Are you, like many people, wondering how to webcast live?
Webinars are intimidating to a lot of people; the technology used to host an online conference is often pricey or disappointing. There is a lot of prep work that needs to be done. The advanced preparations include preparation of the webinar material itself (with a service or product to promote), maybe establishing a joint venture relationship, promoting the webinar, and following up after the webinar. Depending upon what the webinar is about (e.g. lead generation, or product/service sale), there may be the need for serious development here as well.
And so with all the work that needs to be done, it is not surprising that many people do not trend anywhere near them. This is so even though so many online businesses have attended myriads of them (and so you probably have gotten them down pat….at least subliminally) and fully understand the tremendous income potential presented by them.
The income comes not only from the sales made during the webinar but afterwards when the webinar is repurposed into an ebook or broken into a video course etc.
Yes, there is a lot to do….but you do not need to fret (too much;). The best ways to not only get started but to actually launch a webinar is to break it down into small steps and give yourself plenty of time to develop the content (even the content needs to be broken down into steps).
When you take incremental action, you will feel very accomplished. This is a “feel good” moment that leads to taking more action. As long as you proceed as a person who is able to enjoy the process and not one that is bent on getting the impossible done in too little time, you will find that doing a webinar (and many other marketing activities as well) are doable.
The good news about doing a webinar is that there is little downside. Even if few people attend (or even no one at all), you gain a lot of experience. You can also record your webinar and give it away as free content to prospects. You could even try to sell it.
The biggest downsides when learning how to do live webcasting are time, energy and money spent. You can minimize the amount of money invested in a webinar by using highly affordable tools (there are various conferencing services of varying quality on the web).
In order to minimize the amount of time and money spent, you should utilize a webinar program that provide lots of training and support.
Is it possible to combine time, energy and money savings in one webinar provider. Fortunately, the answer is yes.
A new company that offers savings on all three of these factors is launching January 2012. Early adopters can benefit by locking in the best prices and also…if so desired….benefiting as affiliates.
For more information: http://ez.com/mustseetoday







