List-Builders That Work: Squeeze Pages


by Ray Edwards

Are you wondering if squeeze pages still work well to build your email list?

A “squeeze page” is one that forces your site visitors to give you their name and email address in exchange for some kind of bribe an audio training, a special report, or piece of software.

Making a free offer to your site visitors in exchange for their name and e-mail address is a great way to grow your e-mail list, but it has to be done carefully so that you don’t also drive away potential customers.

Consider the following…

You know it’s important to grow your e-mail list. The bigger the list, the more people will see your offers, and the more money you will make.

The problem we run into these days is simple: people are more reluctant than ever to give up their email address. The squeeze page is still the best way to build your list, but it requires more thought today than it did even a few months ago. Using a squeeze page carelessly can do your business more harm than good.

It’s best to use a squeeze page on a site that is built to sell one product. For example, if you have a site that features a sales letter selling a particular product or service, placing a squeeze page in front of the information about that product or service is a good idea. This keeps readers from being distracted; it sifts and sorts potential buyers by level of seriousness; and it gives you a list of interested parties that you can go back and market to repeatedly.

One of the biggest mistakes I see being made online is putting a squeeze page in front of the wrong kinds of sites.

Don’t put a squeeze page in front of your portal site, your branding site, or your blog. Putting a squeeze page in front of those kinds of sites does not make sense. Those sites have a very different purpose than sites that are intended to sell one targeted product or promotion.

Remember that your squeeze page is a gate.

For direct response sites, it’s a valuable tool; used on other kinds of sites it may simply be a turn-off to your customers.

When you offer the right kind of bribe, however, you can get people to opt in through the squeeze page — building a valuable, targeted email list.

Online threats such as spam, scams, spyware, and viruses are a few reasons people are more resistant to giving you their email address.

Squeeze pages can definitely build your list fast. These pages are a powerful tool that I recommend to all of my clients; just be sure to use them in the appropriate situation.

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