small, ... website that offers ... on a topic that might be of interest to a ...

mediaimage

A recent,Personal Private Minisites Pave Paths To Profits! Articles growing trend on the Internet is the private minisite
-- it's a small, password-protected website that offers "insider
information" on a topic that might be of interest to a specific
audience. Similar to an ebook, it primarily offers information
that's geared for a specific group, niche or vertical industry.

A private "minisite" is like a small, niche-oriented community,
where access is restricted and granted for a fee. Of course, web
communities are all the rage, right now, for various reasons --
one is certainly the fact that these places help to humanize the
digital experience as well as offer "insider information" that's
current and more palpable, particularly for that group of people.

However, the success of a private site, whether large or small,
is largely predicated on the idea that it is dynamic and offers
many extras that plain, static information products (like ebooks,
for example) don't or can't. One of its greatest benefits is the
fact that it is constantly updated with the latest information.

As an example, private sites offer many resources, which help to
make the site vibrant, vital and valuable: checklists, surveys,
applications, downloads, resources, chatrooms, scripts, services,
links, file sharing, "hot" topics-of-the-day, discussion forums,
event calendars, instant messaging, reviews, consultations, etc.

Membership-based minisites, however, are not large or bulky. And
they don't necessarily need all of the above bells and whistles.
They are called "mini" because, typically, the private section of
the site consists of content and the public site consists of just
one long copy sales letter. (Being a web copywriter, the bulk of
my work consist of sales letters for private sites, these days.)

The driving force behind private minisites is the idea that their
members feel part of an elite group who have access to exclusive
knowledge, and the fact that they are constantly being updated on
the subject matter. It's an important part of their membership.

If you're an expert on a specific topic, or if you know how to do
something better (or different) than anybody else, then you have
a basis for a private minisite. But unlike ebooks or information
products, your income will not be based on one-time sales but on
recurring, billed memberships, including renewals and upsales of
non-competing products or affiliate programs to your members.

An additional yet enormously compelling benefit of private sites
is the idea that the owner offers personalized consulting on the
topic area. Members receive not only information but also one-on-
one, individualized support. (A good way to accomplish this is by
erecting a members' discussion board. It also reduces redundancy,
since questions need to be answered only once in many cases.)

The more niche-oriented or unique the product is, the greater the
chances of success for the private site will be. Simply offering
content that's exclusive to private members is a start, for the
feeling of exclusivity is the catalyst behind any private site.

As a long copy, web sales letter copywriter, there are several
things that help make private minisites compelling to aspiring
members. Let me give you a few examples to give you a headstart.

1) Drive customer actions by telling them, specifically, what you
want them to do. Use expressions like "click here," "subscribe
today," "visit this," "join now," "go there," "discover how"
and "learn these" are commands in which you compel people to
take action. Take them "by the hand," in other words.

Private sites (or any sales-oriented, single-product site, for
that matter) must have the least amount of links on or around
the sales letter. The more links there are (to other resources
or pages, for example), the more you distract users and take
their focus away from your letter (and away from the purpose
of your public site, which is to sell private memberships).

I know I'm going against the grain, here. But offering extra
pages, like FAQs, links, testimonials and so on, are great for
information-based sites (or those selling multiple products).
They help to make the site "sticky" and drive search engine
rankings. But for private minisites, they're dead weight.

If you're selling a single product, keep visitors focused and
steer them in only one direction. Too many messages, choices
or "things to do" only confuse people. If you offer an opt-in
email newsletter, for example, turn the subscription form into
a pop-up or add it to the body of your sales letter. In short,
if you offer people too many choices, they will not make one.

(You're unknown, so a newsletter, opt-in mailing list or even
a multipart course delivered via autoresponder is an important
tactic, since you build trust and develop a relationship with
your prospects who might not be inclined to join right now.)

Look at how I incorporated the opt-in form within the copy I
wrote for Kirt Christensen at http://successdoctor.com/kirt/.
There are only three links: order page, affiliate signup page
and login page. But the form is added on the sales letter and
in a pop-up window. Bottom-line, the sales letter won't drive
people away and keeps them focused, interested and excited.

2) Jim Rohn said that, "Without a sense of urgency, desire loses
its value." People fear making bad decisions. With scams and
snake oils rampant on the web, the fear is even greater when
shopping online. So, most of them tend to procrastinate, even
when they're interested in your offer. Therefore, communicate
a certain sense of urgency that compels visitors to act now.

Use "takeaway selling" to stop people from procrastinating. In
other words, shape your offer -- and not just your product --
so that it is limited, time-sensitive or quantity-bound. Make
your offer scarce. As an example, put a deadline on your offer
or some kind of limit on the number of people you accept.

(Takeaway selling is based on the fact that "people don't know
how much they want something until it's about to be taken away
from them." It's the supply-and-demand mentality: the rarer or
less available something is, the more people want it. And it's
also one of the reasons behind the success of private sites.)

Add a deadline to your offer, or limit the number of products
you sell (or the number of new members you allow to join). But
there is a caveat: to make sure that people believe your need
to limit the offer, give a reasonable, logical explanation to
justify your time-sensitivity -- or else your tactic will be
instantly discredited. (How many "time-limited" offers have
you seen on the web that are totally false or misleading?)

If you add a deadline or limit the number of members, you must
explain why you're doing so. Here's an example of what I put
on some sales letters I've written -- they sell memberships to
private sites and offer personal consulting to their members:

Example #1:

"To be candid with you, I don't know how long I'm going to
keep the doors open to new members because this information is
extremely sensitive and limited. I don't want to dilute the
value of this information for my paid members. If you were a
member, wouldn't you want the same, too? So, I must restrict
the number of users for quality control purposes."

(In this case, it is very true. The author sells access to
a limited number of "hot" real estate opportunities that he
finds through his unique system, which he also teaches his
members. If too many people join and get their hands on the
opportunities or the system, it will surely lower the value
of the information to the member-base, and contradict the
purpose of the site. Otherwise, why would one join?)

Example #2:

"We're only human, and there are only so many hours in a day
(and so many people we can physically attend to)! So, in order
to limit the number of hours we do provide, we must put a cap
on the number of new members for obvious reasons. We can only
guarantee that people who sign up through [date] will qualify
for membership, completely custom-tailored consulting support
and this incredible set of free bonuses worth over $[amount]!
'You snooze, you lose'. So, don't wait. Join NOW!"

(This example demonstrates the importance of the support
they offer private members and, at the same time, drives
home the idea that such a service is limited. I'm sure the
owners can hire part-time help if the need ever arose. But
nothing can replace expertise that comes from straight the
experts -- the more people join, the less time they have.)

3) People are instinctively curious. And nothing piques curiosity
more than something that's secret, rare, private, unavailable,
exclusive, limited, scarce, uncommon, prohibited, hidden, etc.
The unknown drives people's interest. They love having dibs on
something that's not readily available (especially if it gives
them an edge over the competition before they know about it).

So, use words like "private site," "exclusive members area,"
"insider access" or "restricted vault." Moreover, people love
not only hidden information but also the idea that it's all
put together into a single place that's easy to access, learn
and digest. It all comes down to a matter of convenience.

Expressions like "secret formula," "custom checklist," "unique
process," "specialized system" and so on all help to heighten
perceived value because they imply less time, money and effort
in finding that same information. As an example, when I write
the copy for private sites, I use terms such as: "Proficiency
Program," "Secret Formula," "Inner Circle," "Hidden Vault,"
"Mentoring System," "Treasure Trove," "Coveted Toolkit," etc.

Even though such phrases are truly qualifying the product as a
whole (i.e., the entire private minisite) and not one specific
item, formula or system, it still helps to make the product a
little more tangible and convenient in the visitor's mind. It
also adds a certain mystique to it. Use it to your advantage!

4) Finally, put a numerical value on any benefit you promise, be
it in dollars or hours. And make it an odd number, for they
are more believable than even or rounded numbers. (That's why,
for example, Ivory said it's "99 and 44/100% pure." If Ivory
had said "100%," it wouldn't have been as believable.)

In fact, here's a rule of thumb. A true benefit is one that's:

1) Quantifiable,
2) Measurable and
3) Time-bound.

One private site, whose copy I recently critiqued, offers golf
training to its members. But originally, one benefit promised,
"You will hit stronger drives." I told the owner to replace it
with, "My unique, mentoring system will show you how to boost
your drives by as much as 27 yards in less than 30 days."

The word "yards" makes the benefit measurable, the word "27"
makes it quantifiable and the words "30 days" make it time-
bound. Now, that's a clear, cogent and compelling benefit!

Nevertheless, if you're an Internet marketer or entrepreneur, the
private minisite may be the product for you. But realize that the
number of memberships you successfully sell will hinge greatly on
the words and expressions used in your sales copy. If you ignite
your site with killer copy, you will detonate your response rate.