The Review Profits System – Reviews are the new referrals. Reviews on sites like Google, Yelp, and Angies List are revolutionizing how your potential customers are making decisions. Have you noticed that some of your competitors have dozens of online reviews while you have just a few or even zero? Now is the time to begin taking reviews seriously. The Review Profits System is so simple, effective, and elegant that you will be kicking yourself for not implementing it years ago!
Testimonial Form – This form makes getting testimonials from customers as simple as handing them a sheet of paper. Experts highly recommend testimonials, but they fail to tell you how to collect them. This testimonial form fills that void.
27 Free Press Release Ideas – Most business owners are paralyzed at the thought of writing a press release for their business. This report breaks that writer’s block by providing dozens of ideas that you can use in your business’s free press releases. You will find something that you can use in your business, guaranteed!
Note: These bonuses are only available when this book is purchased via instant download from HollidayMarketing.com.
Excellent guide to building business through the internet
This is an outstanding account of how to leverage the internet to build and retain a loyal customer base.
The game is changing. Those who don’t get wise to the new marketing paradigm will be left behind. Well written and thorough.
By M. MacLanders “CPA by day”
Not as wonderful as I had hoped
This book was pretty good, but left me wishing for more information. As an introduction, it is good. But for intermediate information, I need to look elsewhere.
By T. Stewart “Texas CPA”
No bells, no whistles
I ordered this book as part of a larger effort by my firm to modernize our internet presence. We now have a social media presence on all of the major sites (Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.), and we’ve seen an uptick in client referrals through these sites. This book was generally useful for insuring that our initial foray into social media was at least somewhat sophisticated. The information was dense in some places, but it was still understandable.
By Andrew Hughes