Evaluations and Exits

It should be very important to you as a coach to do a good job. You don’t want to assume that you’re doing fine without taking the temperature of your clients. That’s why I recommend you ask them to fill out evaluations along the way, and then a final ‘exit’ evaluation once the coaching is over. Ask them to be honest with you and give you constructive feedback—I know you can handle it.

You’ll be a better coach for it!

I’ve included samples of these evaluations that you are free to use for personal use for your own coaching clients.

Continue Reading (only available for IMIT members)

Using Bonuses to Make More Sales as an Affiliate

What’s the competition like in your niche when you try to make sales as an affiliate? It can be frustrating. You’re trying your best, but it seems like it’s hard to stand out in the crowd when every other affiliate is doing pretty much the same thing you’re doing.

You try your best, but your hands seem pretty much tied when you’re an affiliate. You don’t have control over the product since you’re not the product creator. You don’t have control over the price since you’re not the product creator. You don’t have control over the sales page since you’re not the product creator.

You do have control over things like your product reviews. So, you can try to stand out in that way. That’s typically what you do, most likely. You try to write the best product reviews and articles you can. You try to help people understand the pros and cons of the products you promote as an affiliate. After all, you want them to truly understand whether the product is right for them or not.

Continue Reading (only available for IMIT members)

Easy Traffic Checklists

Generating Traffic

Every business needs to generate traffic. That’s how you get more people to join your list and how you make more sales.

The trouble is, getting traffic seems so daunting. You may have tried dozens of things before and have found that nothing works.

The trick is that you have to be consistent. Not a day should go by in your business that you don’t work on driving traffic in some form.

Continue Reading (only available for IMIT members)

How to Upload a Twitter Video That’s Longer than 30 Seconds

Twitter is a fascinating spot in the world of social media. It’s often where people hear of breaking news first. It seems to move at the speed of light. Yet, Twitter keeps coming up with ways to keep people engaged…to keep them in one spot on the social site for longer periods of time. And it’s working. One of those ways is through video.

Why Video for Twitter Rocks

Have you tried uploading a video to Twitter yet? If you haven’t, you should. There are so many reasons why video for Twitter rocks. For one thing, you’re on Twitter to grow your business. You hope to share your business with more people, grow your leads and audience, and build relationships.

You can do that through tweets and general interaction, sure, but there’s only so far that can take you. The web is increasingly visual. You don’t want to be left behind, and that certainly means not forgetting about video.

Continue Reading (only available for IMIT members)

Dominate Social Media in a Day

We all know how important social media is these days. It used to be that you could put just about anything up on the web, make good use of keywords, and Google would rank our sites pretty highly. A lot of this came at the cost of quality content that really resonated with our audience, but we tended to be okay with it as long as our stuff got seen.

It doesn’t work like that anymore– at all. These days, keyword stuffing and search engine gaming are a death sentence for any business that’s serious at all. It’s vital to develop real, lasting relationships with people in your niche.

But, how do you start to develop these all-important relationships? How do you make yourself known to the people of your niche? Maybe you’ve gotten lucky and the fickle Google has shown you some love. That’s wonderful… but now it’s all about building relationships instead of focusing on one-off traffic.

Continue Reading (only available for IMIT members)