How I “get away” with selling in each email without ticking off my list
Published: Mon, 04/29/19
“How do you keep your emails so sharp and short? And how do you get away with a call to action in each email?”
The answer to her first question is simply a matter of writing.
The more you write, the better you get.
I don’t care if it’s emails, sales copy, content, or even fiction. The more you write, the better your writing gets and, incidentally, if you have an offer and “aim” that writing (via emails designed to sell, of course) at your offer… the more you will almost certainly make.
That may be obvious to some people reading this.
But, what about her second question about “getting away” with selling each day?
Well, that might not be so obvious.
And in the May “Email Players” issue I go into great detail on the five ways I use to do just that — including one way I doubt anyone reading this email has given any thought to at all.
A way that can potentially:
1. Multiple your sales very quickly
2. Make everything you say in your emails more believable
3. Give you, your business, and your brand a big, thick layer of credibility, and I believe can also amplify the effects of all your advertising henceforth.
It’s something I do in nearly every email I send.
Nearly every sales letter I create.
And, especially try do at all the points of contact someone has with my business *before* they even opt-in, that I suspect gives me a much bigger advantage over others, while, yes, letting me sell every day without anyone having heart palpitations over it.
It takes a bit of of a sac to do it, though.
And, won’t work for anyone with a scarcity mentality.
But, if you want to learn this and the other 4 methods I use to “get away with” selling each day… simply subscribe to my “Email Players” newsletter before tomorrow’s deadline to get the may issue. Then, when it comes, buckle up, pour a glass of your favorite beverage, and get ready to learn about one of the most powerful business-building “secrets” I’ve ever used in HD “surround sound” detail.
Here’s the nasty link to subscribe while you still have time:
http://www.EmailPlayers.com
Ben Settle