The secret to getting hundreds of free network marketing leads and sales every day is to start small and to always leverage your efforts.
Most traffic methods are easy enough to get small short term results with. But the real challenge is to turn those results into repeating long term ones.
Say you write an article in an ezine like ezinearticles.com. The day you get published, you'll get 1, 3, or maybe even 5 leads. But if you don't turn some heads quickly, the results will stop the next day.
A well written press release submitted to 24-7 pressrelease.com might send you 40 leads for your MLM opportunity in a single day. But on its own will rarely bring you any more after that.
Your MySpace profile or YouTube video may bring your home business a few leads if you have a lot of friends in your network, but it will take forever to put your video in front of enough people to make it worthwhile the effort.
Without a way to accumulate the effect of multiple network marketing lead generation sources, it's going to take forever to get leads, customers, and distributors, right?
What smart network marketers do…
Smart network marketers online find ways to leverage their consistent web 2.0 strategies and they compound them on top of each other.
For example, while some people might create a single YouTube video and post it and wait for a decent number of views to generate MLM leads, smart network marketers find ways to reuse the video which took them a lot of time and effort to create.
So they bookmark their video with del.icio.us, a social bookmarking site. Then they "digg" it at digg.com. Then they create a squidoo lens and embed their YouTube video there as well.
This exposes their video to views from other networks of people who they wouldn't have had access to before.
But guess what happens now?
The people on YouTube who saw the video will leave some comments and leave feedback. They'll talk about it and share it with their friends.
People on digg.com who come across your "dugg" video will discuss it in digg with their friends and refer THEIR networks.
The same happens with people on del.icio.us and Squidoo.