direct sale vs passive sale

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i've had this idea in my head for a while to make a content site that tries to make passive sales. i haven't had any experience with it yet and was hoping somone could give me some good advice on it.

can a passive sale site be just as profitable as a direct sale sale?

passive sale - not pushing the product as "in their face" way

direct sale - "in your face, buy this now!"
 


It may work - it will never be as effective as a direct sales page. However, this is pretty often how people sell things via Youtube - they are all like "Check out how I grill this steak on my new $800 grill....which, by the way, you can purchase via this affiliate link....etc....".

Out of curiosity...why would you want to do this if you are promoting a specific product?
 
i'm not saying i want to go straight up passive sale ... but im just trying to go more long term on PPC, so i don't want to have a spammy farticle or flog that i'm going to get slapped all the time

im promoting a cps product, and i actually want to make my site useful

i'll probably have my LP that i direct via ppc be a review site like all the other ones, but i want the content to back it up as well..

i made a sale direct linking to the offer but i got slapped, so im just going to re do it but make a content rich site also w/ my product review/sales page

but a lot of the content part will be more like passive instead of direct
 
Most of my success has been the passive route. Best tip I can give you is to find products that for the most part sell themselves. Either a unique product that you "discovered" or one that is priced right. Another tip is that even if going the passive route, you still have to persuade your visitors by featuring a product or saying X product is the best. This is especially the case if doing a review site where you are comparing similar products. You have to persuade your visitors on one or the other even if there is no real difference in price/quality/functionality/etc. Being completely passive usually results in your visitors going elsewhere for more research. Putting more stars on a product doesn't necessarily convince them, you need to spell it out for them. This product is better for X, Y, Z reasons even if its bullshit.
 
I believe strongly in passive sales. I don't have a single LP/website that follows a direct sale strategy.

When you are pushing a direct sales approach I believe that you really need to have a few variables in place to make it work: highly qualified traffic, a truly revolutionary product (which, let's face it, you likely aren't promoting), or a ultra-niche product. When I say "highly qualified traffic", I don't mean people searching for "WIDGET X REVIEW" or "BUY WIDGET X". I'm talking about people who have already done the searching, read the "reviews", and are now looking for more credible information to direct them to the sale.

You see this a lot with eBooks. The direct sales approach works because the traffic is SO qualified. You also see this a lot with diet pills/acai, because the initial trial is such a trivial amount it negates a lot of someones initial apprehension.

What I find works best for most CPS campaigns is a combination of a passive approach and a direct close. I'll have two or three websites focused on qualifying the visitor, and then I direct them to the "sales website" that will do the direct close for me. I have found that having multiple websites to do this accomplishes a lot of things that simply weren't possible from the same domain:

+ Having a passive website direct to a direct website transfers authority to the direct website, as well as asserts authority on the passive website. Who are you more likely to believe when shopping for a car: someone who appears to offer you advice, and then tries to sell you a SUV, or someone to offers you advice and then RECOMMENDS where to go to buy your SUV? People have it in their heads that if someone isn't selling something they are inherently more credible than someone who is.

+ Having multiple domains on the subject provides more exposure. This is pretty obvious. Having three passive/information sites feed to two direct sale/close websites simply allows for your mininet to absorb more traffic. Of course, if your direct sale websites are able to gain ground and build their own traffic... bonus!

+ Most importantly, having multiple passive sale/informational websites allows you to properly monetize two different streams of traffic. Those who stick around on your passive sale website and decide to buy from it are generally less qualified visitors that became qualified on your website. Those who skipped and went straight to the direct sale allow you to effectively monetize the qualified visitors.

I have found this approach works really well for web hosting. I'll have websites designed to take traffic from keywords such as "what do I need for small business hosting" and then put them through the qualification process so that they buy. The keyword itself isn't exactly a highly qualified buyer, but they are a qualified information seeker. Providing that information in a non-hostile, no-pressure way will almost always allow a product/service to sell itself more effectively than forcing it upon them.

Hope that helps :)
 
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great information guys, Yoink i like your approach as i have a simliar strategy in mind

however one of the selling point i was likely to make was that the product is also carried by store "x" however i dont know if i should mention this or not because i dont want people to leave my site to go to a store and purchase it.. do you think i should include this or not?
 
If you're interested in less 'in your face' selling, it might also be worth experimenting with getting your prospects to sign up to an email list so you can get multiple attempts to sell stuff to them.
 
great information guys, Yoink i like your approach as i have a simliar strategy in mind

however one of the selling point i was likely to make was that the product is also carried by store "x" however i dont know if i should mention this or not because i dont want people to leave my site to go to a store and purchase it.. do you think i should include this or not?
Of course, so long as you control "x" store ;)