Should I Create My Own Membership Site Or Promote As An Affiliate

I’m sure you’ve heard the craze about membership sites. You create a site with a bunch of content and people pay you month after month to get access on this content whether it’s written materials, downloadable items, software, or video. But many other people have already created the membership sites you have thought of. And they have an affiliate program, meaning you can promote this; you can send paid members into these programs and get a commission back.

So the real question is should you create your own membership site or promote as an affiliate. There are pro’s and con’s to both.

Being an affiliate sounds great at first because you don’t have to create the products. You don’t have to maintain subscribers; you don’t have to e-mail the subscribers so they’ll know about new updates; you don’t have to really do any work to keep people in the membership site. All you have to do is recommend that these people join the site, and it’s up to the membership site owner to keep people in that site.

But what are the bad things about being an affiliate?

You don’t get all the money. You are working hard just to get some kind of a commission and many of these membership sites, you get a low percentage, like 20% or less for recurring commissions; and for some other affiliate programs, you get paid for the initial sale but not for the recurring commissions. So it’s very important that you check the terms of service carefully.

Then the one thing that most affiliates don’t realize, and that’s when you recommend somebody to a membership site, when you send them into that site, you give up that hard to earn and leave. You work hard to get traffic; you work hard to get somebody onto your mailing list and now, you just sent them off onto somebody else’s list.

So think about that. If you had one person on your list, and you got lucky and happened to get that person into five other membership sites, guess what, now they have six people e-mailing them instead of you.

So should you really promote someone else’s membership site as an affiliate or should you make your own? It just depends on how quickly and how easily you can create content.

If you can put together a membership site that last for six months, and you can put that together in two weeks or less, then you definitely should look into creating a membership site. On the other hand, if you struggle to even create one single video or get one single subscriber, then you should start off slow, promote a membership site as an affiliate now and then in the future, get into your own membership site.

Let’s shortcut the process and the hardships it takes you to create content for your membership site. I want to show you how you can create an entire membership site in one single day, stop promoting other people’s stuff as an affiliate and finally, make your very own membership site at www.membershipcube.com.

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How Can Article Writers Or Product Creators Use Membership Sites

If you’re the kind of person who creates any kind of content, whether that’s written articles, information products, reports, videos, audios, interviews, or webinars, there are a lot more uses for you than you might think.

First of all, you could take all of the information you have and roll it into one giant membership site. You can submit your content to other membership site owners to get some link backs and traffic within a membership site and you can re-write your paid content into free articles quickly and easily.

How many reports do you have floating around out on the internet? How many half-finished books do you have? Why don’t you just take everything you have and if it all relates together, put it into one site so somebody can enjoy it and get access to all your stuff at once? And now, plenty of information marketers and they used to be the same way where if somebody wants to get all my stuff, it had to pay $10 here, $20 here, $5 there; why not put it into one site for 100 bucks where they can get all your stuff in one place.

Next, many membership site owners are always herding for content. They would love to have someone come and write even an article or two or make a video or two for their membership site because that would buy them an extra week or two worth of paid members.

So it can’t hurt to contact these membership site owners and ask them if they need a guest columnist; ask them if they need an extra article written for free to add to the membership site. The only catch is that your name stays on it and your resource box stays on it. So this is just like submitting your article to article directories except that it’s inside; somebody else has paid membership area so you are talking to a much more savvy crowd and a much more targeted crowd.

Finally, you have taught certain kinds of information inside your membership site. It can’t hurt to take a couple of those ideas and turn them into articles. So what do I mean? It means that if you explain a 10-step process, take one of those steps, make them into articles. Or if you’re left out with just one extra thing that people might want to know, make that an article. Or if there’s one little question always gets brought up when explaining this step-by-step procedure, make that an article.

The key about writing articles is to deliver similar information but leave out the step-by-step process. They get the basic information for free but join your page site to get the step-by-step process. That’s how. If you’re an article writer or a product creator, you can successfully use membership sites. Make your all in one site, submit to membership site owners and finally re-write your membership content into articles.

Why don’t you have your membership site yet? It’s not your fault; I want to help you, www.membershipcube.com.

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Can You Give Me Examples of Your Membership Sites

It’s one thing to talk a bunch of theory about membership sites, but it’s way more helpful to actually talk about profitable membership sites that have worked for and worked for you in the past. So let’s talk about some of those.

I’m going to cover three types of membership sites. First of, a shrewd up type of membership site, a live training class that was turned into a membership site and finally, a membership site in a day split up into a membership site.

So the first membership site that really took off for me was a site that I created as a membership site upfront, which I really don’t recommend you do because it’s a lot of work upfront. What I did was worked with a business partner to generate one year’s worth of content before ever launching. What we did is we planned out that 52 weeks; and for every single week, recorded a video, run an audio interview, bought and posted a private labor right product and then at the end of the week, asked for questions. So there was a new post everyday for four days out of every single week.

It was kind of a relief to finish and relief to launch especially because we knew after we launched it that we had enough content for an entire year. It was also a good place to store videos on subjects that didn’t really fit into any of our other products. But the problem was we had to spend weeks, if not months, generating all this content and there were just too much pressure on it. If we launch the membership site and no one bought, then we would be out all of the time we put in to generate this content. So it was a good idea to create all this content upfront for a membership site but I definitely would not recommend it.

So what would I recommend instead? What I would recommend is sell a single-payment membership site and then cut it up later to make it a recurring membership site. When I say single payment, most people think $20, $50; but what I did instead was to charge 200 bucks, 500 bucks, even $1,000 one-time payment for a four- or eight-week training course.

I really enjoyed the live training because it gave me a chance to interact with small group of people, let’s say 20 to 30 students, and that it let me of course correct and really talked about the things that people learning the subject and using the subject wanted to know about.

For example, I’ve run a few a classes on information product creation: how to create an e-book, video course, report—things like that and I thought people want to know the advanced subjects but after doing the live class, I realized people were carried more about choosing the right niche. So I focused more of the course into niche selection.

Now if you get comfortable with creating a membership site, that is a live training course and turning it into a monthly membership site, you’re going to love this last strategy which is to create your membership site in entire day. And what you do is you run eight webinars all in one day with the same audience covering a different topic, starting with the easy stuff, getting into the advanced stuff.

It might be kind of tough; it might be a pretty long day for you; but at the end, you’re entire year’s worth of membership site content is complete. Now, wouldn’t that be a nice feeling—to finish all your content in a single day instead of in a few months?

So those are my three favorite methods of creating membership site. First is creating it as a membership site just by generating lots of content which I did for an internet marketing membership site; turning the live training into a weekly membership which deals with a product creation membership site; and teaching eight subjects in a single day as putting it up into a membership site which deals with a list-building course.

So whichever one sounds great to you, if you’d rather work slowly or quickly, either one will work. The point is to finish what you start; turn it into a membership site; launch it and get a (4.36 dough) there.

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What Are Some Quick Ways To Improve My Membership Site

I don’t care how proud you are or how much you worked on your membership site; there’s always room for improvement. With that said, I’m going to share you today three easy improvements you can make to your membership site right now; and that’s having a welcome video, that’s having some question-based post, and having a step-by-step system.

How do you make a welcome video and what should it say?

I definitely recommend that you get a video camera such as a flip camera and stand in front of any blank wall and welcome people personally to your membership site. It doesn’t seem like much but when on most sites, somebody joins and they just see a regular, boring, bunch of texts on the page when they can see you personally talking to them, looking them in the eye—it makes a difference.

So record a video, welcoming them into your site and tell them what to do next. Tell them which post they should read first; tell them if you want them to leave a comment explaining themselves. And this is all going to depend on what type of membership site you have.

For example, if you are having a self-help membership site then you might want to ask somebody, “What’s the one thing in your life you want to improve on?” And you’d be surprised at the number of comments you can get just simply by telling people what to do next and they can get a logical next step for what people should do as soon as they join your membership site.

Next, half-post that asked questions and encourage commenting. Having comments is the best thing ever because you don’t have to do extra much work. You users can generate a big chunk of your content simply by asking follow-up questions or adding in there to send on a video or even telling you what they would like you to create content about next.

So at the end of every video you have and every blog post, ask a question or ask for a comment, but either way ends by asking something.

Remember, turn your training into a system. It’s hard enough to navigate a blog without getting distracted or follow some kind of training course, but when you make it a step-by-step system, people can figure out exactly what steps to take next. They even figure out how close they are to finishing and how long they have left to finish. Also, it makes it easy and catchier to remember; for example, if someone’s on Step 3 or 5, then people can refer to themselves as Step 3 people or Step 4 people; or even better, if you make your system spell out of something in certain letters, it’s even easier to remember.

If you haven’t applied these changes or improvements to your membership site yet, please do them now. Add a welcome video, ask questions and encourage commenting, and make your training into a step-by-step system.

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How Do I Sell Off A Membership Site

Just because you create a membership site of your very own or even buy it from someone else, it doesn’t mean you have to be stuck with it for the rest of your life. I have sold membership sites and the favorite one I sold is one that I created with the intention of selling it before I even started with the content. If you plan ahead in this way, you can sell a membership site of yours for many, many times where you earn every month.

So to make sure your membership site sells for the highest amount possible, I have a few tips for your. Mostly, I’m going to tell you how to handle moving over the domain and how to move over the software.

So how you position your site so that it almost flies off the shelves?

Well I have a few tips for you. First of all, leave some potential money on the table. When I sold off this membership site, I did market it as much as I should. I didn’t set up an affiliate program. I didn’t pull out individual project for leading so there were a lot of good ideas to give to the person who bought the membership site.

Another important thing in having a membership site is have some subscribers. It’s one thing to have the site set up. I don’t think they have the content but if you have paying subscribers who pay you month after month, it’s a lot easier to justify a high price.

I only had about 50 subscribers paying $50 a month at the site I sold, but it was still good enough to get a $40,000 payday; and that brings you to my next point—appraise the site.

A normal site with usual paying members is worth about a year or two worth of the monthly revenue it brings in. So because the site made around $2,000 per month, it was worth close to $40,000. Now, to make the site worth that much, we added in a few extra bonuses including some resell rights, a couple of mailings, a few extra sales letters; but in general it was about two years’ worth of membership fees.

And next, show some future potential. Show that these things can be improved. You left money on the table; show that the (2:28 affiliate) program is easy to add. A big selling point for this is 12 months’ worth of content was already scheduled into the site. So the person buying it didn’t just buy a membership site but how will these expenses. If you let it sit for an entire year, it would still make a bunch of money. So that is the future potential. A big thing about this is not just to ask for a price but showing a lot of ideas about what their buyer can do.

So now you sold the site. Maybe you’re thinking about selling the site and trying to figure out what to do next.

Well after the site has been sold, usually you work out some kind of agreement and use a service such as Escrow.com to hold the money until the transfer is complete.

Now what’s up with this “to be transferred?”

The two most important things are the domain name and the payment account. So obviously if you have this site posted on a .com name, it’s going to be moved over. So you only need to get the buyer to request a domain and be moved over to his registrar; and you’re going to have to unlock the domain and maybe you can change to their details.

Your Escrow is needed to move the payment account over. Now if you have your own merchant account or PayPal, you might be screwed and might have to sell off the entire account to them. Now if you’re using service like ClickBank, which I was using because I have planned to sell off the site, you can simply change the login information and the payment information, meaning the owner’s name and mailing address, and now the account belongs to him. So ClickBank is very friendly about selling off sites but PayPal not so much. When somebody is paying you through PayPal, they’re stuck in that account.

And finally, you need to move over the software that you used to power the site. This means your membership site’s life. If you have purchased an unlimited site license to run your site, you’re going to have to buy a brand new single-site license and then transfer it over into that person’s name.

Another issue is things like the autoresponder or the list. So the important thing that you would mind as far as moving a site in someone else’s name is to set up the whole thing as a separate business; set up its own payment account, its own domain name, its own license, and its own autoresponder.

To position your own membership site for sale, leave money on the table, have some subscribers and appraise it. Then when someone buys it, transfer over the domain name, payment account, membership site license, and the e-mail autoresponder.

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Should I Offer Multiple Payment Options

A good chunk of membership sales letters I look at don’t have just one payment button; they have two. They give people a choice between paying the entire membership all at once or paying in installments; or even worst, they might offer a high level, a platinum-level membership or let somebody choose between that or lesser gold-level membership.  And I’m telling you right now, don’t do that. You should only offer one single payment option on your sales letter. If you ever feel like you need to offer a different payment option, that should be a completely different sales letter.

So here’s my thinking. First of all, most people who run very long payment plans—for example, if someone’s paying 50 bucks a month in chunks for a $1,000-program, they’re going to be a little hassled to do it because they can barely afford the payments; and they’re going to be the ones who participate the least in the membership site. I wish this wasn’t the case but it’s simply the way thing is. And it’s true also with trial members.

If someone is in a trial period from my membership site, they’re going to be also a pain to do it because they barely wanted to buy anyway and they had to kind of force that by having the trial offer. So most people in long payment plans or trials are really hassled to do it, which is your first reason for not offering multiple payment options and just to sell the membership site upfront.

The next reason is, an old saying that goes, “The confused mind never buys.” If someone goes to the button of your sales letter and they see a button for platinum subscribers and a button for gold subscribers; now suddenly they’re going to be scrolling back up, looking around, and trying to figure out the difference between the platinum and the gold levels. It may not seem like a big deal, but just adding those extra few seconds of thinking, makes it all the more likely that your visitor is going to leave your site, just out of their confusion or distraction.

So what do you do instead? Get them in the membership site now, and upsell them later. So if you want to get someone on some kind of extra coaching or some additional products, there’s nothing wrong with putting extra payment buttons inside the membership site; but I will definitely focus on getting them in some kind of membership site instead of getting them in the perfect membership site. Get the sell now, worry about upselling later. Don’t deal with long payment plans, trials, or with multiple payment buttons on their page because it’s just going to be confusing.

I’m telling you right now, “Keep it simple.” Don’t offer multiple payment options; just give them the one single button on your sales letter whether it’s a membership site or not.

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What Are Newsletter Open Ended And Fixed-Term Membership Sites

Depending on whether you choose a newsletter open-ended or fixed term membership site, it’s going to drastically affect what kind of membership site you create. How many hours per week you put into it and how much money you make? So let’s go through the difference between these two very important types of membership site.

The first type is a newsletter. This is just simply an e-mail autoresponder. This is where somebody pays you money; they get put on and e-mail subscriber list and your autoresponder sends them lessons automatically every few days. This is the cheapest and easiest way to create a so-called “membership site,” and I like to do this for simple one-time payment products.

This is kind of cheap. You probably already have an e-mail autoresponder. You just go and add extra messages, but the problem with this is that you have almost no control over where the content goes. You’re always going to have people e-mailing you back, ask you for yesterday’s e-mail, last week’s e-mail; it’s not stored anywhere and it’s a real headache to take people off of the list if they cancel, refunds, or accidentally even unsubscribe. It’s a hassle to maintain. But if you’re just selling a simple single-payment product, it’s always a good idea to having some extra followups.

The next type of membership site is probably what you normally think of when you hear the word “membership site.” This is a download area. This is an open-ended membership site where you charge people month after month forever. They pay a monthly fee and can log in with their own unique username and password, and get access to your old articles, your old videos, and your old audios.
But the problem with the open-ended membership site is it continues on forever. So in a year from now, if you still have subscribers in this membership site and your heart just isn’t in it, you just don’t want to update the site, too bad; you still have too. So it becomes a chore and over time, less and less people are going to be in the membership site, so you’re now stuck.

The solution to this is to create a fixed-term membership site. This is just like the open-ended membership site where somebody can log in to your webpage, but the difference is you have an ending date. So your membership site might only last for six months; after six months there ain’t forever.
So instead of an ongoing training area, you instead have a course—a class people take—and after six months, they have graduated.

So I definitely recommend you to create a fixed-term membership site instead of a newsletter or an open-ended site because you get the best of both worlds. It’s easy to set up; it’s simple to maintain; and you can always go and change it later whereas with ongoing membership site, you’re always trying to catch up to this month’s worth of content and there’s no time left to market your site the way you should market it.

So those are the differences between a newsletter open ended and fixed-term membership site.
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Should I Add Audio To My Website

For some reason when people think about what content is, they immediately grab and take towards written materials. Written materials are great. Most of what’s on the internet is written materials but there’s one problem; it takes a lot of time to write stuff down.

Also, most people are simply not writers so even if they can speak out a paragraph or a page or two, they simply run out of gas. What do you do instead? You should create audios instead. Not because they’re cool; not because they’re the future of the internet; because they’re easier to make than writing things down.

Audio is easier to create than video. Video is pretty easy too but the problem with the video is you have to worry about what’s on your screen; you have to worry about changing the picture on the screen every now and then. And this means, if you are filming a live action video, you have to change your expression on the picture, on the video. And the problem with that is sometimes you have to look down at your notes.

The similar problem with screen-captured video because it’s showing a PowerPoint, you have to change slides, change the bullets; but the advantage with an audio is you simply have three things to talk about—three points—and then you just talk and people get the same idea.

Anyone knows how to talk; anyone can talk on the phone and there for you can too, and you too can make audios. And it’s easy to talk for just ten minutes. I’m not talking about being at keynote speaker or anything. Just talk about a subject for 10 minutes, time yourself, and at the end of 10 minutes, wrap it up and tell people where they should go next.

Even if you’re speaking slightly slower the normal, you still talk at about 150 words per minute. So if you talk for 10 minutes, that’s 1,500 words you didn’t have to write. That’s over five pages. It’s very easy to make 10-minute audios and avoid the hassle of all that extra writing.

When you put audio on your site, it’s important to remember that you don’t necessarily have to provide the download of the audio. There are plenty of audio players for WordPress that allow you to take an audio file and simply play it on the page. There’s no way to “Right Click” and “Download.”

It’s up to you how generous or uptight you want to be on the subject, but it’s much easier to get comments on a blog post if you don’t provide a download. This is because people have to sit at the computer and listen to your audio for those few minutes, and they’re already back on that page when it’s time to leave a comment.

Asking somebody to sit for three to 10 minutes to listen to your audio is not that much to ask.

Should you add audio to your website? Yes, you should! Because it’s easier to create audio than video; you just talk; you just have a few things to say, a loose out one, and you let yourself go. It’s easier to talk for 10 minutes and have a complete explanation of some subject and that saves you writing five to 10 pages or more; and if you embed this audio on a webpage or a blog, it’s easy to get people to click on a link, leave a blog comment, or do whatever it is you want them to do at the end of that audio.

I hope you saw today that creating content for a membership site is easy. Now that we’ve got that issue out of the way, let’s get your membership site set up.

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How important is a theme into my membership site?

Contrary to what a lot of internet marketers and membership site teachers tell you, a theme is not very important in your membership site. Now let me explain. I am all for having a membership site that looks good, that looks professional, and that’s easy to navigate, but unfortunately, the majority of membership site creators think that the theme of their membership site is the most important thing and as a result, end up using search for a theme as an excuse not to get anything else accomplished.

Here is something to think about. If you had a membership site with a good-looking theme and no content, would people pay for it? The answer is no. But if you had a membership site with an average-looking theme and some content, would people be more likely to purchase it? And the answer is yes. So, a theme is not really the top priority for you. Is it important to have an okay-looking theme? Of course it is, but it’s not that important to go out and find a different theme every single time you create a membership site. It’s not that important to get a custom theme created every single time you make a membership site.

Personally, I prefer just to reuse my favorite theme. I use a theme called Cutline on most of my sites and it’s a simple black and white theme where I can find everything. So, I just reuse my favorite theme for new membership sites. That way, I can create the membership site quickly while I am still excited about it. Something that’s very important with themes is that they are able to navigate. So, on your theme, can somebody easily search for something? Can they easily find old posts? Can they easily go to an old category? Can they easily leave a comment? Can they easily see what the newest posts are? If you can say yes to all those questions, then you have an easy-to-navigate theme and you should probably consider it.

Personally, I prefer blue or black and white themes with a single right sidebar. If according to your personality, you prefer a two-sidebar or a three-sidebar themes that’s purple, go ahead and use that, but I know what I like, you know what kind of theme you like. Go look at the blogs you frequent and what do those themes have in common, and just duplicate that on your own sites.

But the thing that’s important to me is that WordPress themes and membership themes don’t need to be fancy. There’s no rule that say you have to have a membership site theme that has giant magazine-style pictures everywhere or that has content sliders so that the blog flips around about the different posts better around. Personally, I think these kinds of additions distract people instead of helping them find exactly what they’re looking for.

So, a theme is not really too important with your membership site. You should definitely choose a theme that looks good, but once you found that good theme, reuse it in your other membership sites. Make sure that they’re easy to navigate and avoid a lot of the fancy stuff like magazine style themes or slider style themes.

Now that we’ve gotten that issue out of the way, go ahead and create some content, and market your membership site, and get the first few members.

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How do I stop members from cancelling or refunding?

Attrition is one of those things that most membership site creators don’t think about until they’ve already gone through with the headache. The simple fact is that you are going to have people dropping out out of your membership site every single month. It’s just going to happen. There is no such thing as having 100% retention – in other words, 100% of the people staying in your site just does not happen. So, how you keep this membership site attrition as low as possible? I have three tips for you. The upfront about the re-billing, send them email reminders, and announce upcoming posts ahead of time.

So first of, be straight up about how you’re going to be billing your members. This seems like it would do the opposite of what you want but being upfront, being honest is going to be what it keeps your members in. So, on your sales letter, be upfront about the payments, tell them what the initial payment, what they get as soon as they make that payment, and then what the future payments will be and how often. For example, if you want a $50 a month membership site for six months, then say on the sales letter, “Your initial payment will be $47 tonight and then $47 every month for the next six months.” That way, when that billing comes in, when they see their credit card bill, then they know exactly what’s that for. And to help that, also state what the name on the credit card bill will look like. And then I’ll just prevent people from forgetting or wondering about what a certain bill is and charge them back without even investigating because a lot of people simply won’t.

On top of that, the next thing you can do is to send out email reminders. So, if your membership site updates once per week, then get them on an autoresponder after they join that sends them an email once per week, telling them what is new in the membership site, what they missed if they have not logged in for a week. The reason why this helps is because people forget to log back in. If somebody joins your membership site and they never get an email from you ever again, then they might go for two or three months without realizing they’re in that site, joined, and then be overwhelmed, confused, and behind. So, send email reminders and you might think that this will remind people each month to cancel. But remember, they chose to join your site. So, it’s in everyone’s best interest that you remind them of what they paid for this week or this month and tell them where to go and click and log in to go get it.

And then finally this brings you to my next point, announce upcoming posts. It’s one thing to say, “Here’s what you missed so far,” but if there’s a really important post coming up, like a long video or a big webinar or even a live webinar, send an email reminder a few days ahead of time so they can take a few minutes or hours out of their schedule on a particular day. This once again helps people to consume your content and to just make time in their schedule to make it a habit, make it a regular thing to check in on what you have just added to your membership site.

Those are my top three methods of reducing membership site attrition and increasing membership site retention – the upfront about the re-bills, send email reminders, and announce upcoming posts.

Go ahead find out how to not just make a membership site but to keep your members in it for as long as possible.

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