Promote Your CafePress store on Squidoo
Filed under: Affiliate Marketing, CafePress, Marketing, Poll, Squidoo Lenses, Squidoo Marketing
I was just updating my Promote Your CafePress Store lens on Squidoo and started wondering why someone would add a link to their shop, but would neglect to reload the page and vote for their own shop so it would rise closer to the top of the list.
What would be a valid reason for this behavior?
Could it be a basic lack of understanding of how the Squidoo Plexo modules work? On most of my lenses with a Plexo module, I have it set to add the link right away and send me an email message. When I get time, I go through those messages and look at what has been added to my lenses. If something is off-topic, I delete it.
Usually, I click on the link to see what was added. If I like it, I’ll click the up-arrow on my lens and vote for it.
The more up-votes, the higher the link will appear in that list.
Now, I’ve been remiss in looking through the CafePress shops in this lens, but I’m going to rectify that omission in the next few days by visiting those shops and voting for the ones I like.
I made some changes to the lens this evening. Instead of showing just the top 25 lenses (based on vote count), the lens is now showing all of them. I also removed the option to vote down a store in the list.
Still, I wonder why someone would build a store at CafePress, want to sell their merchandise, would add a link to their store on my lens, but would neglect the simple act of voting for their store and asking their friends to do the same.
Lack of understanding? Being too scattered in what they’re doing? Lazy?
I’m not going to make that mistake.
If you visit my Promote Your CafePress Store lens, I hope you’ll take the time to click the up-arrow next to my store, John Dilbeck – Shirts, Mugs, and Hats : CafePress.com. Currently, it’s at the top of the list with only two votes! Hopefully, after writing about it, my store will stay at the top of the list, or at least near the top.
If it doesn’t, that’s okay, too. I created the list with the anticipation that CafePress shop owners would list their store, and ask their friends to vote for it. I’m hoping other visitors to the lens will look at the stores in the list and vote for their favorites. Maybe the best stores will rise to the top, eventually.
Helping my friends promote their shops
Originally, I created the lens because I had friends with CafePress shops who were not selling their merchandise. Some of them had some high-quality designs, so the lack of sales must have been due to the lack of proper marketing.
Now, I know that one link on a lens will not create an overwhelming rush of customers to your store with their credit cards outstretched as they join in a mad frenzy of shopping, but it is a start.
Promote your shop
Have you taken that first step? If you have a CafePress shop, have you added a link to your store on this lens? Don’t forget to reload the page and vote for your shop.
Have you promoted your shop anywhere online? How are you attracting visitors to your shop so they’ll buy products with your designs?
Squidoo Marketing Community
A few months ago, I started the Squidoo Marketing Community so my fellow lensmasters could share ideas, help each other, and do a better job of marketing using their Squidoo lenses. There’s even a CafePress Shops group there so we can focus on discussing ways to promote our CafePress designs.
CafePress Affiliate Marketing Program
Did you know that CafePress has an affiliate marketing program managed through CommissionJunction.com? They do, and it pays pretty good commissions.
As a shop owner, I welcome sales by affiliates and I’m happy to provide part of my profits to them for any sales they make.
As an affiliate, I’m happy to accept a commission for helping to sell someone else’s items through my marketing efforts.
As you may know, my CafePress shop is located at Shirts-Mugs-Hats.com and I welcome anyone who would like to purchase my designs and/or any affiliates who would like to earn a commission by marketing my designs to your readers.
Do you have a CafePress shop?
What are you doing to promote it?
If you don’t have one, did you know that you can open your own shop for free?
An even better deal is opening your shop and upgrading it to a premium shop. You’ll be able to do much more with it. Considering all that CafePress provides, the low monthly fee for a premium shop is a real bargain.
How satisfied are you with your CafePress store?
I know everyone isn’t as satisfied with CafePress as I am.
So, what’s your experience?
What do you think?
Tell us about your CafePress shop and what you are doing to promote it.
I’m interested in your experiences with CafePress, learning more about your shops and the designs you sell, and how you’re marketing your products via CafePress.
How can we work together to help each other increase our sales and make more profits from our CafePress stores?
Act on your dream!
JD
Where is my bail out?
I’ll be the first to say that I don’t understand the real scope of the financial bailout of Wall Street firms and all the ramifications of passing, or not passing, the bailout that is being fought over in congress.
All I know is that I work hard, spend within my budget, no longer use credit cards, am completely debt-free, and see no reason that my tax money should be sent to bail out greedy people who didn’t manage their risk properly and got into debt over their heads.
Truly, I don’t understand it.
Since there’s not much else I can do, I added a new design, I am too big to fail. Where is my bail out?, to my CafePress shop.
Will this help to solve the problem? Of course, not.
Maybe you would like to wear one of these products to protest this whole mess. Maybe not. It’s up to you.
Sigh.
JD
Is Squidoo another blogging platform?
Filed under: Affiliate Marketing, Blogging, Marketing, RSS Syndication, Social Networking, Squidoo Lenses, Squidoo Marketing, Twitter
Aussie Sire asked a question on one of my twitter update posts and suggested that I rewrite my reply as a blog post. I think that’s a great idea.
He said:
Hi John, I had a look at your Squidoo page and I must say it is very impressive. I have heard of Squidoo and lenses and such but never really looked into them. It seems like another blogging platform but I assume there is a difference?
Hi Sire, thanks for the kind words about my Squidoo page for this blog:
21st Century Affiliate Marketing
Squidoo is not a blogging platform, but it works well with blogs. I try to build a Squidoo lens for each of my blogs for one specific reason: I can syndicate the RSS feed on the lens and Google likes Squidoo lenses. That means that some people may find my blog indirectly via the lens I create on Squidoo.
Squidoo is more of a simple webpage builder and they call each page a lens because the object is to focus on a single topic per page.
You may understand Squidoo a bit more if you read my lens at:
That lens syndicates the feed from this blog, my social networking community for Squidoo lensmasters who enjoy marketing, and my blog specifically about marketing with Squidoo.
It also links to other lenses that have information about marketing using Squidoo.
You can build as many (or as few) lenses as you want and it’s always free. In fact, if you build lenses that attract visitors and get clicks, you can earn money from your lenses. Some very few people earn over $1,000 per month; a few dozen lensmasters earn around $100 per month; and most of us earn less than that. Your earnings come from sharing with Squidoo the commissions from Adsense and Glam ads on your lens.
I get a welcome deposit from Squidoo into my PayPal account every month.
Since you already have several blogs, perhaps you could start by building a lens about the main topic of one of your blogs.
You can get started here:
Join Squidoo and start building your own lenses.
But, I earn much more than the payment I get directly from Squidoo, because I promote affiliate links on my lenses and don’t have to share the proceeds from those commissions with Squidoo.
I also promote my CafePress shop on a few of my lenses and link back to some of my websites on other lenses.
So, I use Squidoo both as a traffic generator and as another profit center. It’s also great at cross-promoting lenses, blogs, forums, websites, social networking sites, and other web presences that share common themes and topics.
If you have a blog and you’d like Google to pay more attention, you may want to build a lens about the blog’s main topic and syndicate your RSS feed on the lens. You can also recommend books and other products from Amazon.com.
You can even recommend products from CafePress without having to join their affiliate program, but you’ll be sharing the commissions with Squidoo. It’s worth it because the CafePress module makes it so easy to promote the products you like on CafePress. There are thousands of shopkeepers selling their designs on CafePress and you can select from millions of product/design combinations.
Once a lens is built, it doesn’t take a lot of work to keep it current, and your blog’s feed is automatically updated on the lens on a schedule you can choose, i.e. every hour, every six hours, etc.
Another thing you can do to build interactivity into your lens is to add a guestbook, set up polls, start a duel (conversation/argument), and there are other modules that are of interest, too.
There are a lot of things you can do with Squidoo easily that are more difficult on a blog. I think the two of them work very well together.
Again, you can learn more, if you’re still interested at:
I hope that helps you get the idea of what you can do with Squidoo.
One other lens you may want to visit is my lensography, where I write about my lenses, link to some of my blogs, show my Twitter tweets, and more:
If you have any other questions, I’d be happy to do my best to answer them or refer you to another site with the answers.
I almost forgot. There is a social networking aspect to Squidoo where you can meet other highly-motivated lensmasters and help cross-promote each others’ sites, lenses, and blogs.
For example every time you add a quality comment to another lensmaster’s lens, you’ll get a link back to your lensmaster page.
Then there is the ability for a visitor to your site to join your fan club. Whenever you post a SquidCast about your lens, people in your fan club and anyone who has marked that lens as their favorite will see the SquidCast on their favorites page at Squidoo.
You can even get a chicklet to show how many fans you have and it links to your lensmaster page:
A lens is like a blog in one respect. Each time you publish your lens (after the initial build or whenever it is updated), you can send what is called a SquidCast, but which is really a posting that is added to the lens’ RSS feed. Then you can ping that update to spread the word among the large RSS aggregators.
Of course, the SquidCast is also shown on the favorites page of your fans and the people who favorited that lens. It is also promoted on the Squidcast Twitter feed.
So, there are a lot of reasons to include Squidoo as an integral part of your marketing mix, even if you are a blogger or webmaster, already.
And, don’t forget, you don’t have to join Squidoo because you want to make money. You can build your lenses on the topics of your choice, so tell your stories, publish your poems, or show photos of your kids and pets.
Are you an expert on something? Build your own Squidoo lens and tell the world. It’s free, and you may even earn some money from it.
Act on your dream!
JD
New political campaign products at CafePress
As you know, the 2008 elections are heating up much earlier than normal and this should provide you a real opportunity for selling your designs through CafePress if you reach an audience who is politically motivated to campaign for their favorites.
CafePress recently announced the upcoming availability – on or around October 10, 2007 – of political yard signs and 3.5-inch buttons.
Because of the printing method used, the yard signs are printed on both sides with no second location surcharge.
The larger buttons have the same aspect ratio as the 2.25-inch buttons so you may be able to use that design on them.
Other changes noted are the switch from off-white paper to white paper in the perfect bound books.
You can read more information on the announcements page.
If you are not already a CafePress Shopkeeper, let me invite you to join for free and sell or buy your own custom designs. I get regular commission checks from CafePress and love selling my designs at John Dilbeck’s Shirts, Mugs and Hats.
Even if you only want to make products for yourself and your friends, you can open your own store at CafePress.
Act on your dream!
JD




