I can't tell you how many b.s. artists I see
trying to sell people on the idea that they can make small fortunes online in just 15 minutes a day with a few mouse clicks.
Programs like that sell like crazy, unfortunately.
Now it's true that if you've spent a long time getting everything set up just so, you could reach a point at which you could indeed have a very short workday and yet generate a boatload of income.
If I really wanted to, at this point I could make my entire living on one email a day.
I have a bit more ambition than that, and I enjoy doing the Tom Woods Show, but that's a fact.
That's beside the point. The point is this: I've been trying to repel people looking for a gimmick to fast-track them to wild riches, because
there is no such gimmick and I don't offer anything like that.
There are plenty of ways to skin this cat, to be sure: eCommerce (including Amazon), physical products, membership sites, what have you. My emphasis is on the simple: master a market, build a list, send it offers.
Note that each of those options requires work. Each also has tremendous upside potential, but you
don't reach that level in 15 minutes a day.
Now trust me, you don't make a fortune by telling people: this will require work. But at least you can sleep at night, and at least you attract a decent and sensible audience.
Yes, writing a book involves work. But it's a good thing it does, or all your competitors would be doing it.
They're not, because they lack the ambition.
You're different. You're willing to put in the work to be the best, to achieve preeminence.
I feel a similar ambition. In addition to my emails I now publish two monthly print newsletters, one for my Supporting Listeners and a completely different one for members of my School of Life program. By the end of 2024
I will have hosted seven murder mystery dinner parties around the country. And so on.
That makes me stand out. No one else in my world does anything like this.
There are people with more podcast listeners, yes. But doing these radically different things from everyone else puts me on a different plane. I could compete on the standard metrics, or I could simply create my own,
as I've done.
Your competitors aren't writing a book because they won't make the time to do it, or they don't know how to make the time. That's precisely why you will, and it's how you can get extra credibility, clients, and income.
It's a matter of saying to yourself what your competitors won't say to themselves: "I am willing to do what it takes to achieve
preeminence."
And I'll help you do it.
But the launch discount expires tomorrow: