I love stories like this.
Here's how you make things happen.
A reader of this very newsletter wrote and self-published a book called Music Theory in One Lesson. It's a great book (I own a copy), but no one had ever heard of him.
So how was he
going to sell it?
Answer: he figured out there was potential in this whole Internet thing, as I playfully remind you every day.
He found Facebook groups where people were likely to have questions about music theory. He spent time in those groups answering people's questions. At the end of his answer
he included a link back to his Music Theory in One Lesson site.
Within months, he had sold thousands of copies.
Meanwhile, the whole process incidentally promoted his online music lesson service.
How
much did it cost him to drive that traffic from Facebook? Zero.
You don't have to write a book if you don't want to. The point is, there are numerous ways to skin the Internet cat. And they don't have to cost you a fortune, or indeed anything at all.
I've just posted a course walking you step by step
through five time-tested ways.
I guarantee you: people much less intelligent than you are doing at least one of these right this minute.
Introductory price on this how-to course more than doubles at midnight tonight, though, so now's the time:
Tom
Woods
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