|
header
Success Stories - 12 Doers Share Their Secrets.
Interview #8: Linda Caroll.
by Martin Avis
Linda Caroll is well
known on various forums as a
knowledgeable and helpful participant. She is also a
successful home-based businesswoman whose talent is
sure to drive her on to even greater heights.
This is quite a long interview, but even so, a lot of
good stuff ended up on the cutting room floor.
I hope that what's left gives you a good picture of
this dynamic lady.
BizE-zine: Hi Linda. Tell us all the personal details.
LC: Hi Martin! My name is Linda Caroll and I live in
the Greater Toronto area, Ontario, Canada, with my
daughter and Maximillian Augustus of Wyndhaven III.
He's a pure-bred Maine Coon Cat. We call him Baby.
BizE-zine: What does your daughter think about having
an Internet celebrity for a mother?
LC: Haha! She was quite oblivious to whether or not I
was a "personality" online until recently. I still
laugh about it. A young man at her work mentioned that
he was learning HTML and hoped to be able to find work
in that field. My daughter said; "My Mom designs
websites. I bet if you email her, she'd help you get
started."
When she wrote my email address down for him, he looked
at it - and looked at her - and then said "... your Mom
is Linda Caroll? Oh my GOD. I didn't know!"
My daughter came home still wearing a confused look.
When she told me the story I laughed my head off.
BizE-zine: How did your interest in marketing begin?
LC: It all started 22 years ago. I lived in a small
city in the middle of the Saskatchewan prairies,
working in management for one of Canada's largest
retail department stores. Our copywriter was off sick
the day an ad for my department had to go out to the
local paper. Impulsively, I offered to do the ad
instead of forfeiting the space and to everyone's
surprise it pulled record results.
I was in total awe when the management from head office
flew to our little store in the middle of the prairies
to meet me.
Marketing had me hooked!
I worked for the store for seven years, and eventually
ended up traveling between three cities to help other
stores with their sales.
I became the 'gimmick master' - and people loved every
minute of it. Both the shoppers - and the store
management. Customers would drop by and ask me what my
next promotion would be. I'd laugh, and tell them it's
a surprise...
BizE-zine: What exactly is your business now, and how
did you come to be so active online?
LC: I work full-time online, providing website design,
strategy and marketing services.
Before the Internet, I owned my own business providing
graphic design, promotional marketing and marketing
strategy to local clients.
When I had my daughter I juggled working and parenting
for a few years - and finally decided to stay at home
to raise her.
Within a couple of years, I was bored to tears and
started working from home, creating promotional
strategies and marketing materials for small
businesses.
Anything and everything from business cards - to a six-
foot berry that was used for a national promotional
event. My clients included small home businesses, the
provincial school board, ACT/UCT International, Canada
Post and more. I created the T-shirt art for a dinosaur
museum, and posters that were used for an International
Sports event.
BizE-zine: What do you think is the secret of great
advertising?
LC: While I've never bought an ad for my own business
(it thrives on word of mouth and referrals) - I create
ad strategies for my clients daily.
I believe that good advertising must surprise the
viewer.
People see the same old lines and ads and buzzwords all
the time. If you can surprise them, make them laugh,
make them curious - or just make them feel emotion
that's when you get response.
BizE-zine: How do you integrate online and offline
promotions in your work?
LC: I teach my clients that a website is a
communication tool, so in business strategizing, I
combine offline and online. Even down to the simple
things that other people might forget. For example,
I'll create a killer business card that makes people
curious about something... and then send them to the
appropriate website for the answer.
The client's business will determine the approach. I'm
doing a site for a financial consultant and her card
says "Could you pass the money quiz? Go to (URL) to
find out. Free". She distributes the card locally,
leaving it on tables in restaurants, etc... And it
brings people to her site.
Another business that I am working with sells goods
online only. So, their business card says; "To thank
you for your order, we would like to offer you a
lifetime discount on future orders. To obtain special
pricing, please go to.. (URL)." They include that card
with all first orders sent to new customers.
BizE-zine: When did your love affair with the Internet
begin?
LC: I discovered the Internet in about 1995. My
marriage had recently broken up, so I worked all day
and then got online for hours every night - learning
and soaking up as much information as I could.
I was fascinated and spent hours researching and
talking to people via forums. I still remember the
complete awe I felt when I received an email from a
woman in Australia thanking me for inspiring her.
My sister was living in Australia at the time and it
took 21 days or more to get a letter to (or from) her.
Then this woman wrote me within 10 minutes of when I
posted to a forum. That really hit me hard. That one
email drove home the wonder of the Internet for me. It
was a communication method unlike anything known
before.
I started dreaming about what it could do for my
business.
At that time, with a growing daughter and bills to pay,
I needed more income than my at-home ad/graphics
company was providing. So, I decided to go online to
pick up more business.
I found much support and encouragement from people
online. I have never forgotten the people that
welcomed me with open arms to their forums and cheered
me on as I grew.
BizE-zine: Forums seem to have played a large part in
your business - and you are still active on many. Do
you find it a problem that they can be quite addictive
and eat up large amounts of time before you know it?
LC: They can be addictive, but I am very self-
disciplined, and I simply set time limits. I tell
myself 'I will check out the forums for 30 minutes' and
at the end of the 30 minutes, it's back to work - or
off to dinner - or whatever the next thing on the
agenda is.
My time is too pressed for me to allow any one thing to
monopolize it, and if I spent more than the allotted
time, I'd feel that I was shortchanging clients who are
waiting.
BizE-zine: How would you describe your primary Internet
business?
LC: 'Helping people improve their profits.'
To do that, I offer website design services, and also
provide marketing and strategy consultation.
My online business was a natural evolution of my
offline business. I saw the Internet as a way to be
able to help business owners anywhere in the world. And
boy has that come true! I have clients from all over
the world.... including Canada, USA, Italy, the
Netherlands, Austria, Australia and more.
I have clients that are small home businesses and large
corporations, as well as two Hollywood actresses.
BizE-zine: Having done both, what do you see as the
main differences between online and offline marketing?
LC: Consumers are much more in command on the Internet.
In other media, they can't help but be exposed to
whatever advertising messages are put before them. If
they want to watch TV, they're going to see ads. They
can leave the room to get a snack, or turn the channel,
but then they may miss part of 'their show' if they
don't tune back in fast enough. If they want to read an
article in a magazine, they are going to see the ad in
their peripheral vision. And they sure can't close
their eyes to billboards, or there would be disaster on
the highways.
On the Internet, the consumer is totally in command.
If that flashing rude banner is annoying, they scroll
past it or leave the website. If a site has pop-ups,
they can close them. The next website is always just
one click away. Total command - in the click of a
mouse.
So, if online advertising is not extremely good, it
will get little or no response.
Also, because of the issue of anonymity that comes with
the Internet, credibility is a big issue. For all a
consumer knows, any business can be 'here today and
gone tomorrow' - and that's a big fear. People look
for credibility - and it's established in many ways.
Five autoresponders just doesn't cut it!
The subject is a book in itself. (Yes, I'm working on
one!)
BizE-zine: They say that the best benefit of earning
your living online is that you can slob around in your
pj's and work from anywhere in the world you like. Yet
you look very glamorous in your photo and you choose to
live in Greater Toronto. Have you missed the point - or
have you a different way of looking at it?
LC: *laughing* I haven't missed the point - and I do
both. There are days that I work in my bathrobe until
heaven knows what time... and other days that I feel I
want to start the day combed and tidied. Summer will
see me in casual wear (tank top and jeans).
Odd thing I've noticed: it never fails that the day I
stay in my bathrobe until noon is the day the FedEx guy
shows up.
BizE-zine: Moving your business online seems to have
been financially successful for you.
LC: Absolutely! My online business pays for the bills
and the frills, the college fees and car keys, not to
mention feeds the cat. I have no offline income now.
BizE-zine: How long did it take you to start making a
profit?
LC: I was making a profit before my site was even
finished. As I was working on it, I showed my
partially done site to a couple of offline clients -
and picked up orders.
My first client was taking orders before I finished my
own site.
So - my site took a back seat, and had contact forms on
a lot of pages with a note that 'this page will be
complete soon... if you want to know when it's ready,
just send me an email and I'll let you know.'
It's a good thing that sites didn't get booted from the
search engines for being 'under construction' back
then, like they do now, or I would have been in big
trouble.
BizE-zine: How many ebooks on Internet marketing have
you bought?
LC: Not a single one.
However, back in the days when I was working offline
(about 20-some years ago) I took a marketing course
called 'The Psychology of Selling.' The lessons I
learned had huge impact on me - mostly because they we
so similar to everything my Grandfather used to say
when I was a little girl. The lessons are as applicable
today as they were back when I took the marketing
course.
I believe that business, marketing and sales all boils
down to people. I like to think of myself a lifetime
student of human nature.
I have had several authors send me their ebooks for
feedback, and the one thing that I discovered is that
if a marketer is any good there is a common and
underlying theme that they understand human nature and
the psychology of response.
I suppose that if I found an ebook that really
intrigued me, I'd buy it. I do, however, purchase old-
fashioned paper books from Amazon or Chapters.
Mostly the reason is that I work 12 hour days at my
computer, so when I take time off, I like to curl up
and read. I've bought books like Forbes Greatest
Business Stories of all Time, and Marketing As Unusual
- The Anita Roddick Story (Body Shop) and other titles
that intrigue me.
BizE-zine: Not many people base their Internet success
on their Grandfather's advice! What were Grandfather's
Internet Secrets?
LC: He talked about the essence of people a lot. He
said life is about two things ... people and time ...
and said that the most important thing is not to abuse
either. He said you get what you give... and never
from the same person. If you are nice to that lady
that talks funny, someone else will surprise you by
doing something nice for you one day.
When I was younger, about 20-ish- I soaked up every bit
of marketing and advertising material and training that
I could. The more books I bought and the more courses
I took, the more I realized that it all just boils down
to understanding and respecting people and knowing how
they react to different things.
I wrote an article in tribute to my grandfather, called
'Grey Knit Vest' and it's been reprinted extensively.
http://www.lindacaroll.com/articles/
greyknit
vest.html
BizE-zine: Without doing any formal advertising, you
don't seem to have trouble getting traffic (and
clients). How do you do that?
LC: Without a doubt, through my writing. I have been
published offline and online, quoted in the New York
Times, and have made guest contributions to several
books as well.
If I need traffic or want to promote an event, all I do
is put out a new article or press release and my
traffic goes through the roof. Sometimes I have no say
in the matter, because I give people free reign to re-
print my materials as long as they link back to my
site. If I'm experiencing a flurry of traffic, I can
be sure someone has re-printed one of my articles.
I find it somewhat amusing that some of the writing
that has nothing to do with selling but focuses on
human nature and people are the articles that
consistently bring me the most response. I've lost
count of the number of emails I have received that
started out by saying "I read 'Grey Knit Vest' and ..."
BizE-zine: What has been your biggest mistake?
LC: My biggest mistake was starting my first e-zine
without knowing about email harvesting tools - and then
going on to accept the death of the e-zine (Bizwizard's
Biz-E) after the subscribe address had been harvested
and added to an 'opt-in' cd.
In retrospect, I wish I'd had the perseverance to fight
the spam attack. My list members were such an
absolutely fantastic group of interactive, responsive
people.
Today, I would never roll over that easily.
BizE-zine: Why haven't you started up another e-zine?
Surely with the knowledge you have now, you could
protect yourself from the harvesters?
LC: I didn't really worry about it because there are so
many good publications that I didn't want to be 'just
another' one.
I subscribe to some great e-zines, and I know that I'm
pressed for time... and assume other business owners
often are, too.
So, I wanted to wait until a unique approach came to
me. Something that's so different that people would
really look forward to reading it, instead of saying,
"oh, I don't have time" and deleting it... which I
imagine happens a lot.
Finally, I've put my ideas together and launched my new
e-zine. It's called 'Shocking Truths' - and I'll be
sharing true stories from the gutters. Real stories
that happen to real people. Both good and bad.
If you want more info, there's a blurb online at:
http://www.websitemagic.tv/shocking.html
BizE-zine: What software do you use to help you run
your business?
LC: The piece of software I'd most hate to be without
is the Zone Alarm Firewall. Last summer will always
and forever be dubbed my 'summer of viruses'.
Despite having had current virus protection, over 1200
viruses swept my network, resulting in a need for one
hard drive to be replaced and two others to be
reformatted. Until that day, I didn't know there were
viruses that could shut down your virus protection and
proceed to do their damage. I learned that the hard
way.
I tried several other firewalls, and found Zone Alarm
to be the easiest and friendliest to use.
For anyone doing business on the Internet, keeping your
system free of viruses is imperative - not only for
your own good, but for your customers good, too. There
are just too many viruses that have the ability to send
themselves out at will - without you even knowing about
it... and some that can disable your virus protection
to allow themselves access to your system.
I saw one terrific e-zine totally devastated because
the poor guy didn't know he was infected with a virus -
and the virus happily sent itself to every one of his
subscribers. Repeatedly. I know... I was one of the
recipients.
BizE-zine: What's next for your business?
LC: I want to spend more time producing training
materials and books. So far, I can only help clients
one at a time. That frustrates me a great deal. There
are so many people that write to me in need of help and
I simply can't keep up with email, nor could I possibly
work with that volume of people on a one to one basis.
There just aren't that many hours in a day.
I spent about 4-5 hours a day just replying to email
and I wish I had written materials ready to offer to
some of these people.
I'm working on rectifying that, and I'd like to develop
an entire series of training manuals based on my 20
years experience offline - and my 5 years experience
online.
From there, I'd like to build a network of people that
will help distribute the materials on a generous
profit-share basis.
I also have a dream of being able to hold conferences
in which a part of the conference includes a trip under
Niagara falls. I think that sometimes the force and
beauty of nature can do a better job of putting us back
in touch with reality and the miracles of life than
anything else.
BizE-zine: Do the questions that fill up your inbox
follow a pattern? What are the most often asked
questions?
LC: Daily, I get letters from people wanting to know
why their website isn't working. The common and
underlying situation is that these people bought
marketing programs and are still not getting any
results. I look at the website, and immediately see
why.
The second most common scenario is the person who wants
a website and has bought a marketing program and wants
the site built according the instructions in the
marketing program.
I've had people say (repeatedly) "I want it as close to
(so and so's) site without being a complete rip-off"
Now, while I would not say that the marketing programs
out there aren't any good, I can see that they are not
working for the majority of people. It serves to
reinforce my theory that being able to 'do' and being
able to 'teach' are not synonymous.
Just because a marketer can market like crazy and make
a lot of money does not mean that marketer can impart
the knowledge needed for others to get the same
results.
My goal is to create materials that makes it easier for
normal everyday people and small business owners to
understand - so they can get real results. It is a big
dream - but isn't it the big dreams that drive our
actions for the most part?
BizE-zine: Your bio says that you like to leap tall
buildings in a single bound. Do you also wear your
underwear on the outside?
LC: *laughing* Nope... it's a fun saying that goes back
about four years. I was talking with a potential
client and she said "We need a hero. Can you leap tall
buildings in a single bound?"
I laughed and said, "that's what I specialize in."
I've used the phrase since then. It's truly what I
strive for with each client. When a client comes to me
the way Cathy did (www.KoaCoffee.com) and says her site
has cost more in hosting that is has made in sales for
over two years, I want to be the hero. And when her
site was listed in the Forbes Top 50, I was as jubilant
and excited as she was. It's a high that I just can't
explain.
My grandfather used to say that it is important to feel
good about what you do, not just to make money. If you
can achieve both, you have succeeded. That's what I
strive for.
BizE-zine: What one piece of advice would you give to
someone who is just planning to start out?
LC: One piece of advice? Me? (laughing) If you gave
me a penny for my thoughts, you'd get a dollar's worth.
At least.
I would tell them to base their business on something
they love and can be proud of. Having some kind of
passion for your field is the only way to compensate
for the hours you are going to put in during the early
days.
I would tell them to strive to be different - success
is never run-of-the-mill or ordinary. Marketing is not
like pantyhose... there is no 'one size fits all'. No
one succeeds doing things exactly the way everybody
else does them.
I would tell them that the two most important traits
are perseverance and tenacity. As Calvin Coolidge once
said:
"Nothing in this world can take the place of
persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common
than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not;
unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will
not; the world is full of educated derelicts.
Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The
slogan 'press on' has solved and always will solve the
problems of the human race."
They will make mistakes. Lots of them. That's okay.
The only one that is truly a mistake is the one they
don't learn from. The rest aren't really mistakes -
they are experience, and we all need to gain that
before we can succeed in any field.
Bio: Linda Caroll is a marketing consultant, website
designer and published author who specializes in
leaping tall buildings in a single bound. She believes
that good marketing requires a regular infusion of
imagination because success is never run-of-the-mill or
ordinary.
You can find her at http://www.Linda
Caroll.com and
http://www.Websi
teMagic.tv
_________________________________
Martin Avis is a management and training consultant.
To get your unfair advantage in Internet marketing,
business and personal success, (and 6 free gifts),
subscribe free to his weekly newsletter, BizE-zine.
mailto:subscribe5@BizE-zine.com or visit his
information-packed website at http://www.BizE-zi
ne.com
BizE-zine: Success strategies that really work.
_________________________________
Success Stories - 12 Doers Share Their Secrets.
Interview #8: Linda Caroll.
(c) Martin Avis, 2002
|