Raise prices (well, wait 2 days, so I can get my purchase through) -- I just sent a note to my boss that this is a no-brainer for the $999. And, we already do email campaigns like this, and probably do 80% of what you are going to suggest (at least), and we only have 3 people that would directly benefit from knowing this -- but, we think it would be a nice perk to employees to see the course.
Quote from co-worker: "It would be worth it even if we learn one new, non-generic thing to try" Of course, we sell software that goes for $x0,000+, so anything that moves the needle with leads ROFLstomps $999.
(I have been waiting to write a response to patio11 like this for a while)
How does one save comments on HN? Do you access via some sort of overlay app with better functionality than the vanilla site or do you just bookmark stuff to your browser (or pinboard or whatever)
If you can't believe how cheap it is now, you should have seen the pricing structure that he was proposing until a number of his friends said "Have you been LISTENING to your own advice over the last 5 years?"
Yeah, my first response to seeing the price was "WTF? Raise your prices!" as well. I was expecting a number somewhere in the four figures.
I mean, I was only checking on the price out of curiosity because I'm a broke student who doesn't even sell software, but if a broke student's first response to your offering is "Hey, that's actually only a little bit too expensive for hours worth of instructive entertainment!" to the point where I was tempted to buy for like two seconds, you can be sure that you could extract a whole lot more money than that from people who'll get actual business value out of it.
What's your lifetime value -- 3 years is ~$360 -- so 1 more customer certainly justifies this price.
Also, I guess my suggestion is to have a more expensive option for those that are going to get a lot of value out of it. Even just segmenting 5/10 users vs. Enterprise would probably have us buying the enterprise version (I am part of a giant company)
Sorry for not being an ass kisser, but I think this is way too overpriced and I would not like to see HN turn into a marketplace. Imagine if every HN contributor started selling their knowledge this way - - it would be a bad community where everything was behind paid walls. And yes, I do know that Patrick has contributed a lot to HN, but so has thousands of others, and I am sure he has learnt a ton here as well. There's no need to monetize this or to encourage monetization of this kind of knowledge.
On the HN I read, there is a nearly constant stream of ShowHN posts with paid services and promotions of Y-Combinator startups who stand to gain from the exposure. It has always been part of HN culture to promote our projects -- particularly accepted if you are a major contributor and didn't just register to post.
For someone who stands to make a lot of money from acting on the information here, I am happy to pay for it.
Frankly, if it were free, I probably wouldn't bother to watch it -- I already do a lot of email dripping -- free, to me, would mean that it's basic, and that I wouldn't benefit from it.
> Frankly, if it were free, I probably wouldn't bother to watch it
Excellent point! I feel the same way about most free Internet-busines videos. Plus, I'm much more inclined to listen to, and take action on, advice from trustworthy sources. By contributing so much to HN, Patrick has built up a tremendous amount of trust.
He's been helping startups since long before he joined HN. He's built up a following of his own. He's been telling us all for a while that we can monetise a mailing list, so when he builds one and starts selling a how-to-sell-via-mail on it, we shouldn't be terribly surprised. And he didn't submit it to HN, someone else did.
Here are some of the responses:
1) It must be free.
Well, he's always telling us how to compete with free. Nothing stops us from reading the huge set of equivalent material online, but it'll cost more for anyone who values their time.
2) This is too expensive.
He's repeatedly told us that people who say this shouldn't be the focus of our marketing. Focus on the ones who have the means and ability to recognise value. Capture the consumer surplus where possible.
3) It's too cheap.
Don't worry, he'll find a way to extract the consumer surplus at some point. This is a great lead-in to consulting.
And you know what? Great. Make the money, Pat. Tell us how to do these things, and then show us in a very tangible way how it works, by convincing us to buy something. If that doesn't teach the principles, not much else will.
Yes, there's reciprocity in this world, but it should be obvious to any unbiased observer that this wasn't part of some elaborate scheme on Patrick's part to grab the money of HN users. Patrick has spent countless hours providing invaluable advice to this community for free -- even if you want to take the most negative interpretation of his motives, this simply wouldn't be worth it.
If you want to spend years doling out awesome advice for free and then "cashing out" like this, I encourage you to do so. It would certainly be more valuable than bringing up the insipid "everything is selfish" argument.
I worked with Patio11 on the WP Engine project his info product revolves around, and know very well the caliber of his character (especially when it comes to helping startups).
Knowing that, This comment is the funniest thing I've read all day. I SRS LOL'd.
> There's no need to monetize this or to encourage monetization of this kind of knowledge.
Respectfully disagree. If Patrick didn't have the incentive of making money on the course, he wouldn't have invested the time, effort and money to make it. I believe he hired another person to help with video editing too. Who pays for that?
Nothing creates a healthy ecosystem of knowledge exchange more than people being fairly compensated for their knowledge and hard work.
Based on the fact that your "premium" product offering comes out to about $2/month I can see why you think this is overpriced. For those of us charging real amounts of dollars for our products, spending $250 to get on the fast track to improving paid conversion rates is more than worth it.
This has nothing to do if I can afford this or not. Imagine if you had to pay $250 every time somebody had some knowledge to tell you, would this be a great community that encouraged learning to build the best stuff we can build? Probably not.
I am sure that many of us has shared a ton of knowledge/code/whatever that has been far more worth than $250 (I know I have), but there is no need to sell this and monetize this, especially not here on HN.
Have you never read Patrick's blog or any of his comments here on HN before? He is always sharing things. He has even talked a lot about the content in this very thing he is selling now.
I get the impression these "courses" are less textbook, than implementation forcing.
You do the SEO, gather 1000 email addresses, drip feed and ab test the list till ten people pony up. Then they are incentivised to actually put the common sense into action, follow up with Skype calls and hey presto ten people who have actually put into practise whT the rest just talk about. And make great sales references for the remaining. 9990.
Not trying to be disparaging here but this stuff is more coaching than book selling. You are paying to get someone to prod you not action.
I hope that patio11 forgives the comment but I doubt very much there will be ,uch in the course common sense and a bit of reading won't get you. But for 250 why not get patio11 to summarise it for you and push you into actually using it.
Almost all knowledge is now available for free. Just saying "could learn this for free" doesn't mean people will or should.
It's impossible to learn everything that could be useful. We have to prioritize.
In some cases, that means paying money for information we could get elsewhere.
At my consulting rate, I can buy this course in three hours (it's not technical consulting). Would I spend more than three hours of my time gathering all the information in this course? Most likely.
Therefore, I can actually save money by buying this course. And given that one additional sale of the product I'm using this for is worth the price of the course, it's information I am interested in.
I think we are agreeing - although I seem to be saying patio11 is a kick in the pants, and you saying he is an aggregator of knowledge. Either way yes, there is a price point to be found, 250 seems not unreasonable and I guess most importantly I would not worry patio11 is a shyster and so would be far more likely to buy than J.random course
Can you define "here on HN"? Are you suggesting that the submitter is a shill for patio11? Or that a community member can't sell anything? Or if it a product makes it onto the HN front page, the seller needs to remove the price?
This is a very hypocritical stance. I don't know what you do for a living, but assuming you're a programmer, aren't you "monetizing knowledge" every day?
And you say there's "no need" to monetize this, but what about the need to put food on your table or pay your bills? Patrick gives away 99% of everything he writes for free, and when he does start charging for that last 1% you still find a way to complain…
You've got to be kidding me, way too overpriced? $250? He's selling it to B2B SaaS businesses for whom that's most likely around the cost of a single sale. I can't fathom any situation where a B2B business would classify $250 as "way too overpriced" for almost anything, let alone a product that could give them a double-digit multiplier increase on conversions.
I hope you do not get downvoted, for providing a different point of view. However, I think the important thing to look at is the ratio of useful input on this site to "selling stuff". With patio11, it's very high: he provides tons of useful advice and information, and rarely out and out just "sells stuff". So when he does... well, great, good for him, let's hope it works out!
If on the other hand, someone only comments to promote their own products, I'd look a bit more askance at that.
Look at his comment: "but would prefer talking about the business of doing this rather than about the product. (I'm not comfortable selling on HN.)".
The site also goes in to a lot of detail about the method used on WPEngine, unlike most of these product sites which only drip feed you enough information to convince you to buy their product. He even commended an article[1] which attempts to de-construct his method and share it. I personally believe that he is genuinely offering to share his help (for a fee - which is reasonable), rather than trying to extract money out of HN user's.
I am glad that Redhat and Canonical exist; there certainly is a place for value-added "deep dives". I am glad that this is available for purchase instead of being locked away in his head.
The price is negligible, first off (in the context of a business training course, even an online self-directed one). It's priced so low that I would consider buying it myself, personally, if I thought it would make me better at my job but my employer wouldn't fork out for it. That's an aggressive price point.
Secondly, there's nothing wrong with getting paid for your hard work. If people don't want to pay, and other people want to give advice for free, that can and will still happen - the two models can coexist, they aren't mutually exclusive. I think some geeks are a little wary of paid products and would do well to try selling something they make that has value for users.
I'm happy to answer questions, as always, but would prefer talking about the business of doing this rather than about the product. (I'm not comfortable selling on HN.) I'll probably blog about it in more detail later, too.
I've been following your blog, podcasts, comments here, etc and learn a lot from you. I've gotta say you hit a big need with the email course, and though I wish the price was $99 I know you're delivering based on value and the course is probably worth more than the $300 price to me. So, I'll probably get it. I think a sample video from the course (ie., 5 minutes would help a lot) to help people take the leap. Or a 2 minute intro video to the course. There's something about video (especially when the author's face comes and he starts talking) that adds more legitimacy and seriousness to the offer.
That's the opposite of what I expect but, since it is entirely possible that video + text does outperform text, there's A/B tests running to that effect.
Just bought the course and I'm downloading some of the videos because I watch most of my videos on the go (ie., in the car or on my ipad).
First impressions (ie., first 60 seconds on the course), it really seems like something created for a person sitting at a computer to watch it all. I wish there was a downloadable zip file I could download all the videos at once. I'm trying to download the videos now and I'm running into all sorts of errors and such (I think it's only letting me download one video at a time). Actually I'm getting error messages right now for all the pages. Is your site down?
Update: Ok, it looks like it's back up and running. When I download videos and try to right-click to save mp4 file, it downloads an html file and not the video. I need to go into the video to watch it and then option-return the url to start downloading. Very strange. This happens to the opt-in videos in lesson 2. optins-teardowns video doesn't seem to be downloading at all.
Also, your video sizes are really large. Example, 235mb for an 8:10 minute video (1024x768 resolution). You should be able to get the file size down to 100mb or so. For comparison, Kevin Rose's interview of Dennis Crowley in 720p is about the same size, 237mb, but the interview is about 20 minutes.
Your copywriting video is 686mb for 19:53 length... compared with Kevin Rose's Dennis Crowley video of 235mb for 19:20 length. That makes your video 3x the size of Kevin Rose's video (which is great 720p quality).
Honestly, this is a really sucky first experience. This is going to take my all morning to download these videos because the file sizes are 2-3x what they should be and because the links aren't all working.
And then after I download the videos, since they're so large I'm going to have a hard time fitting them in my iPhone and iPad. Please investigate getting your file sizes down. I think you can shrink the file sizes of your mp4 video to 1/3 the current size but keep the same resolution/quality.
Update: Your optins-teardowns.mp4 file is absent. I can't download it. Please fix cause I don't want to watch the lessons out of order.
Patrick, that video is far too long and does a lot to damage your perceived value. At a number of points you wander off into "includes material on...", rather than "solve X problem using some means" language.
You repeatedly drum into people that they shouldn't be just rails programmers who know skills foo, bar and baz, but rather people who solve business problems. You forgot that lesson in the video.
I'm not at the stage with my business that this'll be useful - but will be soon enough and email will be my primary sales channel. Otherwise this does look like excellent material.
Note, my criticism comes from a place of love. It's your first attempt and feedback will help you improve. Best of luck.
In multiple tests, I have seen the video + long sales copy move the needle as much as 70% on final sales. As of yet, I have not run a test that does not increase by at least 20%. Details NDA, YMMV
Any reason you decided to launch this on a Friday? Or just random? I'm wondering what kind of data people have seen for the best day of the week to attract attention to a launch.
It was supposed to be launched weeks ago, and I was hoping for a Tuesday, but a) waterfall development sucks even more for videos than for software, b) we totally blew the ship date about four times as a consequence, and c) I step on a plane to America in ~12 hours so I wanted to get it launched prior to the next several weeks of conferences & etc.
I clicked the link a few hours ago, got an error, figured you'd fix it, waited, but still get it now. There's a little box that says "We're sorry, but something went wrong. We've been notified about this issue and we'll take a look at it shortly." Apparently I'm the only one, but I can't get to the site.
It should be up now. Long story short: had a SPoF, it held up to the HNing pretty admirably but enough people actually started downloading enough movies at once to kill the SPoF and that caused sporadic degradation of the site.
I prefer reading too but most people will pay more for a video than they will for an ebook regardless of the value contained within because they've been trained repeatedly that books are cheap.
Patrick and Ramit Sethi discuss this very thing in the last Kalzumeus podcast.
Book pricing isn't as hopelessly broken as music pricing, but that is faint praise indeed. It's sad. Writing a good book is a great deal of work, reading a good book provides a great deal of value, but the psychology of the book market recognizes neither of these facts. People vaguely imagine that producing books costs approximately the time required to type them, and expect to buy books for the cost of buying, inking, and shipping the paper - if the paper is absent they expect the price to be negligable.
Whereas the one good thing to be said about modern college tuitions is that they provide a nice big anchor for the cost of a "course". Practically anything looks like a bargain next to the list price of an hour of TA instruction at Harvard. [1]
[1] That's a fun math problem: Assuming five courses at Harvard, five hours per week of lecture and recitation per course, a fourteen-week semester and $38k tuition and fees, I come up with about $55 per hour per student. Of course, Harvard does not bill by the hour, but that's a whole 'nother essay.
re: "you're a much stronger writer than on-camera personality" LOL, that's a back-handed compliment there.
I think he's aiming to get better at his video production and presentation skills, and believes video delivers more perceived value than just text. Text is not a course, it's an ebook. Courses are worth more than ebooks every day of the week. Perceived value > actual value when it comes to sales... Who's going to pay $2,000 (site license) for an ebook?
BTW, I love video and audio players that allow you to speed up play - 1.5x, 1.75x or 2.0x . Coursera has that, love it.
I'm a self-proclaimed patio11 fanboi, and rave about him to anyone who'll listen. But admittedly, his writing is what I rave about. I'm ambivalent about his videos.
The ideas are still there, but I admit, it needs to be at my reading speed to be interesting.
This guy needs a few lessons on effective public speaking and presentation, this introduction video of him makes me cringe.. I couldn't watch more than just a few minutes of it. Oh, and a web designer couldn't hurt either, who's going to read those walls of text?
If you don't run marketing at a B2B SaaS company it is a wall of text. If that's you, I'll save you time: don't read it or, if you do read it, read it only for academic interest on doing copywriting.
If, on the other hand, one is in charge of increasing the sales of a B2B SaaS company, this page is basically designed to be total brain crack.
It presents an idea which is either new or which one is vaguely aware of, presents concrete suggestions for implementation, has a case study which the target customer will find incredibly compelling, teaches one thing they can literally execute on by the end of today, and then drumroll says that if you found the page to be valuable then there are five hours of very dense, action-packed video and guides where that came from, for a very reasonable price by the standards of B2B SaaS companies.
I can attest to the brain-crackness. We're a bootstrapped startup that is starting to have a compelling product, and starting to think more about how to market it. We're definitely aware of the idea of lifecycle marketing and have been thinking about implementing it.
If purchasing this course lets us get a lifecycle marketing system going that is 10% more effective two weeks earlier than if we had to learn the lessons ourselves, it would pay for itself. Of course, if we had to smash our brains against it and try to pick out a cohesive strategy from across the internet it's very likely to take us a long time - months or years - to learn all the things in the course.
If you're in the target market for this product, and you know patio11 enough to trust him, the sales pitch boils down to "You give me several hundred dollars, and I'll give you thousands of dollars."
Haha, but even with that rational analysis done, the idea of spending that much on something pains my bootstrapping mind tremendously.
I think a decent way to think of it is in terms of customer LTV. "If I get N customers out of this, I break even." For a lot of B2B SaaS products, N is something like 1 or 2. For that reason alone, I think the price is a bit low.
Long form sales copy is all about bullet points, headings, subheadings - essentially presenting a ton of copy in an easily digestible format - specifically avoiding looking like a wall of text!
Walls of text convert like crazy. You aren't targeting the Big Business Corporate Dickhead Department. You're targeting someone sitting in their underwear at their computer. The wall of text serves to draw them in, confuse them, set them straight, give them an ah-ha moment, then say "there's more of this delicious feeling of mastery for only a few hundred dollars..."
Basically, zinga of marketing. Also see: 30 minute infomercials. "This towel will changeyourlife!"
I am most definitely not your target customer for this (not yet, anyway - one day, maybe, who knows?)
Still, it's quite clear how well you demonstrate value - that last paragraph is exactly one sentence long and yet has five concise, concrete pointers on what exactly makes long copy good. As such, I suspect buyers will be extremely happy with the content of the actual course :)
For now I'll continue to enjoy the rest of your excellent free content. Thanks and good luck!
Does the long sales copy letter (on the web) have a place when you're selling a SASS app? Say an appointment reminder system? I've been convinced it works for info products -- but haven't seen good examples for applications.
(or is the long for content done only in emails and not on the site itself)
This is true. The video is poor quality - washed out. And despite wearing a bulky headset with an enormous microphone, there are weird feedback(?) "booms" every few seconds.
I personally couldn't get past the gimmick with the $100 bill. It was really tacky and is such a cliched TV informercial ploy for attention.
The red tracksuit doesn't help convey a sense of authority either. He didn't properly comb his hair (though this is an understandable issue for many people, get some hair gel). And there are distracting reflections on his glasses - an easy solution for this is contacts. The background of the room, all Japanese-y, is distracting as well.
Summary: if you're going to be a salesman on video, you need to look the part. Patrick most definitely does not look the part.
I agree. I know Patrick is known around HN for giving out good info but watching some of his videos was oddly distracting to me because something in the back of my mind reminds how awkward they are. Even just start by losing the nerdy headset I think it will help viewers focus more on the content rather than the awkwardness in the video.
Yeah, well that's not at all relevant to the customers - they need clean, simple videos where the focus is Patrick and the content he's providing. Anything other than that is a distraction.
At first I thought you were being sarcastic... Patrick delivered one of the most amazing talks of all time at Business of Software (ie. the "Old Spice" presentation):
I didn't think it was as bad as you're describing ... and it's very hard to perform on video presentations that don't include an audience (you feed off an audience's energy and get immediate feedback ... and in my case I get a real shot of adrenaline too).
Selling shovels during a goldrush is a great way to make money! Patrick is sure to rake it in with this one, and with the 'money back guarantee' you really can't go wrong. HN is the perfect target demographic for this product.
I think there's a nuance to "selling shovels during a goldrush" suggesting that shovel-sellers exploit the naive 49ers, the majority of whom will end up with no gold. That really isn't the point of the exercise.
Most of my consulting clients, and the people I build this for, are not in a gold-rush. They run profitable businesses selling software to other businesses. This is a business input for them which they have a clear path to profiting from. It is about as speculative an investment as a pizzeria buying basket of tomatoes.
If there is anyone hypothetically thinking of buying this basket of tomatoes because they want to aspirationally run a pizzeria one day, please don't. I don't want your money. Go read my blog. Found a pizzeria. Find customers for it. When you need this you'll know, and it will be a screamingly obvious mutual win.
If he comes on here and says I built this and you all need to buy it right now, well then he's obviously just a salesman.
If he comes on here and says I built this, don't buy it if you don't meet these criteria, I'm not even going to try to sell it because I don't want to turn HN into a sales venue, well then, he's a obviously just a particularly crafty salesman.
So while I see what you're saying I'm not sure how you expect patio11 to discuss this on HN without appearing like a salesman to at least a few people.
You make it out as if appearing like a salesman is a bad thing. Why not be proud of what you're good at? This product is all about sales, it's aimed squarely at the HN demographic and the page does a fantastic job of proving that Patrick is good at sales (as if anybody needed convincing).
And if that did not convince you that this product rocks there is a glowing testimonial from a satisfied customer on the homepage right now.
I think there is a huge difference between a top commenter on HN trying to sell something and a non-top commenter doing the same after achieving a nominal karma rate. (I'm thinking specifically about what appears to be the recent spate of attempts by an company that rhymes with "muffer" to blog about all types of things in order to draw attention to their products.)
Anyone who spends considerable time on HN should be allowed to sell whatever they want that relates to their expertise within reason.
Perhaps the jealousy surrounding people who view "selling" and "business guys" as bad comes from people who don't have the makeup to take rejection that comes with selling. Lest anyone think there is no value to a "business guy" that it's all about technology.
I agree, being a good salesman is fantastic. Good products don't go anywhere without good sales. Hell, bad products can go places with good sales. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Balance)
However, HN is fairly engineer heavy and sales carries a pejorative connotation, so when I read your posts they seemed (to me) negative, as in "Aha! You can't fool me! I'm wise to your game to sell stuff on HN!". I was responding to that.
I suspect we're basically in agreement, if you look somewhere on the page I'm effusive about Patrick's sales letter and I agree that by turning up, answering questions honestly and not trying to sell to people he hits the HN demographic dead on. My point was he may not even be trying to make sales here, just trying to interact with a community he's part of and the two look indistinguishable.
It doesn't have to be binary. Part of being a good marketer is knowing your target market. If you create something and, through smoke and mirrors, sell it to people who won't like it or don't need it, you're setting yourself up for a lot of complaint letters and angry blog posts. I guess that's fine if you're just a pump & dump con artist who's catching the next train out of town, but there are alternatives.
"Please do not recite a script written beforehand. Just talk spontaneously as you would to a friend. People delivering memorized speeches (or worse still, text read off the screen) usually come off as stupid. Unless you're a good enough actor to fake spontaneity, you lose more in the stilted delivery than you gain from a more polished message."
That is a really nice sales letter and I've bookmarked it to read through repeatedly when I need to write one. It nails the long form sales format and manages to do so without sounding sleazy[1].
I particularly like the Do not buy this course section which qualifies potential customers.
[1] To be fair depending upon the target demographic the sleaziness can be increased without causing problems. If you were building a product for hard core sales guys Your Customers Can Still Afford Branded Groceries: Learn How To Capture This Wasted Revenue Today! might do brilliantly.
Patrick, I'd be interested in how you decided on your pricing. With all the pre-selling and your friendship with Amy Hoy I was honestly expecting prices to be about 10-12 times as high, or 5-6 times based on the full price starting next week. What makes you think you will sell 10 times as much at $249 than at $2490?
It actually might be underpriced, to be totally honest, but not that underpriced I don't think.
To justify prices in the > $2k region I think I would need to add some sort of interactive component (webinar or what have you), and I have no time on the schedule for that in the next couple of months, so I went with something which was totally self-guided for my first try. I might revisit that eventually, if there's lots of demand for it and if it makes sense for the business.
You are right -- typically courses in the $X k range need some interactive component -- but it needn't be a webinar.
You want 2k+? -- offer to edit 3 emails -- you probably wouldn't get enough takers to take too much time. Also, it price anchors the $249 and you can do it like Kickstarter and limit the # of sales of bonuses like this.
For $10k or more, write a first draft of emails and look over the final draft after they edit.
I agree. I wasn't expecting it to be within my price range (though I'm glad that it is).
Buying is a trivial decision at $300. We sell a $350 product, with high margins. A single sale and this course pays for itself. (2-3, if you include my time spent watching and implementing it)
edit: turns out I didn't even notice the price. It's actually $250. I was prepared to pay anything up to $400 without thinking about it or discussing reimbursement with my company.
But if that price was $2,500 I am sure there'd be a discussion with finance and budgets become involved. In person 5 hour courses don't cost that never mind web videos. Quite frankly, he wouldn't sell many at $2,500 - not sure if it's a 90% drop in sales but it could be.
Patrick has earned trust in the community by giving away so much valuable information. My first thought was that it's about time you sold some of this info. The reason is great: "I got tired of saying no." Good stuff, and thanks for all the free advice along the way.
This is a 10 mile long sales page, down to the P.S. at the bottom. The copy itself, sounds genuine. However, the look of the page itself is a turn-off. Why did you decide to use this format as opposed to a simple, cut & dry page with a big "buy now" button?
Long form sales letters are proven, statistically, in many contexts, to convert more. It's really that simple. He could do a short and snappy page, but then he'd probably lose thousands of dollars a day. Or he can make people like you feel like it's a bit spammy, and make thousands of extra bucks a day. I know which one I'd choose.
This line from the article had a particular resonance for me given the slow drip feed of articles from Patio11 on HN gradually establishing credibility ↬
Drip marketing means sending a timed sequence of emails to educate, persuade, and only then sell.
patio11 what you have written is great and I have the highest respect for what you do (and things that you have said).
But - separate from any conflict or cynicism that others have raised as far as HN becoming a marketplace, there was to much to read (and in fact I didn't read it, I skimmed it) so I wouldn't feel comfortable paying the amount you are asking which was located at the bottom.
I feel you should have started at the top with:
"If This Doesn't Create Value For Your Business, I Don't Want Your Money"
(pricing options)
Want to know more? Read below.
Just my thoughts. By the way I have no doubt that you have thought long and hard about putting that price at the bottom of the letter and could point to backup for that strategy (perhaps in something you've written before or generally accepted knowledge). But my reaction is my reaction so I just thought I'd throw it out there.
How do you do credit card processing without asking for a billing address? Your checkout process was very simple, makes my company's process look cumbersome.
Also, I noticed you don't use paypal. Could you elaborate on that choice? My guess is that you know your demographic is used to using credit cards, and it eliminates a step, but I'd like to confirm
How do you do credit card processing without asking for a billing address?
Stripe.
Could you elaborate on that choice?
Stripe! (No, seriously: I have the capability of running things through Paypal but a) that code is from BCC and written when I was young and stupid, and I was afraid of breaking something if I just copy/paste ported it over, b) this keeps my accountant happy, and c) there was a non-zero "risk" of this selling five figures in a day with $1,000 charges in the mix, which would mean Paypal and I would have to have a chat, and that was a complication I just didn't need right now.)
So for those curious, but not curious enough to sign up for WPengine's "course", here's the first email:
"I just wanted to say hello and thank you for your interest in WP Engine. I saw that you filled out our speed test form, and wanted to let you know that there is a real person over here, and that I'm interested to hear how you feel about us so far.
Do you have any questions or concerns? Can I help you make a decision either way?
Thanks!
Trafton Esler
Lead Developer Champion"
There are so many things wrong with this email I don't know where to start. My only hope is that they inserted this email into the sequence /after/ Patio11's involvement; otherwise it's a warning sign (along with the awful video on the sales page) that his course is not all it's hyped-up up to be.
Good luck anyway, there's a sucker born every minute.
Hello! I'm Erica, and I consulted for WP Engine at the same time as Patrick. I worked side by side with Patrick during the week he was at WP Engine--Jason (their CEO) hired me to jump-start their entire marketing department for 3 months, vs. Patrick's specific "email drip feed" task.
I'm intimately familiar with the details of the open rates and conversion rates from WP Engine's email series; in fact, I was the one who helped sequence them and proofread/edit some of them after Patrick left.
I can tell you with 100% authority that you are dead wrong. That email converts extremely well. In fact, it used to go directly to Trafton's inbox and he had fun showing me all the responses people sent to him every day.
If you want the spoiler details, it converts well because people love to know there's a real human behind all this nonsense that we call "the Internet." (And it also converts well because Trafton is a machine who seems to never sleep and responds to everyone's questions quickly...another key ingredient. Everyone was always asking Jason how they could "hire a Trafton.") It speaks well for the people Jason hires, as well as the effectiveness of the email itself. There you have it, from the horse's mouth.
That email got me to reply, and moved our business to WP engine faster. Trafton gave me some info that helped convince our tech guy.
And then I stole that email in our campaign (with some modifications), to great results. I even got lots of "Wow, you guys are real humans and not robots" replies.
I'm interested to hear what you say is wrong with the email, because you haven't yet.
edit: The lead developer champion bit wasn't in the email they sent me.
Hey Scoot, sorry the emails didn't grab you. I want to echo Erica's comments below. She and Patrick laid an amazing groundwork for transparent and human communication that Trafton, and when I joined the company during SXSW this year, I was able to build upon and make it easy to communicate with our customers when they have questions or just way to say hey.
It's been working so far :-)
If you have more thoughts about the email, I'd love to read them and learn from your perspective. There may be a perspective here that I am blind to, and you could teach me something.
God, I'm so envious reading all these comments -- patio11 struck a gold mine of the golden mean!
You know you've priced okay when (1) people bitch it's too high and (2) people bitch it's too low.
You know you've MVP'ed when (1) people bitch it's too ugly (walls of text!) and (2) people say it's not.
You also know you've MVP'ed when (1) people bitch the video's terrible (WTF? he didn't comb his hair!) and (2) others don't give a flip.
Now back to the price: it's not like big pharma has some kind of insta-power pill that chomps down all that consumer surplus. For a one-man show he did great.
If you guys want to learn direct mail marketing, print and read all these letters from Gary Halbert from the 80s. It still applies now very much so.
http://www.trafficplusconversion.com/1345/gary-halbert-lette...
There is a limit how much you can learn by reading and watching million dollar videos. Its all about doing and testing for your business.
"Switching customers to annual billing radically decreases churn, one of the key risks to SaaS businesses long-term."
Where I can I read more about annual billing decreasing churn? I've read your blog post (or email?) about switching to annual billing to free up revenue to acquire new customers, but I don't remember reading about how it decreases churn as well.
Dharmesh Shah has talked about it extensively -- basically, of people on monthly billing, at any given time approximately 100% are at risk of churn. Of people on annual billing, < 10% are at risk of churn at any given time. They also have less opportunities to hit involuntary churn like, e.g., getting a CC declined or expired.
One additional point: Customers that commit to annual billing generally tend to churn less often overall -- because they've made a more "considered" purchase and committed more time to the purchasing decision.
Read a lot of them, learn what works, implement them for clients, test, learn what works, take off anything you'd be embarrassed to put your own name on, try writing one for yourself.
There's also a lot of books and products available on copywriting. The only one I've ever liked is, well, everything CopyHackers has ever done.
I originally became fascinated with long-form sales letters by reading "Mail-Order Success Secrets" by Tyler G. Hicks who made his fortune with those long classified ads you could find in any newspaper and with long-form snail-mail. You can find his works here: http://www.iwsmoney.com/mailorder.htm
Append ?video=yes to the URL. It will shortcircuit A/Bingo. (n.b. This behavior ships off by default in A/Bingo for a variety of reasons -- think very hard before enabling it.)
Was this inspired through talks with Ramit? I am seeing a similar model appear. He uses free emails to sell courses, and you use free blog posts to sell emails.
Quote from co-worker: "It would be worth it even if we learn one new, non-generic thing to try" Of course, we sell software that goes for $x0,000+, so anything that moves the needle with leads ROFLstomps $999.
(I have been waiting to write a response to patio11 like this for a while)