Solo ads are still a very powerful way to advertise your
website or affiliate product. You can use solo ads to do numerous tasks and
jobs to create a buzz for your site, develop instant name recognition, and create
a large flood of visitors to your site. Actually, solo ads are as powerful as
articles are in promoting your website. In most cases, solo ads can generate a
quicker response to your site than writing and distributing articles. Mostly
because solo ads are an instant delivery while articles can take a while
generating search engine rankings. In order to do that, your solo ad must be
powerful. How do you do that? After writing thousands of solo ads for thousands
of clients all over the world, I have realized what it takes not only to write
a good solo ad, but one that will generate a desired response. This solo ad tip
is something to think about before you even begin writing your solo ad. workwithjrquarles.com/solos provides all the information
about Solo Ads, Buy Solo Ads, J.R.
Quarles Solo Ads.
One of the misconceptions of solo ad writing is that you can
write one ad for everyone. That simply is not true. Your ad must be targeted
with one very specific audience in mind. By writing a solo ad that is
"speaking" to a targeted audience it seems like just that. You are
talking to that specific person. You have narrowed your words for just one
person. This creates an atmosphere of trust and relations. The reader is
beginning to feel connected to you and your product. Think about it. What ads
do you click open? Something that is obviously an ad, or something that peaks
your interest and makes you want to read it. If I know an email is an ad, I
never open it. Never. I just don't have time to read another ad for something I
really don't want. Chances are, you don't either. And the general Internet
public doesn't read them either. Solo ad success starts with the very first
thing a reader sees... your heading, or headline.
It must not only be a powerful mix of words, but something
that begins to grab the reader. Headlines like Great new opportunity for thousands a month just
isn't going to work. It's blatantly an ad. Something I've been experimenting
with lately is something like, "(first name goes here), I stole (expert's
name here) secret to how he made his fortune!"It's what I call a first
person approach. You are using names and it sounds like a personal email. Sure,
it's still an ad, but at first glance, it's an email. Solo ads are to generate
a lead. If you have taken the first solo ad tip into consideration and have
targeted your ad very narrowly, then this part is easy. Create your ad to
instill and emotional desire to follow your path. The path starts with a solo
ad. Yes, they are. Solo ads should take on the same form as an article. What I
mean by that is keep it short, concise and very clear. Don't try to mislead or
use funny word tricks. A lot of white space or spaces in between paragraphs,
and subheadings to keep the reader who skims travelling through the ad.
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