A freelancer wants to know…
“Ben do you have a client overflow policy where you farm out client work you don’t have the time to handle?”
Few things….
1. I don’t do client work right now
2. When someone inquires I refer them to a copywriter friend in 9 out of 10 cases (we have an agreement where he pays me a portion of his fee). If it’s an email-related assignment I tell my “Email Players” subscribers. That’s a perk of joining. When someone comes to me looking for email writing services I send ’em to my subscribers. For the other subscriber perks read the sales letter at www.EmailPlayers.com
3. Instead of begging for farmed out work, get your own clients
For one, you’ll make more $$.
And secondly, you’ll have more control over your business.
In fact, when someone asks if “Email Players” will help them get clients they seem shocked when I say not only is my system great for getting new clients… I would argue it’s actually better for selling services than for products.
Why?
Lots of reasons.
But the main one is because few service providers are emailing at all, much less doing it daily and in a way people want to read.
Enter the August “Email Players” issue.
It shows you exactly how to get booked with clients with email.
(No matter what kind of service you sell.)
And before you even ask:
The info can be easily applied to selling products, too — as well as any other kind of marketing or selling you do in any other industry or format you use.
(Offline, online or the sidelines, it matters not…)
Plus, the August issue also reveals:
- What exactly to say when selling expensive products or services
- How to make sales even from “plain vanilla” emails
- A secret way to turn 1 email into 3, 4, 5 or MORE emails (and make 3, 4, 5 or MORE times more sales)
- How to milk money from misery with email (and in a way your customers will love and appreciate you for)
- The “symptom” secret of one of the world’s top direct mail copywriters
- A little-known email secret straight from the person once called “The most persuasive man of the 20th century”
- And a ho’ bunch mo’…
She goes to the printer in a couple weeks.
Hop onboard here:
Ben Settle


