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Home Based Businesses
Have Their Share Of Frustrations
By: Kirk Bannerman
The source of frustration addressed in
his article may be all
too familiar if you happen to work at an
Internet-based home
business which relies on personal
relationships and/or teamwork.
I am often contacted by members of my
business team with a tale
of woe regarding a lack of response from
their affiliates. It
typically goes something like..."I send
out lots of emails to all
of them and I very rarely get any response.
What am I doing
wrong".
If your particular internet business
involves selling well known
branded items, personal feedback is not an
issue. Visitors to
your website (potential customers) are
primarily interested in
selection, availability, and price. If it is
a returning
customer, then you can also throw customer
service into the
equation. Once the desired item is selected,
your mouse does
all the "talking" without any
human interaction involved.
However, there are many types of
internet-based home businesses
where feedback and interaction are quite
important and getting an
affiliate or business team member to
communicate with you is a
definite objective. It's not at all
surprising that this can be
a challenge when you stop to think that what
you are trying to do
is initiate a dialog between two complete
strangers who have
never even seen each other.
Heavily branded websites like www.walmart.com or
www.amazon.com are
household names and carry an implied trust
with visitors.
However, the vast majority of websites are
not well known and are
found and visited as a result of searches
performed by search
engines. In these instances, the visitor is
probably arriving at
the website for the first time and human
nature often dictates a
sense of fear or suspicion of the unknown
which is manifested by
a reluctance to respond to email messages
from an unknown party.
It seems that there is no pat answer as to
the best way to elicit
an initial email response from a person. I
have tried several
approaches with varying degrees of success.
Individual styles
will vary, but the following four points
should be kept in mind:
*you need to build trust & credibility
with thorough knowledge
of your business and with straight forward
talk about realistic
expectations
*don't over-sell or indulge in hype as many
people are expecting
this and it can be an immediate turn-off
*send messages with at least one open-ended
question that
requires a response
*keep the messages fairly brief, long winded
messages that go on
and on quite frequently will not be read
One other thing to keep in mind is that your
messages may not
even be reaching the intended recipient and
they have no
opportunity to give you a reply. At the end
of your messages
you might want to ask the recipient to send
you a return email
just saying "got it".
We all agree that spam is a very serious
problem. These days,
many email providers and ISPs have appointed
themselves to be the
"information police" and are
employing various schemes to try to
recognize and block messages that constitute
spam.
Unfortunately, these mail filtering or
blocking techniques are
often very inaccurate and many messages that
people actually want
to receive are arbitrarily being sent off
into the ozone.
I have some first hand experience with this
situation. Not long
ago, the ISP that my mother was using
suddenly decided that she
would not be allowed to receive messages
from me! It took us a
while to figure out what was going on, but
once we did, that ISP
was going to soon become history as far as
my mother was
concerned.
In the final analysis, all you can do is
give it your best shot.
Some people will respond, some won't...and
the beat goes on.
Remember, it's nothing personal, just human
nature at work.
About the Author
Kirk Bannerman operates his own
successful home based business
and also coaches others seeking to start
their own home based
business. For more information visit his
website at
Proven Work At Home Business
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