Let me tell you a story.
Back in high school, I used to hang out with some people from time to time who weren’t exactly derelicts… but they definitely did some unsavory things.
Like the beer thief guy.
I don’t know how he got away with it for so long.
(To my knowledge, he never got caught.)
But, what he would do is, he would walk into the Jewel grocery store on a Friday or Saturday night with a long receipt and a piece of tape. He’d go to the beer section. Tape the receipt onto a case of beer. And, proceed to walk right out of the store with it.
Can you imagine that?
The store was just oblivious.
They never noticed him.
Never questioned him taping the reciept to the case.
(I mean, who does that?)
And, he basically fleeced that one grocery store out of who-knows-how much beer over the years.
Maybe, he even still does.
Anyway, the point?
There isn’t one.
There are several.
Like paying attention to who you let in your “store.”
Who you let work for you.
And, who you let *buy* from you.
People wonder why I’m such a bastard about turning certain customers away… like known spammers, opportunity-minded buyers, people who have previously refunded other products (i.e. if someone refunds one of my clickbank ebooks, and tries to subscribe to “Email Players” their request is received, processed and — BZZT!! — denied)… and the list goes on.
Well, the above story is one reason why.
I suggest you check who you let in your “store” too.
And, who you let buy.
That’s free advice…
Speaking of stores:
I have a bunch of ebooks on kindle.
Most, very short.
(So if you foolishly judge books by volume and page count, don’t waste your precious time…)
And very inexpensive.
Kinda like a “bargain basement” bin of books.
Start rummaging through them here:
Ben Settle


