Dynamic leverage for massive success and wealth
Dynamic Leverage is a term I invented for a very powerful success tool: measurement!
How great it would be to be able to measure your success and plot it on your path, like following a chart. Imagine installing a clear signal system, like radar or GPS, that gave you a positive electronic “ping” every time you moved towards your goal and a decisive “honk!” every time your strayed off your path!
Well you can do that. All successful people do it in some form or other. All dreamers, who hang around on life’s edges and never really get committed and achieve what they want, fail at this major requirement. …CONTINUE READING =>
Add 100,000 to Your List for $10
What if you could add 2,000, 10,000… or even 100,000… to your own personal list almost effortlessly?
Good, right?
What if you knew that everyone joining your list was definitely interested in an online income?
What if you also knew that 100% of those email addresses on your HUGE list were guaranteed to be valid working email addresses?
Now the best part…
Every person joining your list is going to pay you $2 for the privilege of being on your income seekers mailing list!
- Have 1,000 join your list… Get paid $2,000
- Have 10,000 join your list… Rake in $20,000
- 100,000 gives you $200,000
If you follow the simple instructions on the website that 100,000 will end up looking trivial.
What would you expect something this good to cost? You better be sitting down.
Only $10 one time! And it happens so fast it’ll make your head spin.
click here to start a mammoth list
Profit Professor
Sell them what they want not what they need
I just got lazy here and posted one of Perry Marshall’s emails. I’ve left his link (not my affiliate link) as a token. He makes a good point we should all bear in mind.
In the late ’80s, an infomercial was shot for a product that everybody *should* have: a video designed to help parents talk to their teenagers about drugs.
It was such an appealing project that everyone wanted to help with it. It was hosted by Nancy Reagan; it was nothing less than a beautifully-produced, inspiring infomercial about making America a better place for kids.
They bought the airtime and ran the show. Guess how many orders they got?
Dan Kennedy, who helped write the script, reports:
Zero.
Nobody wanted to buy a video about talking to their kids about drugs. Nancy Reagan couldn’t convince ‘em, Hollywood couldn’t convince them, and a team of professional copywriters couldn’t convince ‘em.
Why?
Because it was prevention, not cure. It was too easy to think, “I’m going to mention this to the next-door neighbors, because THEIR son is waaaay out of control.
My kids would never take drugs.”
It’s hard to sell virtue and goodness in and of itself.
That’s why there are so many novels about murder, mayhem, lust, betrayal and hell, and so few about goodness, hope, utopia and heaven.
I’m not degrading the goodness of prevention. But if you want to sell it, it’s much easier to sell it as part of a cure than trying to convince someone who’s never had the problem in the first place.
I like carpet-cleaning expert Joe Polish’s view of this.
He insists that however hard you trumpet the fact that you can kill carpet mites and take toxins and allergens out of your house, the real reason that Suzy Jones calls a carpet cleaner is that she’s got company coming and she doesn’t want her friends to see the spot where Uncle Ned puked.
So Suzy’s going to have the carpet cleaned before the party, not after. After would actually be prevention.
Before is cure.
To Your Success,
Perry Marshall
http://www.perrymarshall.com/renaissance
Making money from your list
One thing that’s good about being on a successful person’s list is you can see what works and what doesn’t. It may be tempting to unsubscribe – but don’t!
Forget about seeing yourself as the sales “target” and be a student. Watch what the guru sells, how he sells it and so on.
Put the emails in a swipe file and copy them, slightly modified, for your own use.
I learned that from being on Keith Wellman’s list. He bombards me with stuff (almost daily). I don’t buy it all, of course. In my beginner days I would just unsubscribe and say “stop sending me all those emails…” Now I’m pleased to be getting such an education!
Something else this taught me: Wellman doesn’t make all his $millions creating his own products. He’s an affiliate for dozens of other people. His Every Day Wealth Team have it down to a fine art. So when he gives you advice, like “This is what I do…” it’s smart to follow it!
Of course, you need to grow a list! Better go to:







Recent Comments