A marketer will say over and over again:
"This offer closes on [such-and-such date]!"
"We mean it!"
"It's closing for good!"
Then that day comes, and they close the offer, just as they said.
But:
A few days letter, you get this:
"Hey, we had a technical glitch on that last day, so we're opening the offer back up for one more day!"
This is always a lie. Every single time. It's a ninja trick they've been taught by some slimy guru.
Folks, your word has to count for something.
If you say there's a deadline, stick to it. Don't sacrifice your word for the sake of a few extra sales. First, it's bad to go back on your word. Second, it's bad to have a reputation as someone who goes back on his word. And third, in the long run these tricks aren't going to help you.
I mention this because:
When Steve Clayton says a program is closing, he means it.
There won't be some convenient "technical glitch" that will make him open the doors to his Parallel Profits program again. When they close at midnight Pacific Time tonight, they are closed, period.
You could open a McDonald's franchise and spend eight years just trying to recoup your investment, selling three-dollar items.
Want fries with that?
No, thanks.
Or you could have this franchise, with high-ticket services that the mother company performs for your clients, and you pocket the difference.
Check it out before it's gone (tonight at midnight Pacific Time):
Tom Woods