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Dear readers, Jane is proud to introduce a new friend today. A friend who helps prove the power of blogging. Our Smart Woman Online, Denise Wakeman of the Next Level Biz Tips blog, came to us through another friend (as she notes in her interview) Paul ... [Read More]

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Anne Stanton

This is great information! and free no less. I just shifted for totally new connections to the first 30 minutes are free and then.. but I like your ideas much better. This will help me reduce the number of people who really just want to pick my brain.

What are your thoughts on listserves and virtual communities where everyone is offering info for free?

Maria Marsala

Oh.. free publicity is worth A LARGE amount! Really!

I think this article and it's counterpart) has brought in more than 100 new subscribers to my ezine. Besides using this article, in this way, I also have used it as "23 ways...", so I'm getting my money's worth from it.

It's provoked the most amount of email on an article that I've ever produced...

This article (or my others) end up on web sites visited by my ideal clients and brings me new ezine subscribers.

It's an entry into those web sites and their visitors in a class I teach on this subject called "Just Right Pricing" For Service Business Owners: Getting Paid What you Deserve or my other teleclasses!

And I sell it in a CD!

Now that's a great way to advertise! Don't you think?

Denise Wakeman

I think there is a lot of value to "free." And, you have to know your boundaries. As Maria points out in her comment, free can attract business and that is usually the underlying motivation or intent of free stuff. Show your prospects what you have to offer, give them something of value and they may want more.

When you're a professional and what you're selling is your knowledge, experience and expertise, it's often not as clear as when one sells a product. Giving away a bit of your knowledge can help your credibility and reinforce that you know what you're talking about.

When I have an intro call with a prospect, I don't time it so much as I ask a lot of questions and then explain how I can solve the prospect's problems. Frequently, I will give them a solution right then and there and I almost always say, in a joking way, that that tip was a freebie! That always gets a laugh, a thank-you and frequently a new client.

Maria Marsala, Elevating YourBusiness

Ann asked: What are your thoughts on listserves and virtual communities where everyone is offering info for free?

To me it depends. I've been using both venues for more than 12 years now. At one time I gave lots of information away for free. I was also broke ;)

My advice now: Give out a bit of information, but don't give away the whole store! Get them to your web site for more information.

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