Oh, sure, there are plenty of phrases: "mask up," "social distancing," "stay
home, stay safe," you name it.
But I think we can all agree that we're pretty tired of this word:
Virtual.
Oh, we had virtual this and virtual that for two years. I'd get an email from a symphony orchestra about its next performance. As soon as it would say it was "virtual," it went right into the trash.
But let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Even before Covid I'd done numerous "virtual summits," in which experts who are geographically dispersed make online presentations to an audience that is likewise dispersed. It saved me the aggravation of flying, and it meant I didn't have to be away from my family.
I got paid less, it's true, but that's a trade-off I was often willing to make.
Anyone in any niche can hold a virtual summit. It can bring in good revenue, and can generate for you that most prized asset: a list of buyers, whom you can write to again and again with other offers.
Well, my old friend Charles Harper has created a step-by-step course explaining the tech side of running a virtual summit.
(I would estimate Charles's IQ at somewhere in the neighborhood of 837, incidentally.)
As I mentioned yesterday, the course also comes with Private Label Rights (PLR).
That means that in addition to benefiting from it yourself, you can sell it as your own course and keep all the profits.
You can rebrand it, put your name directly on it, translate it into another language if you want, add to it, subtract from it, whatever you want. Or just sell it as is. (Charles also gives you a sales page you can use, so even that part is covered.) Whatever you want to do.
Again, you don't have to sell the course if you don't want to. You can just learn from it yourself.
But if you think you might want to sell the course (anyone in any niche could have an interest in running a virtual summit, remember) and you don't know how to set up PLR for sale, send your receipt to bonuses@tomwoods.com and I will send you step-by-step training on exactly what to do.
Oh, and I forgot to mention: you get all this for just $8.
I'll bet you could get some nice World Economic Forum bug snacks for $8, but this is probably a more sensible thing to do:
http://www.tomwoods.com/virtualsummit
Tom Woods