One of my favorite movies is “Wolf Of Wall Street”.
I can watch it over and over (as in, the end credits roll and I replay from the beginning), and never get bored of it. One of my favorite scenes is when Jordan is motivating his guys to pick up the phone and start making sales calls.
Anyway, it just finally dawned on me:
His speech is even *more* applicable to email marketing.
How?
Well, allow ol’ elBenbo do a shameless paraphrase of his talk:
“Are you behind on your credit card bills? Good. Turn on your computer and start writing emails. Is your landlord ready to evict you? Good. Shut off Facebook for 15 minutes and start writing emails. Does your girlfriend think you’re a loser? Good. Quit being a pussy and start writing emails! I want you to deal with your problems, by becoming rich! All you have to do today …is turn on your computer, and type the kind of emails that I can teach you in ‘Email Players’.”
It’s 100% true, too.
And, I’ve got dozens of success stories to prove it.
Where people get stuck is not knowing how to get ideas.
Or, they don’t know how to write emails people look forward to reading.
Or, they can’t figure out how to sell and deliver a good reading experience.
Well, worry ye not.
That’s what “Email Players” teaches.
And, this is especially true in the June issue which is going to the printer soon. In fact, it teaches a way of doing emails so valuable, and that has made my emails so profitable (not just mine, but when I did client work) over the years… that I predict subscribers will consider it the most valuable issue to date.
Or certainly one of them.
It’s also a perfect “jumping on” issue for people new to my world.
(Can be used by newbies or seasoned pros alike.)
The only stumbling block would be its rank simplicity. If you hate simple, you’ll hate it. If you crave bright shiny ninja objects, you’ll hate it. And, if you are a typical IM’er who never does anything, you’ll hate it.
For everyone else?
The grownups?
She goes to the printer in a few days.
Subscribe today, while there’s still time to get it:
Ben Settle


