HOW TO MAKE YOUR FORTUNE WITH SELF-IMPROVEMENT SEMINARS
Ever since the beginning of time, ambitious people of the world
have attributed some "indescribable" secret to the success
of those people with wealth. These people have spent, and will continue
to spend, millions of dollars to cultivate these "secrets"
within themselves.
Particularly since the early 1970s, there has been a growing demand
by the public to attend classes, workshops, and self-improvement seminars
that will enable them to align their thinking as well as their actions,
with those of people who have already achieve success.
The popularity of such best-selling how-to manuals as, Winning Is
Believing - Think And Grow Rich - How To Develop A Winning Personality
- Overcoming Shyness - Imagineering - New Life Options - Winning By
Negotiation - Successful Visual-Verbal Communications - Conversationally
Speaking and countless others lends reinforcement to the "need"
for self-improvement seminars.
You can promote and stage these seminars either as a generalist
or as a specialist in a specific area of expertise and attain wealth
for yourself almost beyond your current imagination! The market potential
has only barely been scratched, affording a real ground-floor opportunity
for those with the gumption to take action.
Dale Carnegie - the author of the book, How To Win Friends and Influence
People - was certainly one of the first, if not "the first"
self-improvement seminar marketer/teacher. Back in the Great Depression
of the 30s, he recognized this need in people to improve themselves
- he worked out a deal with the local management of his home town
YMCA - got the word around that he was holding classes on self-improvement
and the rest is one of the truly classic unemployed-to-multi-million-dollar
success stories of our time.
A self-improvement seminar is conducted much the same as a Toastmaster's
Club meeting. It can be held just about anywhere, from the informal
atmosphere of someone's living room to the formalities of the Hilton
Convention Center.
Basically, a self-improvement seminar is a gathering of people where
one or more speakers talk on a specific subject. More often than not,
only a certain aspect of self-improvement, such as How To Develop
A Positive Mental Attitude - is the thrust of the seminar. In other
words, the more successful seminars deal with "specialized areas"
of self-improvement.
These speakers usually wind up their talks with audience involvement
question and answer sessions. Most of them "wind down" with
the speaker circulating through the audience, plus lots of opportunity
for the purchase of self-help books and tapes by the people wanting
on-going motivation and reinforcement relative to what they've just
heard. Always sometimes even as the featured subject of the seminar
- there's a great deal of motivation projected during these meetings.
At the bottom line, motivation is more the purpose of these seminars
than the attendees learning something they don't already know. The
favorite words of most seminar speakers are usually, "It's the
difference between having a dream and taking action - a matter of
saying I can, believing it, and then doing it because you can!"
Successful seminars are generally based upon the concept of giving
you the power to believe you can. The speakers usually speak from
insights and expertise gained from their own life experiences. Self-improvement
seminars give the attendees the tools and the motivation to succeed.
Thus, a well-organized and well-presented seminar that helps people
up the ladder of success can't help but succeed because we are a success-oriented
society and it's an easy sell with an income potential limited only
by your ability to express yourself.
You won't need an office to make it big with self-improvement seminars.
The public doesn't visit you - you take your programs to them. Self-improvement
seminars appeal to almost everybody from blue-collar workers to top
executives.
The average cost per person to attend a seminar is very close to
$300 - so your basic audience will be from the upper-income brackets,
but if you handle the promotional aspects properly, you'll pull them
in from lesser income brackets as well.
Many seminar promoters employ sales teams to call upon top company
executives and either get them to partially pay the cost of several
employees to attend as educational or business improvement investments
- or to foot the bill for the sponsorship of a "group seminar"
for all of that company's middle management personnel. Many specialty
speakers make in excess of $100,000 per year with regular motivational
and/or self-improvement seminars in this fashion.
In the beginning though, you'll get your start by staging seminars
for the general public in restaurant banquet rooms, hotel ballrooms,
and convention centers. These will entail advertising costs, plus
the charges for the rented space, and an "on-hand" inventory
of the materials you want to sell to the people who attend your seminars.
Generally, you'll do best with an intensive radio advertising campaign
during the week preceding your seminar date. In a metropolitan area
of half a million population, you should probably spend a couple of
thousand dollars on radio advertising, plus about half as much for
flamboyant newspaper advertising. Some seminar promoters invest a
quarter of their budget in newspapers, then a quarter in direct mail
and/or telephone advertising, with half going into radio. Of course,
the allocation of your advertising budget should be related to the
previous proven pulling power of each media within that particular
market. Not too much concern is given to television advertising, excepting
for guest appearances of the community service talk shows.
Most promoters spend all of this effort and money to promote a series
of free seminars. These free seminars usually draw huge crowds, during
which special "front men" turn everybody on with super-motivational
stories designed to whet the appetite of those in attendance for more.
These free seminars usually last 45-mts to 1-hour, and are strictly
motivational in purpose. They are sometimes promoted using a
1-800-Seminars phone number
which toll-free number is advertised along with the seminar materials.
Each person in attendance is handed a brochure describing the up-coming
"main event" as they leave these free seminars. An attempt
is made to get a commitment - at least a deposit for the cost of the
"real thing," which is usually set for the week following.
Those who do not commit themselves to attending the big one are then
contacted by professional telephone sales people and given the complete
sales presentation between the time of the free seminar and the date
of the real thing, which and experienced telephone sales people -
you can count on closing about 30 to 35% of those who attend your
free seminars.
If you don't have the confidence or inclination to participate ,
at least be the principal speaker at your own seminars, you can hire
local sales training people, professional people from the medical
specialties, local "experts" known through your area newspapers
or broad cast media, and/or nationally known speakers willing to travel
and operating thru a speakers' bureau.
Finally, the fact that there are literally millions of people in
all parts of the country willing and able to pay you for helping them
to improve themselves. You can start with meetings in your living
room, or your local restaurant. All it takes is action on your part
to get set up and a push from yourself to making it happen.