Maybe I shouldn’t be so hard on The Burgle, after all?
New “Email Players” subscriber Wardee Harmon (whose office is in my old haunts in The Burgle) writes:
“This is changing my business. I believed it when you said it or I would not have tried it. Yet, I am surprised by how much I like doing it. I thought I would dread it, but I actually look forward to the daily writing and I have more ideas than days to email!”
She also reported:
- December sales (in just her first 3 weeks) were her highest sales ever
- She made top 3 for sales in an affiliate contest (with a list size much smaller than the usual top affiliates) with double the conversion rate of almost every one else’s
- She now gets from 5 to 50 (or even a hundred) replies each day to her emails (which gives her an unlimited supply of email “fodder” to do with as she wants)
It’s a fun time to be an Email Players subscriber.
Lots of big changes in businesses are being made.
Lots of marketplace branding & positioning are being built.
And, yes, lots of sales are being created.
(Out of thin air, basically, just sending emails, no other changes.)
Plus, the info I’ll be showing in 2016 in “Email Players” is going to blow people away (my sales last year were almost twice as high as the year before, due in large part to some changes in the way I write emails and promote myself — things you can only learn from the elBenbo’s mouth, not by observation or in any of my other teachings, speaking gigs, trainings, or products).
However, a word of warning:
The people who are seeing these big bumps in sales all are doers and already have a product and an offer. They don’t think they can magically make more sales by putting each issue under their pillow each night via osmosis with no list, no offer, or no desire to work. And they sure as hades don’t get their monthly issue and then just nod, smile (eyeballs rolling to the back of their head at their temporary dopamine drip high of getting something “new!”) just to file it away (without implementing) and chase some bright shiny object on the side.
They read, implement, profit.
They also treat it like an investment not an expense.
(They are investor-minded, not opportunity-minded.)
And, as a result, they make lots of sales.
Very simple.
And, pretty easy, too.
(And fun.)
Get in on the February issue before it goes to the printer tomorrow here:
Ben Settle


