Sitesell announces new BB2 contest on Twitter
More than two years in the making, at the cost of several million dollars, SiteSell has been completely rebuilding the SBI system. It is transitioning from individual servers to a sophisticated clustered environment that will make it possible to add new features, and to improve existing features, in the coming years.
These changes will bring the underlying technology of SBI into the 21st Century and will pave the way for the next ten years of growth for Sitesell.
It’s being called “The End of Clunky.”
Now, I don’t really agree with this description of being “clunky.” I don’t think SBI has ever been clunky, but some people feel that way.
Basically, I think, the argument is that the Block Builder is clunky.
While I agree that building a new page using BB is not as easy as writing a blog post or sending an email, I believe that the original Block Builder has been a wonderful success and has helped thousands of people with no knowledge of HTML to build successful, profitable websites using SBI.
Others disagree and just don’t like it.
So, the propellerheads at Sitesell have been working very long hours for a long time to make all these changes and improvements.
I think the underlying architecture is the most important part of the story, but I think the new Block Builder 2 will be the most visible change.
Coming in January 2012: Block Builder 2
Some of the new things that will be introduced are:
- Block Builder 2
- Site Designer
- Image Library
and many more features that will be added over the next few months
So, to celebrate all of this, Sitesell will be having a contest on Twitter, next week, from Monday, January 16, 2012 to Friday, January 20, 2012.
If you don’t follow their Twitter account, here it is: @SiteSell
(Following their Twitter account is one of the requirements of the contest.)
Now for the contest
The details and rules are on the Sitesell BB2 Twitter Contest page.
There will be five prizes awarded.
1st prize is one year of SBI! plus $500 cash.
2nd through 5th prizes are one year of SBI!.
(One year of SBI! is worth $299 USD.)
If you are not an SBI subscriber, and you are one of the five winners, you can get a free year to build your online business.
If you are already an SBI subscriber, and you win, you can extend one of your subscriptions for a full year at no cost.
It will be a fun, easy contest and it lasts only five days.
Good luck!
JD
Do you know about Zoho CRM?
For the last few months, I’ve been looking for a good CRM system to help me manage customer contacts, sales processes, and all the other tasks related to gathering prospects and converting some of them into paying clients.
I’ve looked at quite a few systems such as SalesForce and InfusionSoft and could not find one that was really a good fit for a solo entrepreneur and/or microbusiness.
I had just about decided to buy a new relational database app and create my own system (which would have taken months), but did not want the diversion from my current business goals. I have a background in developing these types of systems, but then I’d get tied up in all the maintenance and upgrading and just didn’t want to go there.
Yet, at this stage of my business, I could not find an affordable CRM solution that I could grow into as my business expands.
Then, yesterday, I found Zoho CRM and it looks like it may be what I’ve been looking for.
(That is not an affiliate link, but they do have a nice affiliate program. If Zoho CRM turns out to be a good solution for my business, I’ll join their affilate program. But, not until I know it is a good, reliable solution to my sales management needs.)
They offer a free account for up to three users and their paid plans are very affordable: Professional for $12/user/month; and Enterprise for $25/user/month.
About the only thing that the Enterprise Edition offers that the Professional Edition doesn’t (for my particular needs) is autoresponders, and I already have SBI and Aweber for that.
So, if it proves to be useful for helping me manage my sales process, then it will be easily worth $12/user/month. One new client and it would more than pay for itself for a whole year. That’s the kind of ROI I look for.
I don’t know why it took me so long to find Zoho CRM, but I’m happy that I did.
Now, it’s just a matter of putting it to use and seeing how it works for my business.
It has to be comprehensive enough to help me organize everything and to easily see where each prospect is in my marketing funnel, without being so feature-laden that it becomes too complex to use every day.
I’ll let you know in a month or two how it’s going.
If it works for me, it’s going to be a relief. I’m tired of flying by the seat of my pants, and my main goals for this year are to build systems to organize and manage the sales process for myself and my clients.
Act on your dream!
JD
WordPress or SBI revisited
Filed under: Business, Marketing, Sitesell and Site Build It, WordPress
First, let’s get this point out of the way: Yes, this blog is powered by WordPress.
I enjoy blogging, even though I make little money from it. As I’ve said many times before, I make more money from a couple of websites than I do from all my other sites and blogs. Since I do this to earn a living, it’s the profit that’s important to me.
Yes, it’s easier to write pages on WordPress than using SBI. I throw up ad hoc pages on my blogs all the time about topics in which I’m interested at the moment, with very little pre-planning. I come here to share what I’ve learned and to recommend dependable products and services that produce results month after month.
It’s a fact that I’ve closed most of my WordPress-powered blogs and I rarely post on any of my blogs, any more. I’ve left a wasteland of abandoned blogs in my past. Why were they abandoned? Because they were not profitable.
As I’ve said before and I’ll say again, I am going back to focusing almost all of my attention on two things: local marketing for a select group of small business owners and a very limited amount of consulting. It is going to be very hard to become one of my clients. I’m getting pickier as I get older.
I’ll be using SBI for most of my marketing in 2012 and beyond.
If you’re a dyed-in-the-wool WordPress fan and have no intention of changing your mind, then, the show’s over. There’s nothing to see here. Move along. Don’t waste your time on this blog.
If you’re a marketing wannabee, but you’re not willing to invest money for the tools that do a reliable job of earning profit, I’m not for you, either. If you invest all your time and energy in using only the free tools you can find, I’m going to argue that you don’t have a business, you have a hobby.
That’s my position. Agree or disagree, it’s your choice.
On the other hand, if you are a business owner and you want to grow your business, serve more clients and customers, and earn more, then you may want to take a few minutes and read some of the things I have to say.
No, I’m no “Internet Guru.” In fact, I tend to avoid anyone who refers to himself as a guru.
I’m a guy who’s been in the marketing trenches, off and on, for over three decades and I’ve learned some things that work well and some that don’t.
Am I right all the time? I doubt it, but I’ve made my fair share of mistakes and have learned what to avoid and what to do. That’s part of the learning process. Maybe I can help you avoid some errors along the way.
Okay, now that the preamble to the post is out of the way, let’s turn our attention to the subject at hand: building a business by marketing online.
Whether you sell a product or service, online or offline, I think you’ll agree that marketing is a very important part of the process.
If you don’t have a steady stream of interested prospects, it’s going to be hard to have a steady stream of happy customers who buy from you over and over, and that’s a business. Not one time, here and there, sales. Multiple sales to the same person, over and over, year in and year out.
That’s my goal for 2012. To build a marketing system that does just that: attracts thousands of prospects, tells them how to scratch an itch or avoid a pain, and then recommend products and services and processes that work.
Most of this system, I’ll be building for my clients and myself and I’ll never talk about it here, but I’ll be using the tools that I write about in this blog. If you look in the right column of almost any page on this site, you’ll see the tools I recommend and use all the time to attract prospects and turn them into customers.
(Note: I’m basically starting over after a long illness, so most of the systems I’ll be building are not yet in place, but I’m working on them every day. They will be.)
So, I’ve said all of that to say this:
Do not confuse busy-ness with business. They are not the same.
A business is based on results and that usually means profit. The goal of a business is to increase wealth. I would add this, “while providing the best services and products that are available to your customers.”
I know from experience that I’ve been busy with blogging and it has been a distraction. It has taken my attention away from building a real business and has cost a lot in terms of missed income, because I didn’t keep my eye on my goals.
I was enjoying the process of playing with the technology, rather than focusing on achieving specific business goals.
Blogging — for me, at least — has been a huge shiny object that diverted me from my business for several years. Yes, it was a valuable lesson, but I’m happy that I learned the lesson and have time to rectify the problem.
Harsh words? Maybe.
But, they’re true.
I can look at my own stats and accounting reports and I know that I earn far more money from several websites than I do from all the blogs I’ve built.
I’m thinking, and have no proof, that the main reason is that people come to blogs with a different mindset and different intentions than they do when going to an information rich, niche-focused, hierarchically organized, traditional website.
People bounce into a blog, scan the latest article, and bounce right back out — mostly. That’s why bounce rates tend to be higher on blogs than websites.
At least, that’s what my stats tell me.
I’m not saying that blogs are bad. For some specific niches, they are great. If you serve a niche where the latest news and developments is important and you focus on covering those topics day in and day out, then a blog may be the best approach for you.
If you want to write about a wide range of topics and don’t want to try to organize those topics as you would have to do with a website, then a blog may work, but I’m betting you won’t get very good results from it.
What are you selling?
You have to sell something to have a business. Your income has to exceed your expenses if you’re going to have a real business.
Over a decade ago, I quit computer consulting. I became an artist blacksmith and specialized in making roses that never wilt. I was enjoying that business until Mom became ill. Following her battle with cancer, she could not care for herself, so I brought her home and cared for her for the next several years. Since I could leave her alone for no more than an hour or two at a time, I took up affiliate marketing as a way to earn a living while staying home to care for her.
It worked.
But, the main problem was this: I had no customers nor clients. I had no products to sell. None.
I earned a pretty good living by writing about things that people were interested in and then recommending products via affiliate links. I’m still doing that. I love that business.
The problem, however, is that the people who purchase (or click on the Google Adsense ads) are not my customers — they’re someone else’s customers.
So, my job has been to attract hundreds of thousands of readers and hope that enough of them would purchase so that I’d earn enough to live well.
I did all the work up front and hoped for an income. It’s been great for me, but I know a lot of people who have tried it and have not done nearly as well as they want.
Part of the problem is that it’s a flawed business plan.
We do all the work of promotion and building interest and then pass the customers off to the merchants.
We’re helping the merchants increase their herds, but we’re not building and nurturing a herd of our own.
(If you’re wondering, that’s the term Dan Kennedy uses to help remind us that a good business has a group of satisfied customers and it’s our job to provide what those customers want so that they’ll buy from us over and over. He calls it building a fence around our herd. Then, he advises that we market to our herd over and over, every month, in a way that helps them get what they want.)
That whole process has been perverted, to a degree, in the “internet marketing” business, where people who don’t have a herd of their own, are always selling, selling, selling to anyone who wanders by, and that just does not work.
Someone visits your website or blog, clicks a link, and then they’re gone, possibly never to return. Next!
You may be able to earn a few hundred dollars per month with this approach, but you can’t live on a few hundred dollars per month. At least, I can’t, and I enjoy living a relatively simple life.
So, not only do you not have a herd of your own, you don’t have anything to sell to them. All most bloggers do is try to get visitors to click on affiliate links or click the ads.
Some bloggers offer a lot of quality content; some don’t. Most don’t earn much. Most don’t attract many readers and even fewer buyers.
So, they become enamored with the process and the technology and don’t invest the time, energy, and money to build systems to corral and nurture a herd of their own.
In fact, I know a few bloggers (myself included for a few years) who actively avoid building a herd and nurturing them, even if we know better. It’s a trap that is easy to fall into.
What do you sell? To whom do you sell it?
If you have a traditional business, you have regular customers and clients.
If you own a restaurant, you have regular customers who enjoy your food and they tell their friends. They eat there off and on. If you do a good job of marketing, you can get them to eat more often and to bring their friends along, too. This increases the number of purchases and also increases the amount of the transactions, and that means more income. If your marketing costs less than the increase in revenue, it means that you have higher profits — and that’s the goal. (At least, it’s one of the goals.)
When I was a computer consultant, it was easy to focus on my business. I wanted people to find me, hire me, pay me, and call me back the next time they needed my services. This was before the Internet, so most of my marketing consisted of giving free presentations to groups of potential clients and publishing a newsletter every month.
(I wish I had one of those old newsletters to look at. They were produced with a typewriter and were cut and pasted with real scissors and glue, before cutting and pasting meant clicking a button.)
They weren’t nearly as pretty as the newsletters I’ll create this year, but they were effective.
When I was a blacksmith, the Internet was just starting to flourish, and I used one tiny section of one website and was able to sell all the steel roses I was able to forge.
But, when I closed my blacksmithing business and started caring for Mom, I lost my direction. My main interest was caring for her and my secondary interest was earning enough money to continue caring for her at home. Affiliate marketing served that purpose, well.
So, during the time I cared for her and then fought my own battle with cancer, it means that I’ve spent almost exactly a decade of selling to random people who were attracted to my various websites.
Since I had no clear target markets and no clear business goals, I drifted and experimented with the technology. I was fascinated and I enjoyed it and I learned a lot.
But, now, for the first time in a decade, I’m able to work full-time at what I enjoy doing and I have a couple of products of my own that I can sell.
That makes it much easier to define the target market and to create ways to communicate with those people. As time goes by, I’ll attract them into my pasture, feed and nourish them, and tell them, over and over, how I can help them get what they want.
Since I have some highly-developed skills in this area and enough experience to know what to do and what not to do, I can sell my services in several ways. Each of those will have its own herd and I will nurture and care for them month after month after month, until I can do it no longer.
That makes it much, much easier to focus.
It’s also why it has become so obvious to me that I need to decrease my blogging activities and focus on other means of marketing and attracting clients and customers.
Yes, I still enjoy blogging, or I would not take the time to write this post.
I don’t know if you enjoy reading it. That’s for you to decide.
Affiliate marketing will always be a part of my business, but it has moved into second place this year. It will move into third place in 2013.
Even so, I intend to earn more from affiliate marketing in the coming years than I ever did in the past, because I’ve stopped promoting anything that doesn’t work very well. I’ve narrowed my focus on tools I use and I’m promoting only the best of breed in each category.
I’ve taken that philosophy and adapted it to one of my service businesses, and I’ll only work with one person in each category — and that person will be the best I can find. Life is too short to waste it on working with people who aren’t focused on doing the best they can.
Why build a website instead of a blog?
This brings us back to the original topic: WordPress and SBI, revisited.
Here’s an interesting page you may want to read:

I think the conclusions that are drawn are valid — but it is a limited data set.
I suspect, but have no proof, that the majority of self-hosted WordPress blogs attract many more readers than the average number reported by WordPress blogs that are hosted by WordPress.com.
I have a blog there that I rarely write to, and I doubt it gets any visitors.
I post a lot more frequently to this blog and put a lot more work into each post.
So, I believe that the actual average number of viewers for WordPress-powered blogs is higher than shown, but there’s no way to know for sure.
The numbers for SBI sites, however, are valid and true. SBI keeps these stats for all sites hosted on their system, so we can be sure that they are accurate.
And, as with any “average” number of anything, there will be sites with far fewer visitors and a few sites with many, many more.
I believe one of the key differences is that SBI has a process that includes an education and set of steps that we follow to make our sites as good as they can be — if we take the time to follow those steps properly.
I admit that I have not done a good job of that, so I’m basically starting over with both my sites and will systematically rebuild them using the plan I created over the last few months.
Even though I’ve mostly ignored my two SBI sites for the last couple of years, they still outperform my blogs — including this one.
Now, will that be true for you? Honestly, I don’t know, but I think the odds are in your favor.
I also want to quibble with one point on that page. It says, “The more traffic you receive, the more income you earn, whether you’re selling ads or aardvarks.”
All things being equal, that may be true. It probably is.
However, I don’t think things are equal between blogs and websites. I think people have a different mindset when they visit a blog and bounce back out than when they visit a website and read several pages before leaving.
I think that gives a well-organized website that is full of high-quality information a real edge over most blogs.
I’m not positive about it, but I think it’s true
Building an online business is not for everyone. It requires a number of skills, and two that are very important are being able to research a topic and then write what you know about it. I don’t mean paraphrasing someone else’s work, I mean truly original writing. That takes work and talent.
Not everyone can or will do that.
It’s a little easier if you have your own business with your own products and services and you want to promote them online. A well-planned and organized website will outperform a blog.
While I can’t conclusively prove that statement, I think it is accurate.
Do you have to use SBI to build such a website?
Of course not.
There are many ways to build a website and there is a lot of information scattered all over the Web on how to do it. Without any doubt, that is true.
But, none of those includes all you need to know to build your online business in the way that SBI does, all in one place.
Will SBI work well for every site? No. SBI does not offer things like PHP scripting and database access. If you need those features, or even if you just want them, SBI is not for you.
However, for the majority of people who don’t want or need such things, SBI puts the technology in the background and lets you focus more of your attention on attracting and nurturing your herd.
No matter what system you use, however, if you’re new to building websites, there is a LOT to learn. But, with SBI, you don’t have to figure it all out, all you have to do is follow the time-proven method to identify, research, and build your site. That makes it a lot easier.
Especially if you’re a busy business owner who isn’t interested in learning a lot of technobabble.
You want to tend your herd and have them buy from you again and again. That’s the goal. SBI makes it easier. Not easy, but definitely easier.
What kinds of businesses are people building with SBI? Find your business.
If you’re not sure if SBI is right for you, you can ask your questions for free. No obligation.
When you’re ready to start, SBI offers a 90-day full-money-back guarantee, if you decide it isn’t what you need.
Why am I so insistent?
Is it because I earn a commission if you subscribe to SBI through one of my links?
Yes, that’s partly true.
However, I’m also an affiliate for HostGator, 1&1, and others, and you don’t see me promoting them. I’m also an affiliate for several domain registrars and I’ve stopped promoting them.
I like, use, and recommend Weebly to some people for building some kinds of websites, but not if your primary method of attracting prospects is via your website. For that purpose, I recommend SBI.
Weebly does make it easy, however, if you want to build a website and blog that provides some information about your existing business and you promote it mainly by links from other places, rather than relying on attracting lots of visitors through the search engines. You can do it and it works well for some people, but it is not my top recommendation.
By the same token, I could join the affiliate programs to recommend premium WordPress blog themes and even promote WordPress consultants and specialists.
You don’t see me doing that, either. (Although I’m sure I could earn a lot of money, if I did.)
Why?
Because, for most business owners, and people who want to own their own business, SBI is the right choice.
Act on your dream!
JD


















