Let me tell you about something you've probably never heard of:
Blind copy.
It's huge in Internet marketing.
Blind copy is sales language that tries to get you to buy something without knowing what it is.
It's the ol' Nancy Pelosi: you have to pass the bill to find out what is in it.
You read a long sales page, and by the end you have no idea what you're buying.
All you know is that it's an amazing new method, and it brings in smackers automatically, and it takes 30 minutes of work per day.
But you have no idea what it is.
Now you might think: no one will go for this. Who's going to buy a product without knowing what it is?
Wrong.
Blind copy sells like crazy.
Here's why:
As soon as you specify what the method is, people's objections come to the fore. "Oh, I've tried that already and it's too hard." Or, "I don't want to do X." And so on.
They'd rather think there's some secret method to generate an income, and that if they buy just one more product they'll finally discover it.
That's why blind copy works.
Not to mention:
Lots of people like the dopamine rush that comes from buying products like these. They won't ever do anything with them. They just keep accumulating them. And they're excited by the newest thing, complete with all kinds of crazy promises. Writers of blind copy know this. They keep releasing product after product, each promising some amazing new method without revealing what it is, knowing that there's an endless market of people ready to buy.
Well, we don't do that around here.
I can't imagine people on my list are in the market for crap like that.
You want something real, not blind b.s.
Well, here's someone who never writes blind copy, has been around forever, and who of all the people in this industry I admire the most.
He is the anti-Nancy Pelosi.
And this, rather than blind copy b.s., is what will help you:
Tom Woods