I should read Tipping Point again - that's a great point. And you're actually right on target, though I'm keeping the details under wraps for now. ;) More on that coming soon!
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Hi Ingrid :)
More students is a great thing! I look forward to hearing more about your online photography classes, and seeing that project unfold. Let us know how we can help, of course. You do already have a mailing list after offering your free report, right? Are you still promoting that report and building/following up with that list?
Hey Sharon,
It sounds like you've outlined the solution right there! :)
On those affiliate sales that "came out of the blue". Backtrack the source of the traffic & sales and then duplicate that on a larger scale. That's all you have to do! You're in a good position to start turning a profit from these projects.
Hey Dennis,
You're in the right place. Let us know when question come up, and we'll help you out. Also keep in mind that Google is your best friend - whether it's figuring out what a word means (we use all kinds of weird terms!) or a solution to a particular problem - someone else has likely already posted the answer somewhere. I still use it daily myself -lol.
There's really no rocket science to any of it, and once you figure out the basics you'll find it all fairly easy. Until then, like I said - let us know how we can help!
I love that line about naps in your siggy, Lisa :) lol
Take a good look at your daily schedule, and your weekly schedule. Start by keeping a Time Journal for 3 days, or even for an entire week. Jot down everything you do from the time you wake up until the time you go back to bed. Including family obligations (sports, dinner, etc), any TV time through the week, what you're working on (specifically).
Once you do that - which is incredibly enlightening - look back at your 3 priorities. Create a schedule that allows you to work on all three, in the order of priority.
I would guess that the freelance work is a top priority financially, and also because you can't let current clients down. Schedule that into the bulk of your work time. Work on MVOM for one hour each day (60 minutes, with a timer set), and work on the website for your husbands business for one hour each day. That's 10 hours of solid focus time every week towards those two projects, leaving you plenty of time to get your client work done.
Thank you - that's a very high compliment and I appreciate it :)
It sounds like things are going very well for you through this transition. I'm glad to hear that. A lot of service professionals struggle with pricing and value, but time and again I've seen the higher-priced models flourish while those that maintain lower ("competitive") pricing struggle to maintain - much less grow.
Keep on rockin' it! ;)
Hi Johan, welcome to the forum :)
I just took a look at your site/blog - very nice start! This is a somewhat competitive niche so you're going to need two things: lots more content (focusing on longtail keyword phrases), and inbound links.
I would also raise your font size within the blog posts. It's quite small and that makes it hard to read.