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So if you are generating leads on your own site, there really is no need for CPA. You then need to market and sell those leads on your own similar to the fashion you described for offline leads, except it wont be face to face and pretty much through phone/email.
It depends on the type of industry the buyers and sellers are in. Also whether or not it's B2C or B2B, online/offline. There are many different lead gens to go after and just as many client variations in need of leads.
Most of the lead gen I've done was for Realtors and for Dentists. I did some in the dating niche, but in order to really penetrate that market, et al, I would want a higher budget that I currently have available. At least $1k a day.
I still do lead gen for a few high end Realtors and I can say they pay $50 to $500 per lead depending on whether it's a cold pre-qualified lead or a mortgage approved buyer. I get $50 up front on all of the leads, but when I bring them a mortgage approved buyer or a seller that they get under contract, then I get an additional $450 at closing.
To say one is easier than the other can't be said I think. I had a Dentist roll over for me after five minutes on the phone and he started paying me a flat $50 fee for a general dentist lead, and pays me 10% on restorations that can go into the 10's of thousands. I've had other dentists make me work for it much harder. The same goes for the prospects. Some lay down right away and others make you work for it.
With B2B. I have an abundance of experience from back in the '80's when I had a manufacturing facility in Vegas that made and distributed computer supplies for the mainframe and mini-mainframe markets. We built the finest money could buy and sold direct to the user. Lots of government and corporate contracts. Longer term relationships, bigger orders, but setting up the sale could take months. These bigger clients were all on big mainframes like the IBM 4330's, 4340's, a few had those monstrous Crays' (NORAD, NASA, Bergen Brunswick, Boeing, Ford Aerospace, et al. I also had a phone room that dialed for dollars with the smaller B2B clients, most of them on mini mainframes like the IBM 34's, 36's, and 38's, DEC PDP 1170's, Honeywell, Burroughs, and such. The bigger they were, the more work was required, but a bigger payday was the reward.
In my opinion, one is not easier than the other. Both require a good formula to attract clients, and a good formula to maintain the business relationship to sell the leads to. Whether it's online or offline.
Questions/Comments:
1. At $1,000 a day, you see a positive ROI? You must or you wouldn't be doing it. Makes me want to hear more details.
2. Why aren't you selling a course on how to do this? Sounds like a product to me.
3. Does that big brain get heavy sometimes? The knowledge and experience you possess blows me away.
Thanks for your detailed responses, TJ.
Reading your posts is always so enjoyable. Ergo, I shall elicit a couple more from you:
1. What type of work would you outsource for lead generation?
2. In your opinion, which (if either) is more challenging to those of us fairly new to the industry - CPA or lead gen? To be honest, I'm not sure that I understand any vital difference between the two.
Re your continued learning and action-taking, I honestly don't know how you find time to do everything.
Getting quality leads and converting them into buyers
Topic pretty much says it all. Share your thoughts