I’m amazed at the cons that go on every day on the internet.
I spend a little time studying them, because you can learn so much. They all start with one fact I learned years ago. People believe what they want to believe.
So I’ve just spent half an hour listening to the utterly sincere, heartrendingly touching pitch from one of those guys who – like most of them – promises to liberate you from the slavery of working for a living. And, like most of them starts with the touching tale of how he was starving in a trailer park until … Shazam! – he stumbled on this amazing system that will make YOU rich.
It was “freedom from work forever” – that sort of thing. It was brilliant. You saw how many $$$ you can make each month. You saw the wonderful life this guy leads, his adorable wife and kids, he stammered nervously – couldn’t possibly be anything but a real guy like you and me – in fact he used every trick in the book to touch your greedy, foolish, credulous heart.
Then you saw how easy it is, and what an astounding deal you’re going to get. Not $5,000. Not $2,000. No, a mere $997 for this set of DVDs and a couple of booklets that cost, oh, at LEAST $5 to produce. In fact he told you everything you need to know – except the two things that are essential: what to sell and where to find your customers.
This reminded me of something excellent from Michel Fortin the other day. I’ve edited it slightly because old Michel does go on a bit for a guy who criticises long copy. He predicted:
‘We’re going to see more and more marketing principles, strategies and tactics applied to the Internet. More and more outside of Internet marketing, particularly outside the bizoppy, make-money arenas.
I’m talking about real businesses selling real stuff using real marketing strategies. And by “real” I don’t mean just physical products and hard goods. I include digital products.
I’m talking about businesses that sell non-Internet-marketing stuff. To me, too many products appear like ponzi schemes, where someone teaches how to make money online, and the way they make their money is by selling their make-money product.
No. I mean real stuff. Not snake-oil. Not “secrets.” Not “how to get a gazillion visitors or make a gazillion dollars overnight.” And certainly not circular, “Make money by becoming an affiliate of my make-money product!”
I sure hope he’s right, because I’m going to spend the next year running round the world in the hope that there just might be enough people around who want to make money the old fashioned way.
We shall see.
Exactly.
Each time I see a “make money” advert or salesletter, I say to myself, “Seriously?”
Thanks, Drayton, for being another voice of reason.
You might be interested in our colleague Nick Usborne's post this morning:
http://ow.ly/Uc5C
Nice article.
It's so easy to make up hard luck stories… it makes it impossible for those of us with real ones. 🙂
“…in the hope that there just might be enough people around who want to make money the old fashioned way. “
God I appreciate you, Drayton.
People who sell 'How To Make Money On The Net' products honestly, in my opinion, don't really understand marketing… and I think, were they to try selling something else or running a business… they'd fail miserably.
Your books live proud on my top-shelf next to the Gary Halbert's, Dan Kennedy's and Jay Abraham's of the world — people who sell more than a pipe dream. People who understand how business and marketing works. People who can truly help those who want to succeed in business… and do so by teaching what has *always* worked.
You teach and preach foundational business/marketing skills… and I really, truly appreciate it.
Exactly.
Each time I see a “make money” advert or salesletter, I say to myself, “Seriously?”
Thanks, Drayton, for being another voice of reason.
You might be interested in our colleague Nick Usborne's post this morning:
http://ow.ly/Uc5C