Sometimes a website reader will ask why I don’t sell a one-shot product on email marketing.
Something easily pimped out via affiliates.
Easily accessible.
And, easily downloaded in pdf.
I’ve rapped about this many times before.
But, there’s one reason I’ve never revealed:
I have to teach month-to-month because it is, in many ways, like a professional monthly period. What I mean by that is, it’s uncomfortable making sure I don’t phone anything in. (I’ve rewritten entire issues from scratch because they didn’t meet my standards.) It cramps my fingers on the keyboard writing it. (Ask any subscriber… each 16-page issue is wall-to wall text, very little white space and zero filler). I get irritating hot flashes of ideas for other emails, products, ad copy, etc I have to constantly pause to write down before continuing, which slows my momentum while writing it. I become moody and lash out at anyone bothers me while writing it. My conscious gets bloated with anxiety in making absolutely SURE I’m delivering information that, for someone who implements, will *easily* make back their monthly investment (many times over in the short term, and hundreds and thousands of times over, over time…) And, it cleans out my mind of all the lessons and ideas always hatching in my mind.
Yeah, yeah, I know.
“Ben that’s such a crude analogy!!!”
Meh.
Imagine me rubbing my fingers together.
You know what this is?
It’s the word’s smallest violin.
Save the complaining for someone who cares.
It may be crude, but it’s accurate.
In fact:
I can tell right now, just by own tone in writing this (as I read it over) it’s time to start writing another issue.
I’ll even give you a “sneak preview” of what’s in March’s issue:
One thing I cover is how to sell in virtually ANY market you want… even if you know zilch about that market now… using plain old, “retro” email, and in just 60-minutes or less.
I’ve used this secret several times.
And, each time I made out like a bandit.
Methinks you will, too.
That is, if you’re a subscriber.
And, if you implement the info.
(Which is very “newbie friendly, good jumping-on issue.)
Subscription details here:
Ben Settle


