In less than 2 weeks, I’ve managed to increase my blog’s subscriber count by nearly 200% to about 900 subscribers (198% to be exact, at the time of this writing). Many of you already know how, but I’ll say it anyway. Two words: Free Ebook.

I did this according to a plan, and I’m going to tell you how, but first, I would like to thank everyone again who has subscribed in order to receive the ebook. My hope is that you get real, actionable value out of it. This is way more than just some cheap gimmick to get you to subscribe. I put a lot of work into this in an effort to make it something good enough to pay for, yet I gave it away for free. Why? Well, that has to do with the plan behind all this, so I invite you to follow along with me as I explain.
Permission, Attention, and Something Else
I’ve been disappointed in the free offerings by others (especially internet marketer types) in exchange for an email address, and I’m sure many of you have, too. Not fun. But I’ve seen other bloggers do it, and do it right, like Chris Garrett and John Chow. You see, as far as blogs go, perhaps the most important metric for success is the number of RSS subscribers. Subscribers give you permission and attention, which are two of the most valuable assets a business can have (there’s a third–I’ll get to that).
One of my burning desires is to have as many RSS subscribers as possible, so I followed the excellent example set by others, but there’s more. Not only did I want to use a free ebook to increase my RSS subscriber count, I also wanted to use it as a springboard for future offers and services. And there is simply no way in hell anyone would go for that… unless the free product provided the same amount of real value as something that was worth paying for.
So why would I give away something that I could have easily charged as much as a real book for? Because of that third valuable asset (that I mentioned above) that every business needs to truly succeed: trust. Trust is difficult to earn and keep. If I offer a product or service in the future, it is my hope that you will find it worth your time and money because I have already proven myself to you and earned your trust.
You Can Learn from This
Why am I telling you all this? Am I giving away my secrets? Am I just bragging? No, and for goodness’ sakes, no! First of all, I don’t have any secrets. If my plans can’t succeed out in the open, then they’re not worthy of success at all. In fact, I have absolutely nothing to lose by being open and transparent about what I’m doing and why I’m doing it… and everything to gain. I feel with total conviction that this will help me. But I also know that such transparency makes this a great way for others to learn by example.
I’m not doing this to say “hey, look at my subscriber count!” because it’s nowhere near the likes of Chris Garrett, Maki, or Darren Rowse, so bragging would be silly. I’m not in competition with anybody but myself (when it gets over 1,000 I will do my little happy dance like Snoopy). I’m just saying, “here’s what I did, and why it worked, and so maybe you can learn from this.”
Here are some tips to help you do the same:
- Repurpose your existing content: the basis for much of what’s in the book is already on the blog. I wrote a series of posts on how to start a business blog, and I added material from a couple other posts as well.
- Expand on that repurposed content: I know my blog posts are long, but still not nearly as thorough as you would expect from a real book. I expanded on my original post material, sometimes by a great deal.
- Remember you’re creating a real book that should be valuable enough to sell: This is the key to the whole thing. Your ebook has to be good enough to sell. But you’re not going to sell it. You’re going to give it away for free in order to get permission, have attention, and earn trust from your audience.
- Think about how you can use the free ebook as a launchpad: Always be thinking ahead, about how one thing leads to the next. The next logical thing to do based on my ebook, for example, is to have an online seminar around it (this is described in the introduction of the book). Each thing we do is a stepping stone to the next thing.
- Ask for links from others to help boost your launch: Once you have built up enough of a network of friends and associates, this is one thing with which you will want as much help as you can get. You want to generate momentum and critical mass in terms of links, social media, and subscriber count. These things can combine to become a tipping point that catapults you clearly into success territory. Do not be afraid to ask for what you want from people. This isn’t totally selfish: bloggers are always looking for linkworthy material, and a great free ebook fits the bill. After all that hard work, don’t let a little fear stop you! Go for it!
Hey: I’ve got another post coming up — a multimedia post (oooh!) on permission, attention, and trust. Don’t miss it: Subscribe to Remarkablogger! Oh… did I mention you get a Free Ebook?
PS - Hat tip to Christine O’Kelly for helpful advice on how to write a post like this.
PPS - Of course today is the day I show a slight dip in the numbers. Typical FeedBurner fluctuation.









33 Comments
Yes, yes, and yes. I’m so with you here. As an ebook writer, I’m constantly disgusted by the low-quality, empty crap out there. You’re right - it doesn’t have to be that way. A quality ebook that reads well, that looks good and that provides value is easily done, and I wish more people had your attitude towards making sure your product - even something free - is a solid, good one.
Your tips on promoting ebooks are good ones, too. Well done!
@James: Thanks, man. I dig your style so coming from you that means something to me. Much appreciated.
Quality material is in sadly short supply among the plethora of ebooks, it’s true - but it seems one can alwasy rely on MM to deliver. Well done - thanks!
Michael:
Can you explain in the comments or in a future post how you set it up so that people would have access to the free ebook when they subscribed? Or if there’s another resource out there that explains it, perhaps a link would be helpful. Thanks so much.
What a cool post! I’m planning on creating 2 ebooks and this is very useful info. Thanks for the hat tip!
Christine
I fully admit that I’m a skimmer. I can’t help it. It’s in my blood. You may have said this but I don’t think so.
Along the trust building lines, the reason that a good ebook is such an amazing tool is that people automatically think “If he’s giving this away for free, God knows what he’ll give when I pay him.” It’s a macrocosm of a business blog. It’s an automatic instinct to think that, so you may as well capitalize on it.
(By the way… I didn’t subscribe for the ebook. I subscribed because you kept leaving awesome comments on my blog. I did read the ebook, though. Does that count?)
@ Michael - Wow, nice compliment, and I have to admit, same here!
@ Tim - free ebook delivery is as simple as setting up an autoresponder on your website. People drop in their email and name and the ebook link is sent to them automatically in an email. Work while you sleep, my friend
@ Naomi - Exactly. A free ebook establishes that credibility and provides viral marketing as your free ebook gets talked about and passed on. The more people talk about you, the better it is for your business.
Write a great ebook, format it well, put it together nicely and gift-wrap it, and you have great swag - which, I believe, you love.
@Tim: There are a couple WordPress plugins that allow for feed signatures. I put the download link into mine. If you don’t have WordPress, but are using FeedBurner, I believe it’s possible to create a custom FeedFlare item or some such thing (I haven’t looked into it). In many ways I’m a fairly good tech whiz, but people don’t get the download link until they get the next post from me. I don’t know of a way to make the book available immediately upon subscribing. I’m sure full-blown email list software could do that, but this is just RSS.
@Christine: You think you got subscribers now, just wait!
@Naomi: Yes, you have it exactly right. But this only truly works when both the free and the later paid products/services are valuable. If the free ebook was great and then the follow-up for-sale product was a dud, people would be after blood… and rightly so. I can already feel the pressure to top myself. Which isn’t a bad thing at all–creative tension, really.
And thank you for proof (not that it’s needed, but it’s always nice) that commenting done well is a great DIY public relations strategy. Hmmm… my blog-sense is tingling. I feel a post coming on…
“Do not be afraid to ask for what you want from people. This isn’t totally selfish: bloggers are always looking for linkworthy material…”
Can you come by say…every Tuesday and leave that as a comment on my blog. I could use the reminding. ;o)
Great stuff Michael, I’ve been reading for a while. Just thought I’d stop lurking and actually comment.
@Jay: Thanks for de-lurking! Finding good stuff to link to that isn’t the same stuff echoing around the rest of the blogosphere is a challenge, but hey, the blogosphere’s pretty dang big.
200% in 2 weeks, that is impressive!I didn’t achieve the great result you have, but I am employing a similar strategy as you and it has given me good result too. Rather than giving free ebooks, I write WordPress plugins and distribute them for free. And by providing a great user-support and useful tutorials in my tech blog, I am able to build a substantial base of loyal readers, not to mention the publicity I get when they use my plugins.Thanks for sharing, Michael. I have also read your ebook - it’s great!
@Damien: Thanks! I have found similar success with WordPress themes. WordPress plugins are a great way to get traffic and publicity, especially if your plugin becomes the next hot thing everyone wants! I’m glad you mentioned user support and tutorials, that goes hand-in-hand with plugins. Keep up the good work!
Hey Michael,
Could you use Feedvertising to deliver your book?
cj
@Cheryl: quite possibly! I haven’t looked into it. Thank you for the suggestion!
Great post. Now I just need to learn how you got that nice ad right into the feedburner feed and I am set!
Well, I subscribed for other reasons: didn’t even know there was an ebook, didn’t get any e-book (and that’s ok: I dislike ebooks).
But: isn’t some percentage of this just readers you already had who signed up for RSS because of the hook? How many site visitors did you just trade for RSS readers?
That’s hard to measure, of course. I came here today because of your RSS feed, and I might not have come without it - so I definitely agree that there are real benefits to getting people on the RSS wagon.. they are just very difficult to measure accurately.
But then Michael, we must know what we’re writing about because NOT every e-book sells, LOL. But of course, you’re one of those people who know perfectly well what they’re writing about, so congrats to you!
@Pelf: Thank you! Nice to hear from you! I think I did okay in picking a good topic that meshes well with what I blog about and who my intended audience is. That’s key to any success with something like this.
@Anthony: The link to the ebook is at the bottom of the posts in your reader or email. And, if you print it out, it’s no longer an “e” book, so now you have nothing to dislike!
All kidding aside, your question about how many signed up “just for the book” is a good one. Here’s my answer: Good! My Evil Plan is working! (Okay, guess I’m not really done kidding, yet!) Here’s how I see it: All I want is exposure, a chance to make a connection with someone.
If somebody signed up just for the ebook, well, guess what: they’re still reading my words and paying attention to my ideas. I want people to sign up just for the ebook. That really was the whole point. If they don’t unsubscribe, they’re still going to get my posts in their readers or inboxes. They’re still going to be exposed to my ideas and thoughts on how to create a remarkable business blog. And that’s all I’m asking for. Because I know that’s going to lead to people seeing value in continuing to give me their attention. And that, my friend, can eventually lead to me getting another new client. Out of the hundreds and hundreds which have subscribed, only the barest handful have immediately unsubscribed after they got their free ebook. And even then, I bet one or two of them will re-subscribe, because they will see value in having my ideas in their life.
I used Feedburner a while back and received around 8 readers max. I decided to give it another try and in 2 days I’ve jumped from 6 readers to 91. I made my Wordpress feed redirect over to Feedburner. Also the website is receiving higher visit count than it used to. If I had kept using Feedburner when we hit our high of 13k in one day who knows how many readers the number could be.
Thats some great results you’ve built up micheal, keep working hard, it’ll be past 1000 in no time!
@Glen - Thanks, mate! Nice to hear from you. I like your new design — it’s definitely more “pro” looking.
Michael - okay, you’ve completely WOWed me - now I’ve got to come up with a great ebook topic for Clearwater Real Estate - any ideas?
Real estate as a retirement investment?
@james - that’s a good thought - I was also thinking about guide to understanding our property taxes because it’s different whether it’s your primary residence or vacation home. I get lots of hits on the 2 long articles I did on it.
The other thing I’ve been tossing around is “what beach properties rent for” - we have different rules per beach condo complex some weekly, some 3 months some annual for example - there’s no where to easily get the info and we have lots of people who want to buy property and then want to know what kind of rental income to expect.
You’re right though - they both roll up into real estate as an investment / vacation home - not as a primary residence.
Any more thoughts or feedback?
@Cyndee: I don’t know enough about real estate to make a suggestion beyond a “seller’s guide” and a “buyer’s guide”. Looking at what gets high traffic and what your most popular keyword hits are is always a great idea for planning future content of any kind.
Michael, thanks for this valuable tip and wordpress plugin…
I am keeping my fingers crossed that I can figure out the CSS part.
Thanks again for your hard work,
Lawton
@ Lawton - You’re welcome. Not all readers and email clients will put up with the inline CSS. They may strip it out, leaving you with people who will email you and say they can’t download it. I had to email mine directly to a few people.
“Do not be afraid to ask for what you want from people. This isn’t totally selfish: bloggers are always looking for linkworthy material…”
I should’ve started an eBook quite sometime ago… would this theory also work if you substituted the eBook for something else?
Jay
@Jay -
It doesn’t have to be an ebook, but it should be something easy to get, so usually a download of some kind is the way to go. Other downloads would audio or video files, or possibly even a WordPress plugin or theme.
Great post, Michael, and congratulations.
You should consider entering these tips in my Building RSS Group Writing Project:
http://groupwritingprojects.com/blog/building-rss-group-writing-project/
All you would need to qualify for over $350 in prizes - including consults with Liz Strauss and David Airey - is to add a link to the announcement post at the above link.
3 Trackbacks
[...] spins the Long Tail “free”- or “nearly free”- ball forward yet again. In How I Increased My RSS Subscribers to Nearly 900 in Less than 2 Weeks, Michael Martine of Remarkablogger boasts: “ In less than 2 weeks, I’ve managed to increase [...]
[...] Michael Martine reveals how he increased his RSS subscribers by 200% in less than 2 weeks. [...]
[...] Steal the idea of stimulating blog traffic… but do it by creating your own [...]