Co-publishing
really means you agree to mail a certain number of copies of
an
Ad sheet with your regular mailings. In
return, you usually get two
things: 1) You
get your ads in that ad sheet for half price, as long as
you
co-publish, and 2) You get to keep 50%
commission on all ads that
people
mail to you to include in the ad sheet.
When you co-publish,
your
name and address will go on the copies of the ad sheet that you are
sending
(either the publisher will put it there, or you can rubber stamp it
in
the provided space). People who receive
your copies of the ad sheet, who
want
to place ads, will send their ads and payment directly to YOU. You
keep
your cut and forward the rest, with the ad, to the publisher. These
arrangements
vary. The usual arrangement: 50% off
ads, and half for
commission
on new ads placed through you, for as long as you co-publish.
Usually,
before you can co-publish an ad sheet, you will have to place an
ad
at full price. Indicate with your ad
order that you want to co-publish,
and
include the number of copies you intend to mail out. If you can mail 50
easily,
say 50. Don't say 200. See, this adsheet might get published every
two
weeks. If it takes you two months to
send 200, people will get old
copies
and will see your name on them. This
will give the impression that
you're
slow, and you obviously don't want that!
Why
would any publisher want to have others co-publish THEIR ad sheet?
After
all, they lose out on half the ad revenues from any of those ads.
Well,
by having co-publishers, the reach of the ad sheet can be greatly
expanded. The publisher may only be able to mail out
1,000 himself; with
other
people doing extra mailings, another 1,000 might see the ad sheet.
The
higher circulation allows higher advertising rates, which partially
compensates
for the 50% commissions. Also, most
publishers put ads for
their
own offers in their own ad sheet (the main function of their ad
sheet,
as noted in the previous report, is to cover the publisher's
advertising
expenses). This means their offers are
seen by an extra 1,000
people,
and the only expense is mailing ad sheet copies to only a few people.
So,
exactly how do you benefit from co-publishing other ad sheets? You get
cheaper
advertising. You get better circulation
of your own ads, from the
other
co-publisher's mailings. You get another
sheet to insert into your
"big
mails" (see the next report to learn how your business can explode by
using
this idea - including how to send tons of mail to your customers for
FREE!). You get a commission for every ad placed
through you (this can pay
for
YOUR ads in the ad sheet, meaning FREE advertising for YOU).
How
do you benefit from having others co-publish YOUR ad sheet? Your
circulation
is VASTLY expanded. You don't have to
pay others upfront to
mail
your sheet. You just have to send them
however many copies they can
mail,
and be willing to give them a commission on new ads. But look at it
this
way, these would be ads you WOULDN'T get otherwise, because your sheet
wouldn't
have reached that person if you were the only mailer.
Co-publishing
is built on trust. If you promise to
mail out "x" number of
copies,
keep your promise. If you don't mail
them, you can't get the
commission
on the ads that may have been placed.
Also, your offers won't
get
the extra circulation they deserve. But,
do it right, and you will see
your
orders grow!
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