How to hit a jackpot on Facebook??

21 replies
Hi guys,

just wanted to share something with you that I found really crucial for my own Facebook business and that's different than advertising affiliate offers on Google and other search engines.

It's about my product selection strategy that I use in Facebook advertising, in other words how I find products (mostly from ClickBank) that I promote then through Facebook.

After the product passes my initial criteria (eg. overall and average gravity, conversion rate (if I can get traffic estimates), targeting possibilities & ideas, etc. - I will talk about this more some other time) I follow my proven steps and create 4 ad variations, proper targeting (primarily likes and interests) and I just direct link to the product's sales page.

In other words, in this phase, I am just testing the product's potential and more importantly I am testing whether or not I can get cheap targeted clicks!

Because this is the most important thing that's going to separate that product from the rest - whether or not you hit a jackpot with the combination product-targeting-ad variation.

This is the first test the product must pass for me. And probably the most important one.

If I achieve good enough CTR and avg CPC with any ad variation I give this product a green light for the next phase - adding landing pages, ie. building a more sophisticated funnel that ultimately increases my conversions.

This is so important to realize about Facebook, because there's no point in spending 10 days working on your landing page, your facebook page, investing in videos, blog posts, all the stuff that will increase your conversion rate, ie. all the stuff that will turn more visitors into buyers - if you can't get the CTR and CPC to a level that's profitable to you.

You maybe achieve a very good conversion rate (people who buy/people who clicked on your ad), but if you're paying too much per click, your CTR is too bad - then your ad spend will eat up your revenue.

In this case you probably did something really wrong with your targeting and/or ad copy and image, so you have to work on it.

But it's much better to find that jackpot, that product-targeting-ad variation combination AND THEN invest your time and money into creating a super powerful and high-converting preselling funnel.

Bare in mind that I then continue to work on ad, test more variations and so on to get that cpc even lower and CTR even higher!

So, with this test, the most important goal is to test whether or not you can, using your proven ad-building strategies, get a good enough CPC and good enough CTR.

Usually for me a good enough CTR is the one above 0,15% and a CPC less than $0,12-0,15 when targeting US, UK, Canada, Australia and so on.

If none of the ad variation achieves these kind of good enough results, I simply dump the product and move on to the next one. Or, if I think the product is really really good, I try to target it differently.

This way you could only loose $5-$30 per test, depending on the target size and commission you can get! And more importantly - only one or two hours of your time!

To sum up, it all comes down to numbers and not theory.

If I test 10 products, 6 will be a miss (I loose 6x$20), 3 will be ok (I loose 3x$20, but I maybe improve that with some other targeting ideas), but 1 will be a jackpot whose profits will surpass my losses for this test.

So in the end I loose around $200 and 10 hours of work to find a product that's going to make me much much more.

And it is not just about the money you loose on not-so-profitable products, but most importantly the time you loose.

Just imagine how much time and money I would loose if I created a preselling funnel for each of these 10 products!

I would probably loose motivation after the third one and forever label Facebook as something that doesn't work.

If you want to test this yourself, in your own Facebook campaigns here are the steps:

1. Find a product that looks promising.
2. Come up with your targeting strategy.
3. Create 4 ad variations and direct link them to the offer.
4. Wait till you get around 30-50 clicks per ad variation or wait till it gets impressions that's equal to 2 x number of people you're targeting (this means that most people will only see your ad once or twice)
5. Analyze avg CPC and CTR of your best ad variation - decide to dump it or move on with it.
6. Start creating your powerful preselling funnel for that product.

The main advantage I now have, which enables me to follow these steps, is that I have experience in targeting on Facebook and most importantly about creating powerful ad variations.

This is also crucial.

If you don't know how to properly target and you don't know what kind of ads you should create, then your test may fail not because of the product or niche, but because of your wrong targeting or poor ads.

If you want to learn more about how to create powerful ads and how to target them properly, you can read my free and no optin wso about that particular topic. I also give away some of my proven-to-work Facebook ad images.

Hope this helped you guys!

Take care,

~Davor
#facebook #hit #jackpot
  • Profile picture of the author Rambo007
    What type of products do you think convert well via facebook?

    Weightloss, dating, other??
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    • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
      Originally Posted by Rambo007 View Post

      What type of products do you think convert well via facebook?

      Weightloss, dating, other??
      There's no answer to that question and that's exactly what I wanted to achieve with this thread.

      I had success with stuff like "how to bake a great chocolate cake" and I didn't have with any weight-loss stuff.

      Why? I don't know. I just follow what my test results tell me.

      I haven't even tried dating because it's just not my thing for a lot of reasons. (And - no, one of them is not that I suck at dating hehe )

      There are thousand of products of clickbank who are consistently being bought - meaning there's a market for them and they do convert.

      And on top of that, there are at least 20 ways you can promote each of that product on Facebook.

      Meaning there's 20 ways you can target those products.

      This all means that there's 20,000 opportunities on Facebook you could test as I described!

      If you follow the steps then you'll find the jackpot really quickly.

      So, targeting on Facebook is the most important part, then knowing how to create high-converting ads, then the creation of a powerful preselling funnel.

      And you can't know which one is a jackpot BEFORE you test them!

      Sure, some niches and producst have more potential, but if you only try those you're loosing the opportunity to earn money on some obscure stuff that no one if promoting.

      And in those niches, the competition is fierce, so you need to be better than a lot of other marketers in every step - have better ads, have better targeting, have better funnel and in the end - have more money than them.

      Hope this clears it out.

      Take care,

      ~Davor
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    • Profile picture of the author SutejoTan
      people joining fb are mostly "fun" people , networking with others

      i guess the best performing products should be entertainment related product , relationship product and "fun" related product as well
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      • Profile picture of the author flowers4love
        Originally Posted by blgts View Post

        people joining fb are mostly "fun" people , networking with others

        i guess the best performing products should be entertainment related product , relationship product and "fun" related product as well
        I beg to differ. Facebook has a myriad of communities and functions. For example non-profit, religious, social and commercial communities. I personally am subscribed to a book club Fan Page administered by an online bookstore. There are even Fan Pages, which are job boards. My suggestion is try to market something which you really like and can be enthusiastic about and which you also have personal expertise about.
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  • Profile picture of the author The Simpleton
    This is a good strategy. So you suggest that one should not create any special landing pages for the product until there's proof that there are good clicks for the ad? If there are indeed a lot of clicks and most of them do not convert because the actual sales page isn't that good, won't that eat into the ad budget?
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    • Profile picture of the author tecHead
      Originally Posted by Rayaprolu View Post

      This is a good strategy. So you suggest that one should not create any special landing pages for the product until there's proof that there are good clicks for the ad? If there are indeed a lot of clicks and most of them do not convert because the actual sales page isn't that good, won't that eat into the ad budget?
      I'm sure that would be a part of the extensive testing process he's semi-outlining.

      Its also easy to create your own sales page for any product on CB and still flow through their system; (and yes, giving the original vendor the sale and credit).
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      • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
        Originally Posted by tecHead View Post

        I'm sure that would be a part of the extensive testing process he's semi-outlining.
        Exactly.

        Its also easy to create your own sales page for any product on CB and still flow through their system; (and yes, giving the original vendor the sale and credit).
        Hehe, that's exactly what I meant by my sneaky technique.

        There are tons of ways you can do this to sort of suit the sales letter to the traffic your sending to it.

        Even if you leave it in tact you can track the usage with Google Analytics and ClickTale.

        This can give you a lot of information about the sales page and how the people you're sending to it are using it. You can then make a more informative decision about whether it works or not.

        But as I said, it's important to get the vendors approval which you can get 99% of the time if you tell them exactly what would you do and why you need it. Ending it with "this proved crucial to me in other projects and had a big impact on the conversion rate" will probably win you their approval.

        Take care and thanks again for the kind words.

        ~Davor
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        MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
        I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
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        • Profile picture of the author mikeb1
          Davor
          I am trying to promote my own offline consulting business on facebook, with landing page etc, I have heard around that this isn`t a goer on facebook from some quarters, and from others it is.
          Any others on here any tips they can share on this ?

          Best Mike
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          • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
            Originally Posted by mikeb1 View Post

            Davor
            I am trying to promote my own offline consulting business on facebook, with landing page etc, I have heard around that this isn`t a goer on facebook from some quarters, and from others it is.
            Any others on here any tips they can share on this ?

            Best Mike
            Hi Mike, how's it going?

            I'll try and help you with some tips although bare in mind that I haven't advertised anything similar like that on Facebook except digital products and some services for clients but only locally (here in Croatia).

            But I'll try to come up with some tips based on what I have advertised.

            First of all, by saying "offline consulting" do you mean consulting about business in general, or consulting small businesses how to leverage Facebook, ie. you make them their Facebook page and all that?

            I will assume you mean real consultancy and not managing their Facebook pages and so on.

            Ok, let's see...

            If you are targeting small business owners and your service is helping them improve their business than your service is high-priced, right?

            In other words, you are selling something that won't be an impulsive buy from your clients.

            So you need to first establish yourself as an credible expert.

            IMHO, that's how you need to approach them on Facebook.

            Engage them with your expert blog posts. Make a list of all the main things your customers could be struggling with and "solve" these problems in the form of a blog post on your blog. In that post tell them what they need to do in order to solve it, but not HOW they should solve it.

            Create Facebook ads that ask a certain question like "WalMart is killing your sales?" then in the body text "Expert small business consultant talks about ways to compete with the big guys. Click here to read the full article."

            And put an image of a nice professionally looking girl/woman smiling with an red arrow below it pointing to the right. If you think that's nothing to do with your service, please bare with me - it won't hurt you, it will just help you.

            And you link it to the blog post.

            Then on your blog you set up an optin box where you can offer a very detailed report on all kinds of issues that your customers face.

            You collect their email addresses and you set up a 3-4 day autoresponder where you give them even more advice.

            After that sequence you shift to your service - send an email about your customer and the problems they had and how you solved it for them.

            At the end of that email tell them to contact you with their own problem and you will advise them for free. Or tell them to set up a call with you, first 15,30 minutes are free.

            You see the main idea? Give them free stuff as much as you can - wet their appetite (hope that's the right term) and when they got so much from you, then you offer them to help them with every single problem they have and tell them how much it will cost them.

            This could work on Facebook.

            Your main problem sort of is targeting. Since I don't know what exactly your service is, I can't help you with it.

            But here's the main idea with targeting - think of who this person is, what would a small business owner LIKE? Perhaps he or she would like Richard Branson, Bill Gates, some famous business people they look up to? Or perhaps they would probably like some famous business related books like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad"?

            Narrow your prospects down by the things they mostly likely LIKE. That's the key to targeting.

            The best part of the Facebook advertising where you need and should be creative is targeting.

            Back in the day when I was advertising on Google, there wasn't many opportunity to be creative with targeting, but every time I found something out, it would be very profitable for me.

            For example, I was promoting dog training stuff, but I was targeting keywords like "puppy names", "dog names" and stuff. The clicks were like 7-9 times cheaper and I was targeting the same group of people! Just a little bit before they realized they need to train their dog. I add them to my list and after a while I just shifted to my offer by saying "Is your dog pieing around the house?".

            The same is in Facebook. Find some crazy stuff your customers would like and then target them with an engaging ad and not with a salesy ad like "Your business sucks? Click here to find out how I can help you grow your income by 240%!"

            That would be ignored on Facebook, especially by small business owners.

            Ask them questions, promise them interesting facts about small business owners, be controversial - spur their interest about your CONTENT.

            And then on the page you slowly build relationship with them and over time you sell them your service much more easily.

            Hope this helps, ask any question you have.

            Take care,

            ~Davor
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            MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
            I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
            I do this on the side, will try to sell you something, be sure of it!
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            • Profile picture of the author mikeb1
              Originally Posted by ~Davor Debrecin~ View Post

              Hi Mike, how's it going?

              I'll try and help you with some tips although bare in mind that I haven't advertised anything similar like that on Facebook except digital products and some services for clients but only locally (here in Croatia).

              But I'll try to come up with some tips based on what I have advertised.

              First of all, by saying "offline consulting" do you mean consulting about business in general, or consulting small businesses how to leverage Facebook, ie. you make them their Facebook page and all that?

              I will assume you mean real consultancy and not managing their Facebook pages and so on.

              Ok, let's see...

              If you are targeting small business owners and your service is helping them improve their business than your service is high-priced, right?

              In other words, you are selling something that won't be an impulsive buy from your clients.

              So you need to first establish yourself as an credible expert.

              IMHO, that's how you need to approach them on Facebook.

              Engage them with your expert blog posts. Make a list of all the main things your customers could be struggling with and "solve" these problems in the form of a blog post on your blog. In that post tell them what they need to do in order to solve it, but not HOW they should solve it.

              Create Facebook ads that ask a certain question like "WalMart is killing your sales?" then in the body text "Expert small business consultant talks about ways to compete with the big guys. Click here to read the full article."

              And put an image of a nice professionally looking girl/woman smiling with an red arrow below it pointing to the right. If you think that's nothing to do with your service, please bare with me - it won't hurt you, it will just help you.

              And you link it to the blog post.

              Then on your blog you set up an optin box where you can offer a very detailed report on all kinds of issues that your customers face.

              You collect their email addresses and you set up a 3-4 day autoresponder where you give them even more advice.

              After that sequence you shift to your service - send an email about your customer and the problems they had and how you solved it for them.

              At the end of that email tell them to contact you with their own problem and you will advise them for free. Or tell them to set up a call with you, first 15,30 minutes are free.

              You see the main idea? Give them free stuff as much as you can - wet their appetite (hope that's the right term) and when they got so much from you, then you offer them to help them with every single problem they have and tell them how much it will cost them.

              This could work on Facebook.

              Your main problem sort of is targeting. Since I don't know what exactly your service is, I can't help you with it.

              But here's the main idea with targeting - think of who this person is, what would a small business owner LIKE? Perhaps he or she would like Richard Branson, Bill Gates, some famous business people they look up to? Or perhaps they would probably like some famous business related books like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad"?

              Narrow your prospects down by the things they mostly likely LIKE. That's the key to targeting.

              The best part of the Facebook advertising where you need and should be creative is targeting.

              Back in the day when I was advertising on Google, there wasn't many opportunity to be creative with targeting, but every time I found something out, it would be very profitable for me.

              For example, I was promoting dog training stuff, but I was targeting keywords like "puppy names", "dog names" and stuff. The clicks were like 7-9 times cheaper and I was targeting the same group of people! Just a little bit before they realized they need to train their dog. I add them to my list and after a while I just shifted to my offer by saying "Is your dog pieing around the house?".

              The same is in Facebook. Find some crazy stuff your customers would like and then target them with an engaging ad and not with a salesy ad like "Your business sucks? Click here to find out how I can help you grow your income by 240%!"

              That would be ignored on Facebook, especially by small business owners.

              Ask them questions, promise them interesting facts about small business owners, be controversial - spur their interest about your CONTENT.

              And then on the page you slowly build relationship with them and over time you sell them your service much more easily.

              Hope this helps, ask any question you have.

              Take care,

              ~Davor

              Hi Davor

              Thanks for taking time to reply to my question its well appriceated. I have a couple of free reports set up for any small business opting in. I am talking about small business in general, and how to manage a facebook account is one of the free reports I have for any business opting in. SEO, and video marketing, article marketing will be other services I offer.

              As for pricing I am at a bit of a crossroads on that. What would a fair price be for setting up a facebook fanpage, and an auto-responder email campaign ? some of the pricing the big SEO companies charge for this are astronomical. Ive Just recently joined up to facebook and been looking for some business groups to post on with some relevant tips, but these all seem to be full of spam with tons of affiliate links.

              I do like the fact that the ad campaigns can be really targeted, I am in the process of setting up a campaign on facebook for a client/friend who is in the mortgage/financial sector. The first campaign is to get potential sign ups to attend an up and coming overseas property seminar in my city, any advice here dearly appreciated. Thanks for the facebook templates, trying to set one up for my client just now.
              ps I have found image shack.us very easy to use for hosting images etc, no sign up required, should any of your readers be interested.

              again thanks for your help
              Best Mike.
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    • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
      Originally Posted by Rayaprolu View Post

      This is a good strategy. So you suggest that one should not create any special landing pages for the product until there's proof that there are good clicks for the ad? If there are indeed a lot of clicks and most of them do not convert because the actual sales page isn't that good, won't that eat into the ad budget?
      Yes. Right now, I just direct link, I don't create any landing page. I maybe add one short and simple landing page just because my ad copy promises a particular answer, but then I just create a simple Blogger blog with only one post containing that answer.

      I also use one other more sneaky method to test it, but you need the vendor's approval before it.

      But..

      To answer your other question.

      From my experience, by direct linking, even if the sales page is written by the best copywriter in the world, and even if it's the most highest converting sales page and you send targeted users to it, the conversion rate at it's best will only be 0,5% for a low priced (up to $40) product.

      The simple reason is that people on Facebook are not in the buying mood!

      And that's the key for creating a powerful preselling funnel through which you get them so psyched about the product and more importantly into a buying mood.

      For my successful campaigns where I invested a lot of time developing my funnel, I don't even mention the product I'm promoting up to 3 days after they clicked on my ad! (This should give you a clue of what I'm doing )

      But here's how you can tell if the sales page is working or not even if no one bought the product:

      Look at the number of order form impression count, or more importantly at the hops per order form impression count

      Because if enough people clicked through to the order form from the sales page, you know they are interested in the product, but they (1) aren't in the buying mood and (2) they weren't presold about the product so that they want it more than anything else.

      People that go to the order form are the ones thinking "Yes, this looks really cool, let's see how much does it cost.. $27? Ok, not bad, I'll get back to it later, I first need to finish watching my ex-girlfriends new photos.."

      They are not in the buying mood, but they are interested in the product and they would buy if they were presold properly, meaning - move on with this product.

      Hope this helps,

      ~Davor
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      MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
      I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
      I do this on the side, will try to sell you something, be sure of it!
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      • Profile picture of the author The Simpleton
        Originally Posted by ~Davor Debrecin~ View Post

        Yes. Right now, I just direct link, I don't create any landing page. I maybe add one short and simple landing page just because my ad copy promises a particular answer, but then I just create a simple Blogger blog with only one post containing that answer.

        I also use one other more sneaky method to test it, but you need the vendor's approval before it.

        But..

        To answer your other question.

        From my experience, by direct linking, even if the sales page is written by the best copywriter in the world, and even if it's the most highest converting sales page and you send targeted users to it, the conversion rate at it's best will only be 0,5% for a low priced (up to $40) product.

        The simple reason is that people on Facebook are not in the buying mood!

        And that's the key for creating a powerful preselling funnel through which you get them so psyched about the product and more importantly into a buying mood.

        For my successful campaigns where I invested a lot of time developing my funnel, I don't even mention the product I'm promoting up to 3 days after they clicked on my ad! (This should give you a clue of what I'm doing )

        But here's how you can tell if the sales page is working or not even if no one bought the product:

        Look at the number of order form impression count, or more importantly at the hops per order form impression count

        Because if enough people clicked through to the order form from the sales page, you know they are interested in the product, but they (1) aren't in the buying mood and (2) they weren't presold about the product so that they want it more than anything else.

        People that go to the order form are the ones thinking "Yes, this looks really cool, let's see how much does it cost.. $27? Ok, not bad, I'll get back to it later, I first need to finish watching my ex-girlfriends new photos.."

        They are not in the buying mood, but they are interested in the product and they would buy if they were presold properly, meaning - move on with this product.

        Hope this helps,

        ~Davor

        Those are some really good observations. I've always wondered how Facebook is thought to be as a profitable source of income when most of its users are just there to kill time! So I guess it all depends on how creative you are in creating your landing page and how your pre-sell your product to the visitor Thanks a lot for the advice!
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  • Profile picture of the author tecHead
    ...with English (obviously) being your second language; I applaud you for taking the time and making the effort to share your (also obvious) gifted understanding of this abstract topic...

    Your insights are logical and forward thinking and your attitude for giving your gifts away is refreshing.

    You have my respect, my man... and that ain't easy to get (for what its worth)

    Stay blessed,
    PLP
    tecHead
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    • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
      Originally Posted by tecHead View Post

      ...with English (obviously) being your second language; I applaud you for taking the time and making the effort to share your (also obvious) gifted understanding of this abstract topic...

      Your insights are logical and forward thinking and your attitude for giving your gifts away is refreshing.

      You have my respect, my man... and that ain't easy to get (for what its worth)

      Stay blessed,
      PLP
      tecHead
      Wow, thank you so much for this, I really appreciate your kind words!

      Actually, I don't know what else to say, blushing a bit.

      Thanks again and all the best!
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      MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
      I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
      I do this on the side, will try to sell you something, be sure of it!
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  • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
    Mike, glad I could help!

    Your plan sounds fine, I will give you some more tips tomorrow.

    Right now - I'm off to sleep.

    Take care and Merry Christmas!

    ~Davor
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    MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
    I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
    I do this on the side, will try to sell you something, be sure of it!
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  • What kind of results have you seen to consider a product a 'jackpot'? Are you talking 2-3k? More? Less? And I'm assuming then you are doing the standard 'sign up, get a free report', then a 7-day autoresponder series?

    How are you pre-selling them? And at what points in your autoresponder do you advise them to take action?

    Thanks,

    John
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    • Profile picture of the author ~Davor Debrecin~
      Originally Posted by InternetSuccess001 View Post

      What kind of results have you seen to consider a product a 'jackpot'? Are you talking 2-3k? More? Less? And I'm assuming then you are doing the standard 'sign up, get a free report', then a 7-day autoresponder series?

      How are you pre-selling them? And at what points in your autoresponder do you advise them to take action?

      Thanks,

      John
      Hi John!

      In this thread by saying jackpot I was thinking about finding that good combination of ad variation-targeting-product which gets you high CTR, low CPC, ie. you pay small amount of money for (enough volume of) targeted traffic.

      Once you find out that you can drive quality and targeted traffic to the offer, you know you hit the jackpot because 80% of the time this offer will make you money after building a suitable preselling funnel.

      But then that's the next phase of testing - presell funnel.

      As I said, I look at hops per order form impression statistics to get the idea of how interested they are in the product. I also use some other tactics during the first phase, but they improve my results for only 10% so that's probably a little bit too advanced now, it's better to keep things as simple as possible once you're starting out.

      So, then I decide which presell funnel I should test first.

      I've developed through trial and error 3 types of funnels that have proved to be the best.

      First is the one I already shared with warriors in my "how to start earning money today" thread - the survey method.

      You link your ad to a simple one question survey asking them to ask you their burning question about the subject.

      I won't go into details about this because I described it in detail in the other thread.

      This works nicely for a lot of products and I had success with promoting FarmVille guides using this funnel.

      The next one is more advanced but it's even more powerful.

      I'll now describe to you the one that's most advanced, but bare in mind that I "arrive" to this funnel after some testing and not for every product because it does require you to do some work building it. Today I already got a hang of it, so it's much faster for me, but when I did it the first time it took me a lot of days to build it.

      Yes, it looks like the funnel you described, but it's a bit different.

      In a nutshell, here's the funnel:

      ad > first part of the useful content > next part of useful content + optin box with promises of more free stuff > free stuff download page > free stuff 3 day email sequence > 4 day promotion sequence

      I've spent a lot of time figuring out the exact sequence. The key is obviously the 4 day promotion sequence and the 3 day free stuff sequence is used to set the "mood" right.

      For the promotion emails I used email copy from Frank Kern and Jeff Walker as a basis of how I should structure the emails and the sequence.

      The first version of the sequence, the basic version - has the same emails for every subscriber and it's all added to the follow up sequence, meaning it's automatic. Not nearly as effective, but still works to get the test results.

      If I get 1-2% conversion rate (buyers/subscribers), depending on the product of course, I move on to develop a more advanced sequence.

      And the key is in segmenting people. That's the advanced trick.

      I then leave the first three day sequence where I give free stuff, advices, ask them questions and so on, but remove the promotion emails and move them to broadcast.

      The reason is that you can then use scarcity (real of course) and more importantly the segmenting option.

      I send four types of emails:

      A) Get the conversation going about their problems, needs, frustrations, dreams, etc. (It's all about THEM.) and give them just an inkling of what's going to happen. I don't mention the product or anything.

      B) Talking about responses I got, what questions people asked, etc. At the end I tell them that I'll be sending them something helpful tomorrow.

      C) In this email I reveal the product, explain it, give reasons why they should buy, overcome some possible objections they could have AND - talk about bonuses you'll give them. They see you as the biggest expert in the field so you need to promote it as you even have more knowledge than what's inside the product. And in order for them to get to your knowledge they need to buy this "basic" product. It's about "This product is perfect, it's the product that got me going, but it lacks two pieces of the puzzle I figured out by myself." then you promise to give them those two pieces. I won't go into details of how you create those bonuses, there's tons of ways, even for promoting products you know nothing about.

      L) This email is a simple launch email "Hey guys, here's the link, go and buy it now."

      As I said, segmenting the list is the key. You won't acheive the same effect if you send email C to people who have opened A and B beforehand and to people who haven't!

      This is really getting long, so I won't go into details, but I have the following emails set up:

      A, B1, B2, C0, C1, C2, L1, L2, L3 and then have 8 combinations of who gets which email.

      This is the top of the top and I invest that in products that have the biggest potential. And I use it not only for promoting stuff through Facebook but in other businesses as well.

      Hope I was clear enough.

      Thanks again and take care,

      ~Davor
      Signature
      MY CV ❱❱❱ 12+ yrs exp, 7-fig revenues, 40 employees.. 39 actually, someone just left the company, f**k!
      I like to innovate stuff and babble IM stuff into a camera:
      I do this on the side, will try to sell you something, be sure of it!
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  • Profile picture of the author Hexor
    I notice that you've come from Europe and you write/spoke english very well and that's nice. As i said on the previous threads, facebook advertising is better. Added with some proofs, it will make and build trust to people who will see your advertisements. Hope your success will continue. Have a great day!
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  • Profile picture of the author Andrea Wilson
    Hello Davor! It seems Facebook Advertising has really got you. The market in Facebook is huge and its a jackpot that you managed to discover the formula to get success with them.

    Andrea
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  • Profile picture of the author marketwarrior06
    Banned
    facebook is really good for you! its great to hear about your success. keep it up and give us tips for the betterment of ourselves.
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  • Profile picture of the author TylerF
    Hey man,
    Bought your FB product months ago, and you didn't deliver. No replies from your emails and PMs as well, what gives?
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