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10 ways to drive Word-of-Mouth: Lessons from my neighborhood garage sale.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,October 6th, 2008

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There’s a garage sale in my neighborhood today.

It’s the first chilly morning of the Fall. And folks around here don’t much like cold. So at 9am, traffic is really sparse.

A few lonely neighbors are in their driveways, sweatered up, sipping on coffee. And surrounded by items for sale.

No one is buying.

Every few minutes, people will drive slowly by. They’ll pause in front of a driveway, do one of those rolling stops.

And then they’ll quickly drive on.

It’s almost like a wild life reserve: “Don’t make eye contact with them, Susie! They might sell you something.”


What do people see in you, when they walk past your business?

Do they see a snake oil salesman, trying to hustle them into buying something they don’t need?

Are they afraid to make eye contact?

Do they say “No, just browsing” when you ask if you can help them?

Want to generate word-of-mouth?

Stop “Selling”. Lose the sales pitch.


10 ways to drive word-of-mouth at your garage sale / business:



  1. Educate people.
  2. What if you had flyers at your garage sale that read: “How to get the best out of garage sales?”

    People would be more likely to engage.

    And people would spread the word, too.


  3. Entertain people.
    (With no catch.)


  4. Bring people together.
    People love interaction. Especially with like-minded people. A garage sale that becomes a gathering place for people with similar interests, will be a much bigger draw than low prices. Some cafes are hip to this - they encourage groups to have their meetings at the cafe. They provide wireless Internet access, and adequate comfortable seating for groups. It’s much better than a hard sale.


  5. Tell a story about each item.
    Either verbally, or on a little post-it sign. People love stories. It will make your items instantly more valuable. Where was it made? How was it valuable to its last owner? Why do you sell it, instead of its zillion other competitors?


  6. Have fun. And don’t take yourself too seriously. People like being around others that know how to have fun.


  7.  

  8. Think about your customers’ needs.
    Imagine: People driving from one garage sale to another on a cold Saturday morning would probably love… Coffee. Hot chocolate. Doughnuts. Give away, or even sell, some Krispy Kreme doughnuts (not your main product), and your real products will fly off your driveway. Oh, and people will tell their friends - be sure to stop at the place selling Krispy Kreme!


  9. Don’t be desperate for leads - take a long-term view.
    You don’t have to capture each customer the minute they step into your sights. Like you’ll never see them again. If you have a good conversation, and make yourself a resource (versus a salesman), you’ll see them again - in the event that they one day need what you happen to have to sell.


  10. Build a reputation.
    Reputations are created, and grown, by word-of-mouth. Reputation means familiarity. Quality. Consistency (of that which the customer cares about).


  11. Address their secondary needs, not just the primary ones.
    It’s why garage sale pros provide cookies and lemonade. The garage sale buyer with child in tow will have a much happier experience if their child is happy. Consider the grocery store Harris-Teeter. Their products are a bit more expensive than, say, Food Lion or Kroger. But they provide free balloons, and free cookies, for kids. They also have these miniature shopping carts for “shoppers-in-training”. Yes, your kids. It makes shopping a lot easier for parents, and a lot more fun for kids.


  12. Be genuine.

    Treat your customers like neighbors. Don’t even talk about your product. They know what you sell - they’ll ask when they’re interested. Caring goes a long way If they have a good conversation with you, they’re more likely to remember. They can’t spread the word if they don’t even remember you.



Free Prize Inside:


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How simplicity drives word-of-mouth.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,October 2nd, 2008

Simple is Better.


Microsoft redesigns the iPod package…


Simplicity rules.

Simple is simple to talk about. (That’s word-of-mouth.)

Simple is simple to explain. (That’s word-of-mouth, too.)

Simple is simple to use.

Simple is best at resolving complex problems.

Simple exudes confidence.

Simple speaks volumes.

And simple is really, really, hard to do.


Doing one thing remarkably

is simply more remarkable than

doing something complicated

      ( with all its caveats…)
      (and asterisks…)
      (and instruction manuals…)


Don’t we all just want something that works?
Make me look smart.
Design a simple solution to a complex problem.
Make it so simple, I can look good doing it.
Because I’m selfish. I’m self-centered. And if it makes me look good, telling people about it (so they can see how good I look) will make me look even better.

There. I said it.


What word-of-mouth for a complicated product looks like:

“Man - it does everything! What do you want? It has everything you want. Feature X? Got that. Feature Y? Got that. Feature Z? Got that. It even has features 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, & 10! It does it all.

What does the listener take away from this? Nothing. Doing everything may as well be doing nothing. It’s not memorable. Besides, everyone claims to do everything. Very few actually do.


What word-of-mouth for a simple product looks like:

“Dude - if you want to get XYZ result, this is exactly what you need. I used it for my XYZ needs, and it was eeeeasy. I use it for XYZ all the time.”

Result? If the listener does indeed need XYZ result, they’re sold.
(On the flip side, you won’t get customers not interested in XYZ. But that’s okay. Don’t attract customers who will end up disappointed.)

More is not better.

More is typically worse. Think law of diminishing returns. Think Google search engine versus Yahoo search engine.





Don’t try to please everyone. Keep it simple. Do that one thing… remarkably.

And word-of-mouth will flow. (Eventually.)

What’s your favorite simple product?



Bolaji Oyejide is an online marketer and word of mouth maven. In his spare time, he explores how to generate passive income via blogging and affiliate marketing. Escape the Rat Race, and Find your Buried Cheese.

Follow me on Twitter…

Free Prize Inside:

Microsoft’s zunePhone ad (parody):

Simple is simply… better.

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Stop redesigning the STOP sign (The customer is often wrong.)

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 30th, 2008




You wouldn’t go to your mechanic and tell him what to fix. Without letting him diagnose the problem, and propose the solution.

You wouldn’t do that with your doctor either.

Hopefully.

But we let our customers tell us what features they want, all the time.


Think Different. Think Apple - most of their innovations aren’t customer feature requests.

And customers LOVE them.


Engineers build features.

But an entrepreneur, a business owner, has to stop asking what customers want… and instead ask them what results they expect.


Customers don’t talk about features. Not spontaneously. Not without prompting.


But they DO talk about benefits. Solutions. How a product makes them feel. How it makes their lives easier. Better. The fact that the product does stuff they didn’t even anticipate.


Don’t get hung up on asking what your customers want… and giving it to them.
If you do ask, they’ll tell you. And you’ll provide it. And then they’ll realize that the feature they asked for, doesn’t give them the benefit they wanted. So they’ll ask for something else.

Instead, build something that solves a real problem.

Give it to a customer.

Observe.

Learn from what you observe (not what they tell you).

Go back to the drawing board, and make changes.


In so doing, you may create a remarkably boring (but effective) stop sign.


Instead of a remarkably aesthetic (but useless) one.


In what instances have you been a feature-seeking customer? Or, when have you had a customer ask you for features that didn’t ultimately get them the result they needed?




Bolaji Oyejide is an Online Marketer and serial entrepreneur. His latest company, Rat Race Escape Artists (www.Rat-Race-Escape-Artists.com), helps you create a customized plan to get out of the Rat Race, and find your buried cheese.

Free Prize Inside:
Another example of customers often being… well… wrong.

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“We Heart Pig Lipstick”. Why gimmicks don’t drive word-of-mouth.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 24th, 2008

There’s been a big to-do about pit bulls, lipstick, and pigs of late.

In business, we all want customers to talk about us (nicely).

To get that, most of us want to put lipstick on a pig. And call it a day.


Stop.


Grinning Pig

Stop

looking for gimmicks, tactics, and short cuts to coerce customers to talk about you.

Start

making products that are relevant. That are indispensable. That matter.

Life is too short for complacency.

So stop.

Get rid of the lipstick.

Commit to making family breakfasts a universally special experience again.

I love pigs.

If that doesn’t float your boat, sell the pig instead, and get into the lipstick business.

There are lots of pig owners buying it these days…



Bolaji Oyejide is an Online Marketer and serial entrepreneur. His latest company, Rat Race Escape Artists (www.Rat-Race-Escape-Artists.com), helps you create a customized plan to get out of the Rat Race, and find your buried cheese.

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Find your Ness. 3 ways to word-of-mouth.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 22nd, 2008



“Life may knock you down.

Scratch that.

Life WILL knock you down. Okay?
It’ll kick you in the gut. And knock you to the curb.
But you can’t let it rob you of your Ness…”

- Owen Wilson as Dupree, in “You, Me & Dupree”.




Owen Wilson is a fool.

This guy has his own brand of comedy. Watch the clip to find out HOW to make an EXIT like no one else. (It’s Owen Wilson-ness.)

If you haven’t seen the movie, rent it this weekend. It is dumb. It is endearing. It is romantic. It is frat-boy humor. And Owen Wilson steals whatever scene he’s in.

His message here is silly.

But his message here is also true.



Find your “Ness”.
Hone your “Ness”.
Communicate your “Ness”.

And people who love your “Ness” will flock to you.

(In time.)

But let’s turn this on it’s head. John asked recently for some tactics by which to generate word-of-mouth.

I’ll give you three.

  1. Have patience.
  2. If you’re not able to be patient and have a long-term view on your campaign, that’s fine. But don’t expect word-of-mouth. Not unless you pay for it. Word-of-mouth is based on trust. And trust takes time to build.

  3. Find your own “Ness”.
  4. Stop trying to be all things to all customers.

    Ignore some customer needs. Find the ones the customers you favor like the most. Need the most. Focus there. You’ll lose some customers - that’s fine. That’s progress. It means you’re starting to focus. And you’re starting to win customers that will stay with you (and talk about you) for the long haul.

    For example: I’m sure many may find my style of writing empty or frivolous. That’s good. It’s not trying to be for everyone.

    It’s for people who want big ideas. Who don’t need to paint between the lines all the time. Who are okay with trying something off-the-wall, failing, falling, and getting back up. Who favor freedom over safety.

  5. Help your customers find their own “Ness”.
  6. Make your customers remarkable.
    Give them the tools to be the most interesting person in the room.

    And you will have your word-of-mouth from them. (In time.)

Do your customers wear or use your product like a badge of honor? If not, maybe you should change customers. Or, more truthfully, maybe you should change products.

Because you should be making products that matter.
Products that help you,
And your customer,
Find that “Ness”.

In a slow economy in particular, what’s stopping your customers from aggressively seeking the bottom-of-the-barrel cheapest alternative? Are you making them feel special? Feel relevant? Feel remarkable?

What’s that “Ness” that you bring out for your customer?

Free Prize Inside:



Bolaji Oyejide is an Online Marketer and serial entrepreneur. His latest company, Rat Race Escape Artists (www.Rat-Race-Escape-Artists.com), helps you create a personalized plan to get out of the Rat Race, and find your buried cheese.

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Want Word-Of-Mouth? Tell the Chinese Backstreet Boys.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 11th, 2008

           

Okay.

That was hilarious.

That’s the funniest thing I’ve seen in a minute.

That video has been viewed almost EIGHT MILLION TIMES.

I think the Backstreet Boys… AND the Houston Rockets (note the jerseys), owe these kids some money.

Want word-of-mouth? Create passionate fans.  And then get out of the way.  Today’s customers have access to tools that let them spread the word about what they love (and they don’t love).

For word-of-mouth, create passionate fans.

Want passionate fans? Create something remarkable.

Not something good.

Not something great.

Not even something excellent.

Something remarkable.

Want remarkable?

Don’t benchmark.  Benchmarking leads to gradual improvements.  It puts you one step ahead of the game.

Go 3 steps ahead. Try something crazy. Fail. Learn from it. Try again.

And when you have a hit… call the Chinese Backstreet boys.


Bolaji Oyejide is an Online Marketer and serial entrepreneur. His latest company, Rat Race Escape Artists (www.Rat-Race-Escape-Artists.com), helps you create a customized plan to get out of the Rat Race, and find your buried cheese.

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What’s your Cracker Jack Free Prize Inside?

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 8th, 2008

Cracker Jack BagHow many of you remember Cracker Jacks?

I heard on the radio yesterday that Cracker Jack free prizes have become collector’s items.  With some going for THOUSANDS of dollars!!

In the bestseller Free Prize Inside, author Seth Godin suggests that today’s companies can’t afford difficult and risky technological innovation.  These complex projects are notorious for being late, over-budget, and short on meeting promised deliverables.  The Return On Investment (ROI) falls short.

He also suggests that you can’t afford to spend HUGE amounts on advertising.  Again, the ROI doesn’t justify the expense.

Free PrizeThe solution?  Seth says you can profit all day long with CHEAP INNOVATIONS that have a significant ROI.  He calls this the FREE PRIZE INSIDE.

According to Seth a FREE PRIZE is a secondary product benefit so remarkable, that it drives word-of-mouth, and drives sales.  Invest in these, instead of running huge media buys, or huge IT projects.

So you already have a product you’re proud of.  How do you create a FREE PRIZE inside?  Something secondary that will be so remarkable, it will drive word-of-mouth, and sales?

 

Some of Seth’s examples include:

  1. FedEx truck mailing slots (drop your mail into any parked FedEx truck you see!)
  2. Flintstone vitamins / orange-flavored vitamins (Kids enjoying taking their medicine? What?)
  3. A bank that’s open on Sundays
  4. A grocery store that gives express lanes to shoppers who buy a LOT (reward your most loyal customers)

 

Or how about:

  1. Hidden music tracks on your favorite artist’s latest CD
  2. Fortune cookies at Chinese restaurants
  3. Snapple’s humorous facts on the inside of the bottle cap (-ex- Camel’s have 3 eyelids)

 

As you can see, none of these are terribly complex or expensive for the company to implement.  But by observing customers, finding out what they could use, you can build a cheap free prize inside.

The beauty of these soft, cheap innovations is that if they don’t work, you haven’t spent a lot of money! Scrap the idea, and try another one.

So.  Go buy a box of Cracker Jacks.  Reminisce on your childhood.  And let that inspire you to create your first free prize inside.

Thanks for reading this blog in its entirety!  To show our gratitude, here are some free prizes inside!

  1. 1960s Cracker Jack TV commercial (Video)
  2. The History of Cracker Jacks (Video)
  3. A Free Summary of Seth Godin’s “Free Prize Inside” (pdf eBook)
  4. Fortune Cookies aren’t from China (Video)
  5. Did you know:
    My favorite hidden track of all time, Lauryn Hill’s “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You” on the 1999 MisEducation of Lauryn Hill, was nominated for a Grammy. 
    First time that ever happened with a hidden track. 
    How’s that for a free prize inside?

Note: Seth Godin’s book, Free Prize inside, was sold in what looked like a mini-cereal box. 

Seriously.

What’s your Cracker Jack Free Prize Inside?

 



Bolaji Oyejide is an online marketer and word of mouth maven. In his spare time, he explores how to generate passive income via blogging and affiliate marketing. Escape the Rat Race, and Find your Buried Cheese.

Follow me on Twitter…

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The Skype Laughter Chain: How to Make your Product Infectious.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 7th, 2008

 What is the Skype Laughter Chain (video)?

skype logo
First, Skype (for those that don’t know). Skype is a Voice-Over-IP tool that lets you make phone calls from your computer.  All you need is a head set and microphone.  And the Skype software (which is free).  Then you’re good to go.  All calls are dirt cheap, even international ones.  And Skype-to-Skype calls are… free.  Even international ones.

Skype is already incredibly successful, with tens of millions of users worldwide.

So why did they feel the need to create a “Laughter Chain“?

Here’s what they said:

“Laughter is a universal language.”

“It’s no accident that LOL (Laugh Out Loud) is one of the most popular acronyms on the web – we all love to communicate, to share and feel part of a community. Laughter brings us closer together – it’s a language we all understand and everyone loves a good laugh.”

“Spread a little happiness.”

“At Skype we believe that face-to-face communication is the best kind, which is why we’ve created this Laughter Chain to promote our free video calling feature. You can use Skype to make as many free video calls as you want. Seeing the person you’re talking to makes your conversation come alive – you can share excitement, laughter, tears or even just pull a silly face.”

Watching the skype laughter chain, I found it terribly silly.  And infectiously funny.  Who knew watching other people laugh would be funny?  And what does this have to do with Skype again?

Oh yeah. These people are video-conferencing.  For free.  Using Skype’s product.

And Skype is getting thousands more users daily, because of this silly video.

Who’s laughing now?

The thing is,

Interactive = viral.


Interactive = word of mouth
.

  • So. What is interactive about your product?
  • How do people interact with each other, around your product?
  • How can you turn that into a viral experience that people just HAVE to talk about?
  • Think about the Skype Laughter Chain.

Whatever your line of business - observe how people interact with your product.  And then enhance that - either by using features of your product, or something related to the interaction, which can be used in conjunction with your product.  (Like Panera Bread and free high-speed Internet).

If you bring people together around your product, they’ll talk about it.

They may even laugh about it.

What’s laughable about your product?

Or, if you’re not in the mood for the giggles, how can people interact around your product?  And how can you enhance that interaction for them?  Word-of-mouth, after all, comes from memorable shared experiences.

Let’s hear your thoughts:

How do people interact around your product category? Let’s create a Skype Laughter Chain for your product.  Even if your product is a service - people must interact with it in some way that can be enhanced by bringing people into a shared experience.  Let’s talk about it.



Bolaji Oyejide is an online marketer and word of mouth maven. In his spare time, he explores how to generate passive income via blogging and affiliate marketing. Escape the Rat Race, and Find your Buried Cheese.

Follow me on Twitter…

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Tell Me a Story: How to Get People to Remember You.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,September 4th, 2008


Create a story about yourself. About your brand.

People are already inundated with information. Don’t give them more plain information to process.

Give them a story.

Create a story about yourself. About your brand. And then live up to the morals, the lessons, of that story. Make yourself relevant. Make yourself remarkable.


Stories are easier to share than product features or lists of benefits. They’re easier to share than competitive talking points. It’s why our politicians and media seek the perfect image, the perfect narrative.

Stories are a short cut to reading the details.  If people get the story, the narrative, and are sold on that?  They don’t need all the extra noise.

Stories put the audience at the center of the narrative.  Stories make you relevant. They put you in the audience’s world view.

Stories position you as… the friend. the wise advisor. the endearing mascot.

People remember stories.

Here’s one for you:

A little girl came to my door the other day, to sell girl scout cookies.

She was bright-eyed and bushy tailed. Her uniform was impeccable.  She was well-spoken, confident, but respectul.

After listening to her pitch, I was determined to buy some cookies.

I had no cash.

“Could you come back tomorow?”, I asked.

“Well,” she said, as she blew some hair away from her forehead…

“The thing is, my parents are divorced, and I’m with my Mom today, but I’ll be with my Dad for the rest of the week, so can I come back in a week?”

I was deflated.  she said it so matter-of-factly.

“You come back next week, and I’ll be sure to buy your cookies”, I said.

The moral of the story?

This girl was dealing with a significant life challenge.  But you wouldn’t have known it if it hadn’t come up because of my question about her schedule.  she was bright, cheery, and I already wanted to buy from her.

Her persistence and undeterred go-get-it attitude, in the face of her story, made me want to buy from her even more.

And tell others to buy from her as well.

This isn’t about wearing your life challenges on your sleeve. It is about weaving details into a picture that make your offering more compelling, more unique, in this cluttered world.

It doesn’t have to be a real story either.  It can be complete fiction. You could build a myth, a legend, that teaches a lesson analogous to the value you provide.

In another post, I will further explore stories that have been crafted around products. Which make us want to share in the experience.

But for now, if you see a little girl in your neighborhood.  Selling cookies.  Buy a box.  You never know how much it might mean to her.

For now, it’s your turn - what’s a compelling story that has stuck with you?  Or that you’ve told to someone else?


Bolaji Oyejide is an Online Marketer and serial entrepreneur. His latest company, Rat Race Escape Artists (www.Rat-Race-Escape-Artists.com), helps you create a customized plan to get out of the Rat Race, and find your buried cheese.

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Michael Phelps vs Usain Bolt: How to Gain More Notoriety while Doing Less.

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Posted by User ImageBolaji Oyejide,August 25th, 2008

Michael Phelps vs Usain Bolt

The King of Beijing: Who will people talk about more?

Michael Phelps.

Usain Bolt.

Is this even worth comparing? 

 Michael Phelps cover of Time

Michael Phelps won 8 gold medals.

Let me pause after that.

Allow it to sink it.

One man.

One Olympic meet.

8 gold medals.

That’s more than every single country in the world. Except for 9 countries.

One man single-handedly got more gold than most of the rest of the world.

Why are we even discussing this?!?

Here’s why.

Usain Bolt wins

Usain Bolt.

Started running professionally less than 2 years ago.

Already broke the world record in that short time, at 9.72 seconds.

Then SHATTERED the world record, and the competition, at the Olympics. By running 9.69 seconds.

But it wasn’t the fact that he won.

Or the fact that he broke the world record.

It was HOW he won.

Usain Bolt wins
 It was like watching a man run against boys.It was an unprecedented trouncing. It almost looked unfair. He did the same thing in the 200 meter race: Broke the world record, in style.And again, in the 4×100 meter race. Another gold, another world record. 

Usain: 3 golds.

Michael: 8 golds.

Michael is the greatest. End of story.

So - why are so many people talking MORE about Usain than Michael?

Here are some clues:

1. Michael was expected to win 8 gold medals.
A tall order for most human beings - but once the expectation was in place, even 7 golds would have been a let down.

All thanks to the media’s propensity to overhype.

So Michael met expectations, and was justifiably praised.2. Michael’s ability to excel in different types of races further cemented his mythical status - with many dolphin comparisons.

In people’s minds, he was just so good, there was no use being amazed. Appreciative, yes. Amazed, not so much.

2. Usain was expected to be good. Maybe great.
But he didn’t do that.

He was EXCEPTIONAL.

He was AMAZING.

He was REMARKABLE.

He made it look easy.

Usain showed himself to be remarkable at sprints. More so than anyone else in history.

He also showed a joy for his craft -

  • Horsing around before the race
  • Expressing joy, at the crowd and to the cameras,
  • Shooting an imaginary lighning bolt from an arrow,

He did one thing. But he did it better than anyone else in the world.

Michael Phelps is the greatest Olympian ever.

Michael Phelps is greater than Usain Bolt.

But people will be talking about Usain Bolt for the next 4 years.

How does this relate to you?

Don’t try to be a Michael Phelps. Don’t try to excel at everything you do.  Very few people can do it. And even if you are one of those few, it will not be regarded as remarkable after a point.

Find one thing that you can be the very best at.

And blow everyone else out of the water.

 

At that one thing.

Let them see your joy in performing that task.

And people will talk about your business, for the next four years.

On your mark…

 




Bolaji Oyejide is an online marketer and word of mouth maven. In his spare time, he explores how to generate passive income via blogging and affiliate marketing.

The Legend of Annie & the 3 Peaks of Internet Marketing
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Update: Aug 17, 2009.


Usain Bolt runs 9.58. He’s done it again!

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