Well, how about this.
I'd better not say the name just yet, but an author and the editor of a well-known financial site just wrote me a letter (I'm in New York at the moment so I don't have it in front of me) that started off like this:
"Dear Tom,
"Remember when we were discussing my next book project, and you tried to explain, gently, that the kind of book I was thinking of would have a hard time finding a publisher and an even harder time finding readers?
"Well, you were so right. I should have listened."
See, the old man here knows a thing or two.
Even before he got started on that project, I knew it would flop.
If you know these things ahead of time, you can save yourself some grief.
By the same token, if you know what people really do want, you can skyrocket your success.
I knew that particular item was a loser. But I'm not omniscient and can't always get it right.
Well, it turns out: there's a science to it.
One of my podcast guests knows that science cold, and has the track record -- his own, and that of his students, who would crawl over broken glass for him -- to prove it. If you know it, things can happen for you quickly.
You can proceed with this knowledge or without it.
Think about which way will get you closer to your goals, and farther away from wanting to commit an atrocity.
Then click here:
Tom Woods