-
Website
http://lifedev.net/ -
Original page
http://lifedev.net/2009/10/learn-to-sell-digital-product/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Get In The Hot Spot
4 comments · 1 points
-
SEO
3 comments · 9 points
-
Metroknow
3 comments · 1 points
-
Dayne | TheHappySelf.com
4 comments · 2 points
-
Tammy Lenski
4 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Real-World Flops That Prove Failure is a Key Ingredient of Creativity
2 weeks ago · 7 comments
-
Stick to Your Guns!
3 days ago · 1 comment
-
I’ve Got Nothing To Say
3 weeks ago · 8 comments
-
Real-World Flops That Prove Failure is a Key Ingredient of Creativity
Thanks for sharing this with us. It was a nice read.
Question: If you know your pitfalls in regards to this digital product, then will you re-launch the product with proper copywriting and give it more enthusiasm to prove your point?
I don't know about a complete re-launch per se, but I'll definitely improve the copy. It does need some more enthusiasm ;)
Let us know what happens when you change the copy. I would love to know the percentages of sales from bad copy to good copy.
Did you put the product in any affiliate programs such as Clickbank or Digital River?
Sales copy is definitely worth investing in. ;)
This point about perceived value by irrational buyers leads me down the path that makes me think of another example I use sometimes. If there are two people and one orange, and person A takes the orange and person B goes hungry due to wanting to share it, person A is able to reproduce and person B is not.
In the same way, the person creating more perceived value through copywriting methods takes the sales, while the other person who would provide just as much, if not more value, without showing it off as perceived value, struggles and can end up giving up.
But yeah, I don't want to get into some massive rant. I'm still trying to work out my thoughts on how selling can work within ethics. :)
Anyway, those are probably thoughts for another post. Great thoughts.
And thanks for this:
"There are plenty of things more important than commercial success of a product. The second you get wrapped up into the success of something you’ve created, that’s when you start making decisions for the wrong reasons.
There are plenty of things that are more important."
Whether we're in a down economy or a booming economy, it's very easy to miss that all-important point.