Abraham Kallon is the founder of Overachiever Media. He claims they can allow you to grow and scale your company with predictability. All you could gotta do is add a single ingredient to your marketing strategy. And voila, it's demonstrated to generate a 3,500% ROI consistently. And that's just an average result. Skeptical? Me too, but let's hear him out, shall we? “That is no hype,” Michael says. “It's no over-exaggeration. Everyone can apply this to begin generating instant results.”
If that's you, whether you're running your ads in-house or outsourcing it to an agency, Abe wants to understand if you'd want to go ‘head and collect the five or six figures that's hidden in your company right now. It starts with understanding the three forms of traffic. There's traffic you rent (aka paid traffic). Facebook and Google ads, for example. There's traffic you influence. Your Instagram following, for example. Then there's traffic you have, traffic you've full control over. Your email list, for example.
The target, obviously, is to convert rented and influenced traffic into traffic you own. Once you've got that going, once your ads are running and your organic game is solid and folks are joining you list each day, so you gotta focus on conversions, right? You have to get as most of them as possible to take the action you would like, be it booking a phone together with your team or ordering from your store or buying your course, or whatever it may be. Sounds simple enough, so why do so many people struggle with this specific?
If your emails are relevant and helpful, they'll get opened. And as your strongest competitors are firing off emails left and right, you're gonna get left out if that you don't join them, says Abe. He's caused Robert Kiyosaki, ex-NFL player John Madsen, Scott Haug, and other top info marketers, to show simple emails into big bucks on repeat. Want him to work some of the email marketing mojo for your business? In that case, book a phone at Overachiever Media. No reference to cost, but Abe clearly knows his stuff.