Buy My Smart Ebook? Maybe???

8 replies
You're all familiar with the "Buy My Stupid Ebook" site and all the similar ones.

They're good for a laugh and yeah, maybe some of these people actually
make some Adsense money through them or with whatever monetization
they have set up.

But what do you think of gimmicks like these?

Do you think there is a real market for them if done right or do you think that
ultimately, the best way to make money on the Internet is with a straight
forward "conventional" approach?

I'm not passing judgment on either method. I'm just curious as to what
other marketers think of this "business model" in general.

Also, does it have to be one or the other or can we combine the two?

My gut tells me that walking the humorous/serious line would be difficult
to do unless you were really clever, but maybe I'm wrong. Maybe there's a
market for a serious/silly combo. For that matter, it may have already
been done. I don't know. I haven't seen any personally.

Anyway, just curious as to what the "out of the box" marketers think about
these things.

Worthwhile or worthless?
#buy #ebook #smart
  • Profile picture of the author Tel
    My old man used to say that to succeed in business you had to have a gimmick. It can be a brand name, a face, a catchphrase whatever as long as people remember it. Another one of his favourites was "there is no such thing as bad publicity, there is only publicity", which can be seem with certain rock stars of years gone by who dis outrageous things that stuck in the minds of people, sometimes more than their music. Ozzy Osbourne and biting the head off a live at springs to mind!

    So what marketing really comes down to is making sure you get your own gimmick to stick in people's minds, so that the next time you release something, people will go say, "hey, its that guy..." and you have bought yourself some free credibility and maybe some respect.

    As long as you didn't go biting heads of life flying rodents!
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  • Profile picture of the author CDarklock
    I tend to do this sort of thing. I generally have a great deal of contempt for IM products, and I'm pretty sure my target audience does, too. Most of them aren't worth the paper they're not printed on. (See my sig.) So that comes through, and I say a few self-deprecating things as well... because honestly, sometimes I say something and it sounds like I've just channeled a 19th century snake oil salesman. Just call me Adolfo Pirelli.

    In general, we're marketing to people who understand marketing and inherently distrust it. You sort of have to recognise that fact, as well as the place "snark" holds in modern culture. I think it speaks to some people and not others; the question is whether those people are your target market.
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    "The Golden Town is the Golden Town no longer. They have sold their pillars for brass and their temples for money, they have made coins out of their golden doors. It is become a dark town full of trouble, there is no ease in its streets, beauty has left it and the old songs are gone." - Lord Dunsany, The Messengers
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  • Profile picture of the author Loren Woirhaye
    I go a little off-topic here. (for the record,
    I don't sarcasm is good for selling stuff, but I
    think Engagement is essential.)

    Cleverness in marketing can work well, as long as it
    doesn't obscure the selling message. If you look at
    image advertising for fashion brands sometimes you
    see work that is very clever but you can't figure out
    what it's selling. The agencies who do this sort of
    stuff don't track the results of such advertising
    however.

    As long as we can CLEAR on what it's about, what
    it does, how much it costs to buy it and how to
    get it easily, there is a lot of room for the kind of
    innovation that gets people to notice.

    In recent launches IM gurus have discovered a
    new vocabulary in "pattern interrupts" - even going
    so far as (har-de-har-har!) wearing false beards!

    Why to a jaundiced observer such cleverness
    might appear to be just plain dumb, to some of
    the target market it's an involvement device -
    because as marketers today we are in the business
    not only of SELLING stuff, but of ENGAGING an
    increasingly illiterate and ADHD-afflicted marketplace.

    One way to engage is with hard-nosed credibility,
    which appears to be tested and proven to work
    with products like health-pills and investment advice -
    the seniors targeted by much of such marketing
    aren't looking for entertainment, they are looking
    for SECURITY, relief from pain, ways to hold onto
    what they have.

    Fear-of-loss (health, sexual function, standard of
    living, mobility) are markets in which cleverness
    and entertainment value are not likely to work with
    IM or direct mail... but in the infomercial format
    many testes rules of written advertising do not
    apply.

    Look at the "Sham-Wow!", the "the Magic Bullet",
    and Jeff Paul's "Shortcut to Internet Millions"
    (where buxom models boast of their newfound wealth
    acquired by following Mr. Paul's advice).

    With "make money" products targeted at young people
    who haven't got a great deal to lose, ENTERTAINMENT
    is a big factor. Somehow it seems to function as
    an inclusion device.

    I think people buy from Frank Kern because he tells
    a good joke and he knows how to make people feel like
    they are in on it, included. He has wicked other
    skills too, but as far as I can tell he's really working
    this simple angle of being the "class clown". It's
    an engagement device and it's working well for him.
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    • Profile picture of the author ExRat
      Hi Steven,
      My gut tells me that walking the humorous/serious line would be difficult
      to do unless you were really clever, but maybe I'm wrong. Maybe there's a
      market for a serious/silly combo. For that matter, it may have already
      been done. I don't know. I haven't seen any personally.
      J-mo.

      Hi Loren,

      I think people buy from Frank Kern because he tells
      a good joke and he knows how to make people feel like
      they are in on it, included. He has wicked other
      skills too, but as far as I can tell he's really working
      this simple angle of being the "class clown". It's
      an engagement device and it's working well for him.
      HE got J-mo on board and then cloned his style.
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      Roger Davis

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  • Profile picture of the author CDawson
    Banned
    I think that these people are just trying something new to see what happens.
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  • Profile picture of the author summerm
    hey thanks! i hadn't heard of "buy my stupid ebook". that was hilarious.

    the more entertainment the better. i love gimmicks. like those car insurance commercials with that interesting female character. (but look, i don't even know what company they were for.)

    so if you go gimmicky, you'll gain a lotta love, but you better remember to prioritize directing that love into a sale. like at the bottom of the buymystupidebook.com page, if the person put an actual link to a product that contains more satire... it would be tempting to buy.
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  • Profile picture of the author John M Kane
    If the buy my stupid ebook(or any other 'successful' parody) is grabbing eyeballs forget selling it, why not just adsense the site.
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    • Profile picture of the author melanied
      Dang, I thought maybe a Smart eBook was a new kind of small eBook that you could pull directly into parallel parking spaces. Too bad.
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  • Profile picture of the author Loren Woirhaye
    I have to admit I use the "BuyMyStupidEbook" site as
    an involvement ploy in one of my websites - the
    argument is sort of: "You can check out my stuff and
    I'll give it to you straight, or you can go wallow in the
    illusion and chase get-rich-quick-for-dummies dreams -
    start here with this..." (and the link goes to the
    "BuyMyStupidEbook" site).
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