Today’s the deadline to get the December “Email Players” issue.
Some of the presents ol’ Santa elBenbo has in his sack this month include:
- What the late night talk show king Johnny Carson did to create a bond with his audience so tight he was even more popular than the President in his day. (And how you can use his wily ways to bond with your email list just as easily and strongly.)
- A 50+ year old secret way of writing emails (yes, invented before email) that can make yours stand out like a redneck at a Hillary rally.
- What to inject in each of your emails if you want to have higher status than all your competitors. (Like or lump it, people love to buy from other people with high status in their niches and industries. Here’s how to do it, even if you’re a social outcast who nobody knows about now.)
- 6 real-life examples of how *bragging* about your worst flaws can create instant believability in you, your products, and your services. (Works especially well on highly skeptical prospects with money to spend, but don’t know who to trust.)
- How to “flip” unusual facts into fascinating emails your list can’t resist reading (and, in many cases, buying from.)
- Why people who are great teachers online are so often broke without a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out.
- Two resources every email marketer should watch if you want to ratchet your email game up several notches. (One of these resources can be found on Youtube for free, the other on the hulu service.)
- What to say in your affiliate promos that can (1) make you way more sales (2) make you the most honest person in your list’s inboxes and (3) frustrate the living hellz out of any of your competitors selling the same product. (You can find this baby on page 11, so simple, yet so effective…)
- And mucho, mucho more…
Plus:
A valuable Christmas present that’s sure to make any Eugene Schwartz fanboy have to change his pants afterwards…
If you want in, now’s the time.
I’m sending the list in to the printer today.
Hop on the B-train here, before it leaves the station:
Ben Settle


