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Regularly referred to in the media as "Australia's Richard Branson", Pete Wililams is a serial entrepreneur, author, internet marketer and ego maniac. This blog is where he shares his rants and raves on all things business, marketing & publicity - in particular, how to successfully mix internet marketing & business...

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Archive: March 2008

March Madness… The Contest!

Petes Book For those of you playing along at home, you’d know that I am off to the USA for a 3 week vacation on Wednesday.

So, in an effort to ensure the blog doesn’t go unloved I have scheduled a series of posts with excerpts from my book ‘How To Turn Your Million Dollar Idea Into a Reality’ to magically appear over the next 3 or so weeks.

These posts will cover:

  • There’s No Such Thing As Failure
  • Want Profitable Ideas? Become A Fisherman.
  • Building On Other People’s Ideas
  • Finding your USP
  • Why Are You Going Into Business?
  • Creating Systems To Meet Your Goals
  • …and much much more

so keep an eye out, and subscribe to the rss feed

PLUS, i’m going to run a contest while I am away…

MARCH MADNESS CONTEST

Firstly, here is what is up for grabs…

  • A signed copy of my book, which these excerpts come from - ‘How To Turn Your Million Dollar Idea Into A Reality’ [valued at AU$29.95]
  • Unleashing The Power Of Publicity Audio CD - Interview with Pete Williams & Dale Beaumont [valued at AU$27.95]
  • Business Essentials Audio CD - Interview with Pete Williams (May 07) [valued at AU$27.95]
  • Why We Want You To Be Rich Book - Robert Kiyosaki & Donal Trump [valued at AU$29.95]
  • and… A Hand Crafted Pen Crafted From The Authentic Timber of the Melbourne Cricket Ground[valued at AU$189.95]
  • Total Value: AU$ 305.75

There are two prize packs to be won.

To Enter:

1. Post a ‘review’ of one of these up-and-comming book excerpt posts on your blog, with a link back to the relevant post on my blog. Does that make sense ? I’ll see the link or the trackback.

2. Include an email address in your post unless your whois information is correct.

3. Promise to give a review of the entire book on your blog once you have received it and read it.

4. I’ll randonly draw the 2 winners when I get back after April 18 2008.

It’s that easy!

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Also, here is my loose schedule… if anyones interested in catching up for a beer or 3 shoot me an email.

March 26 til March 31 -Los Angeles (celebrity spotting for Fleur)
April 1 til April 3 - San Deigo (the vacation part)
April 4 til April 8 - San Antonio for the NCAA Final Four (this is my part of the trip)
April 9 til April 11 - Las Vegas (spending the $100 Fleur won on the weekend in a charity raffle)
April 11 til April 13 - Sacremento (visitng family)
April 14 til April 16 - San Franciscor

The State of the Web in 2008 [Video Of The Week]

Here is this weeks edition of ‘Video of the Week’… Enjoy.

A conversation with Michael Arrington of TechCrunch on the state of the Web in 2008.

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But They Did Not Give Up…

If you are ever ever ever thinking of giving up…

Winston Churchill failed sixth grade. He was subsequently defeated in every election for public office until he became Prime Minister at the age of 62. He later wrote, “Never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never - in nothing, great or small, large or petty - never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense. Never, Never, Never, Never give up.” (his capitals, mind you)

Charles Darwin gave up a medical career and was told by his father, “You care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat catching.” In his autobiography, Darwin wrote, “I was considered by all my masters and my father, a very ordinary boy, rather below the common standard of intellect.” Clearly, he evolved.

Thomas Edison’s teachers said he was “too stupid to learn anything.” He was fired from his first two jobs for being “non-productive.” As an inventor, Edison made 1,000 unsuccessful attempts at inventing the light bulb. When a reporter asked, “How did it feel to fail 1,000 times?” Edison replied, “I didn’t fail 1,000 times. The light bulb was an invention with 1,000 steps.” What a bright spark

Albert Einstein did not speak until he was 4-years-old and did not read until he was 7. His parents thought he was “sub-normal,” and one of his teachers described him as “mentally slow, unsociable, and adrift forever in foolish dreams.” He was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School. He did eventually learn to speak and read. Even to do a little math.

Henry Ford failed and went broke five times before he succeeded.

An expert said of Vince Lombardi: “He possesses minimal football knowledge and lacks motivation.” Lombardi would later write, “It’s not whether you get knocked down; it’s whether you get back up.”

Michael Jordan and Bob Cousy were each cut from their high school basketball teams. Jordan once observed, “I’ve failed over and over again in my life. That is why I succeed.”

Babe Ruth is famous for his past home run record, but for decades he also held the record for strikeouts. He hit 714 home runs and struck out 1,330 times in his career (about which he said, “Every strike brings me closer to the next home run.”). And didn’t Mark McGwire break that strikeout record?

Walt Disney was fired by a newspaper editor because “he lacked imagination and had no good ideas.” He went bankrupt several times before he built Disneyland. In fact, the proposed park was rejected by the city of Anaheim on the grounds that it would only attract riffraff.

I bet you didn’t know that John Milton wrote Paradise Lost 16 years after losing his eyesight

27 publishers rejected Dr. Seuss’s first book, To Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.

Decca Records turned down a recording contract with the Beatles with the unprophetic evaluation, “We don’t like their sound. Groups of guitars are on their way out.” After Decca rejected the Beatles, Columbia records followed suit.

In 1954, Jimmy Denny, manager of the Grand Ole Opry, fired Elvis Presley after one performance. He told Presley, “You ain’t goin’ nowhere, son. You ought to go back to drivin’ a truck.”

I think you’ve got my point…

How To Succeed At YouTube: 700,00+ Views [with Andrew Nez]

A good friend of mine, from the Thirty Day Challenge, Andrew ‘Nez’ Nesbit, recently had HUGE success with a ‘test’ he ran on YouTube - the video sharing website…

Here is a verbatim interview I did with Nez via email…

—–Original Message—–
From: Andrew Nesbitt [mailto:#### ####]
Sent: Wednesday, 19 March 2008 3:00 PM
To: Pete Williams [mailto:pete@preneurmarketing.com]
Subject: Re: A Dent In The Universe: Interview for my blog..

Hey Nez,

Thanks for this… I’m not exactly sure what to ask, but I am keen to hear what you did, why you did it and how you did it… I same kinda questions I’d ask Paris Hilton really..

(anyway I’ll spice/clean the wording of the questions up for the blog)

1. So Andrew, tell us why you decided to put a video of a man running naked on YouTube?

Being a fan of cricket and a follower of what’s going on in the news, I had a pretty fair idea that this would be a very popular video clip around the country for the next week or so. I knew it would be an ‘around-the-watercooler’ story that everyone would want to see. These days, if you want to find a clip of something quick, you go to You Tube. So what I really was trying to achieve was a test to see if my intuition was right, Aussies like the combination of nudity and sport.

1b. For the American readers, what the heck is this baseball-wanna-be sport called Cricket all about?

Funny you asked that question, as when the video starting hitting number one lists globally it was suddenly on the radar for a lot of U.S viewers. The comments (ended up with over 1000 of them) were collectively in 3 categories: why cricket sucks, what the hell is cricket, and cricket vs baseball.

Cricket, for the uninitiated, is a sport that is as much a part of Australian culture as baseball is to the U.S. The only thing the 2 sports have in common is a bat and ball, and even they are both different. I won’t explain the rules here, instead I’ll direct you to the famous tea towel that came out in the 80’s that explained the game in 2 paragaphs: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_towel_explanation_of_cricket

For many viewers of the video, this would be the second time they’ve seen a cricket bat. The first time would have been watching the brilliant movie Shaun of the Dead.

2. What sort of results did you get ?

The results were astonishing. After just 2 days the video had been viewed over 446,000 times, had 919 comments, been favorited 572, and held the number 1 spot in Australia for both Sports and generally, for both views and top ratings. It was also the number 3 most viewed globally in Sport. After a week it had gotten up to over 600,000 views.

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As I write this, the video has had over 728,000 views, 1057 comments, been favorited 686 times, and for the month holds the number 1 spot in Australia for ‘Most Discussed - Sport’, ‘Most Viewed’ and ‘Most Viewed - Sport’, ‘Top Favorites - Sport’, and it’s the number 1 top rated in Sport this month too.

Not bad for a video that took all of 20 minutes to have on You Tube.

3. One of the keys to the success of the video, was due to the tags you used to define the video.. Firstly, what are tags and how do you use then correctly?

Tags are essentially labels you put on your videos. The beauty of tags of that you get to use more than one. Tags only work for you if you use words that are relevant to what your video is about. When someone does a search on You Tube (or any search) they use keywords that are the most obvious to what they’re looking for. Whichever videos have those keywords as their tags show up in the search results. Of course this applies to everything you can put tags on, like blogs, not just videos.

My video wasn’t the only one on You Tube of this great moment in sport. In fact there were heaps of them, and quite a lot of the videos uploaded were exactly the same clip (lots of copies got made). The reason my video won out over these other guys was simple, good tags.

Thinking like the average You Tube user, I made some educated guesses about what people would type in when they were searching. Using slang terms or descriptive language doesn’t work. I reasoned that people would search by the cricketers name, his nickname, the sport name, even the stadium the event took place, and of course the crucial word streaker.

2008-03-19_2106

4. With web 2.0 being such a buzz word, no matter what anyone does online these days it seems to fall under the web 2.0 banner… so to appeaze the Ed Dal’s of the world.. What super-awesome Web 2.0 techniques did you use ?

Here’s the cool part, I didn’t use any of them (except Twitter about it). I did this as a test based on my impressions of how high the level of interest would be. I have a Traffic Geyser account, and I also use Tube Mogul and Social Marker and a few others, but I decided early on to keep this pure vanilla. You Tube is still king of the hill when it comes to online video, and this was a test to see what kind of reach I could get just using it and nothing else. If I’d decided to go the ninja route and really put it out there, yes obviously it would have had a much greater reach.

The whole thing was a test of myself really, to see if my intuition was right, and to measure the quality of the timing. By having the video up that night, it was already being viewed and was ready for the following morning. I knew that the tipping point on this was the start of the work day across Australia the next day, as people either heard about it on the news, got told about it at work, or were looking for the clip to email to their friends.

Buzz words aside, using web 2.0 techniques are obviously what should be the norm. Don’t go out and do a vanilla test like I did. Most of it’s free too, which is very cool. For anyone new to it all wanting to make a start for free, I’d suggest 2 services. Tube Mogul, to get your videos out to over a dozen video sites, and Social Marker, to get your content bookmarked in as many places as possible. It’s time consuming setting all the accounts initially, but once it’s done it saves you so much time it’s rediculous.

5. How can someone apply these lessons to a non-smutty video like your nuddie man run?

What not having used fancy web 2.0 techniques does, is demonstrate how crucial the timing and awareness is. If your niche has something big happen on the news or within its own sphere of influence, you need to be ready. That’s where your news readers come in, that’s where being on the right email lists comes in, and that’s where having your reticular activation system finely tuned to your niche comes in.

The reticular activation system is a favourite of Ed Dale’s and for good reason. It’s that part of your brain that allows you to sort all of the information you have coming in from all of your senses, and tells you what you should pay attention to, and what you should ignore. We’ve all seen in action. The best example is of a car you’ve never really taken notice of before. Then someone shows you their new car, or you run into one or something, and then all of a sudden you see them everywhere. I never took notice of Suzuki Swifts, never. I’m now working with a guy who sells after market parts for them, and I’ve created the website, shopping cart and marketing materials. I literally now see them everywhere, and I mean everywhere. So much so, that my wife now sees them everywhere, and our game of Spotto we used to play with VW beetles is now a game for Suzuki Swifts.

I took notice of the streaking incident because I was thinking like a marketer, but the lesson is still the same. Live and breathe in your niche and your headspace will follow. You need to have a level awareness or you miss critical information. If something big happens in your niche and you miss it, it’s time to take your bat and ball and go home.

So, I am guessing you probably want to see the video right?

Any finally, make sure you add Nez’s blog to your RSS readers..

http://www.adentintheuniverse.com [rss]

P.S. if you have anymore questions you’d like to ask Nez, please leave a comment below and I’ll get Nez to share more of his wisdom.

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Things Other People Accomplished When They Were 26…

It was my 26th birthday a few weeks ago (no it’s not to late to send gifts) … anyway it got me to thinking “what did other people accomplished when they were 26 yeas old ?”

Albert Einstein published five major research papers in a German physics jornal, fundamentally changing man’s view of the universe and leading to such inventions as television and the atomic bomb.

Benjamin Franklin published the first edition of Poor Richard’s Almanac, which was to play a large role in molding the diverse American character.

Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Chereshkova became the first woman to travel in space.

College dropout Steve Wozniak co-founded Apple Computer.

Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, revolutionizing the economies of the United States and Britain.

Antoine Joseph Sax invented the brass saxophone.

Napoleon Bonaparte conquered Italy.

Want to know what things other people accomplished when they were your age? Visit http://www.museumofconceptualart.com/accomplished/

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