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You are a Goddess. Super share.
@LeggyAnita and mwendwa: Thank you both for your kind words of support and for liking my share; I appreciate it.

Your support makes me want to just keep on going and going and going ...

[Image: Energizer-Bunny-300x270.jpg]

Thanks
Layna61524
(05-19-2018 09:51 AM)layna61524 Wrote: [ -> ]
UPDATE --- October 2, 2018
Replaced Dead Zippyshare Link with a New One!
=============================

HOW YOU CAN MAKE $5,000 TO $15,000 IN ONLY WEEKS
TEACHING YOUR VERY OWN E-MAIL ONLY E-CLASS!

[Image: 2018-05-18_1515.png]


LAYNA'S NOTE:

Here's an oldie-but-goody...

I found this deep, deep, deeeeep in the recesses of an external hard drive. You can see it's dated (2001) based on the web header graphic above. Yet the subject matter is evergreen.

If you choose to download this, do your own knowledge upgrade by accessing more recent resources. Whatever appears dated can be upgraded.

This is a Joe Vitale master class but he shows you how to make good money quickly doing the same thing that Jimmy D. Brown did. And Yanik Silver and Paul Lemberg and others did, too!

Promote the course via a landing page, newsletter or joint venture. When they opt-in to your list (to get a high-quality freebie that gives value PLUS further pre-sells the course content) you collect when subscribers buy the course.

Cost per unit can be lower but perceived value must be high. A course with modules that go for $14.97 to $19.97 per month for a year can make you quite a nice mint --- all passively --- because you do the hard work once. Set up correctly, your autoresponder handles it from there.

All you need is a few hundred people to make an impact on your bottom line. 100 to 300 subscribers at $14.97 or $19.97 brings in $1,497 to $4,491 or $1,997 to $5,991 respectively. You can expect to lose or gain a few subscribers but if you promote creatively and consistently, you will have more new subscribers than cancellations.

You simply sketch out your course content into easy to digest modules. Spread them over a period of weeks or months up 6 months or a year. Set it and forget it. You could even do a "news break" type email letter for any updates that occur to make your content really evergreen.

Please, don't discount the value of this share.

Some will think, "That worked THEN ... things are much different NOW."

Well, it is more difficult to get people to open emails today than it was years ago. But if your customers KNOW you will be sending what they paid for to them every week or month via that method, they will look forward to that email.

You can either attach the files to the email or send a brief notification email with the link that points your subscribers to a protected website where they can download the newest modules.

So, there's really nothing new under the sun. Everything old is new again.

It just takes a creative and entrepreneurial mind to put a different spin on it.

If your course is interesting enough and you can create sufficient content, you can still make a decent passive income doing this. In fact, with all the gurus churning out content that runs into the gigabytes in size, over-complicates simple processes and costs thousands, you stand to make very good money by going old-school again to make things simple and easy.

A few videos (or no videos at all, depending on your content) and a few PDFs per course module should be more than enough. It's the content not the quantity that counts.

Plus, this is duplicable. Once you see the success of your first email e-course, what's to stop you from doing more than one of these bad-boys!?

NOTE: The sales letter seems to promoted a course that is on a membership platform but that site is down. This is a 160+ page e-book but you may find enough detail inside to set the e-course memberships up.

Copyright 2001, 130 pp., PDF

READ MORE HERE:
Magic Button :
Code:
.
https://anonymiz.com/?http%3A%2F%2Fwww.eclassfortunes.com%2F
.

I have provided one direct download from Joe Vitale's site (seems he's giving this away now); one Mediafire link I found online and two links I personally prepared. So there should be no need to mirror this share.

GET IT HERE:
Magic Button :
Code:
.
Direct Link:
http://www.mrfire.com/ord009312/Eclass_Ebook.pdf
.
Ge.tt Link:
http://ge.tt/8HBBVqp2
.
Mediafire Link:
http://www.mediafire.com/file/emzxitzetng/Vitale+Eclass_Ebook.pdf
.
Zippy Link:
https://www30.zippyshare.com/v/1djywRSx/file.html
.

VIRUS TOTAL:
https://www.virustotal.com/#/file/d4d0e4.../detection
SHA-256 d4d0e4a651ce776fd90431f7ee4daa9ce8149ee49a573f5784faf444e7d5aa9c
File size: 310.26 KB
Detection ratio: 0 / 42
Last analysis: 2010-03-04 19:26:03 UTC

If you're seeing this post anywhere other than bestblackhatforum.com or
being shared by anyone other than Layna61524, then that's where/who
THEY TOOK IT FROM!


Thanks
for reading!
Layna61524

I cant denying what you have wrote here Princess Layna. Its 100% true! Perfect 10 Perfect 10 Perfect 10

This course remind me one of the course that also been share here couple of years ago.

Passive Print Profit.


This course also focus on paid newsletter and yes some of them doesn't need any website for membership.

All the paid newsletter were send every month to the subscriber.

So no need any techie stuff like plugin to build membership,vps server (i doubt this kind of membership ever need an high speed hosting),or anything that cross our mind.

The more important part is one and only - The Content Value.

Because that will make your subscriber stick to you month after month.

Thanks again Princess Layna for this post.

Its recall back my planning on this niche that once across my mind and have been forgotten long ago until now.

regard,

Lagenda
@Lagenda: Thank you very much for your added value to the thread and for the very kind words. Wow ... I've got to get used to being called Princess Layna. You all give me more credit than I deserve.

But you're right about the value of content creation and paid newsletter publishing. Years ago, I received a book from a lady named Monique Harris. It was called Paperless Newsletters and I read it forward and backward and forward again. At the time she wrote it (co-authored with Terry Dean), she was pulling in more than $19,500 a month (before expenses, taxes, etc.) charging just $19.97 a month to (at least) 1,000 subscribers. Hers was an electronic newsletter that was delivered via a customer's email address. Kind of the same operation that Jimmy D. Brown proposed in his course (Membernaire). And guess what ... that model STILL works.

BUT ... You've got to have:

*** something valuable that your niche/market needs to know
*** content your subscribers can't easily find for free online
*** a writing style people can easily read and understand

Can you imagine having 100 ... 500 ... 1,000 or more subscribers you send an electronic newsletter to each month that you can charge $14 to $19 a month automatically ... or even more ... each month?

Sure, you're bound to lose a few subscribers here and there. Not necessarily because of your content; people sometimes need to prioritize their expenses when there is a financial emergency so they will cut off things like recurring subscriptions. I like that, in PayPal, they can cancel the subscription themselves. In Jimmy D's model, they can re-subscribe but they incur the penalty of having to start all over again with issue #1. Not many people will want to do that so they will think a little harder about canceling.

But since you will constantly market your membership/course newsletter, you should have people signing up at greater numbers than the ones you lose each month.

But back to the newsletter itself...

Inside the newsletters you can occasionally promote and sell your other products, as well as affiliate products. So, your monthly newsletter can generate more revenue than what you're charging for the subscription.

I think that in today's ever busy internet marketing arena, the gurus are having to create bigger products (ex: those mega-gigabyte premium courses full of videos, spreadsheets, audios and a gazillion PDFs most of us will never get around to using) just to justify those crazy selling points (courses selling for upwards of $2,000!).

As for me; I'm lazy. I'd rather write content for a newsletter 6 months to a year in advance and load them to an autoresponder but be flexible enough that when something newsworthy for the niche comes up, I can go in and add (or remove) content ... and still have everything set up in advance. Just sit back relax or work on other products to market.

There are so many niches you can write in and (with just a little brainstorming) you can find topics that are essential reading for people in that niche or market.

The easiest newsletter to do is a "resource" type where you research websites for people who need guidance with something. Monique's letter specialized in providing links to websites (or phone numbers and email contact addresses) for writers who needed help promoting their e-book or course.

Of course, she sprinkled in a feature article or two; a Q&A column, a bookshelf where she briefly reviewed recent books new authors would benefit from reading, etc.

A lot of research and (again) good writing skills are important. The only thing is, you've got to have enough content to sustain you from year to year.

And what if you don't have (or can't get) enough content to justify a long-term subscription?

Well, that's easy enough ...

Just look back to the old e-newsletter master, Jimmy D. In his model, you can offer what he called a "fixed" or "limit-term" newsletter (ex: subscriptions run for 6 months, 9 months or a year). These kinds of newsletters are even MORE attractive to people because they can see an end in sight and won't stress over how long they plan to pay before they will have to quit. Once they complete the course, they know they are done. Thus, these customers/consumers are more reluctant to cancel because these "fixed term" or limit-time subscriptions end after a set number of months.

Even with fixed-term memberships, you can cancel but (what Jimmy advised is that) you make them start from the beginning if they ever chose to re-subscribe. That makes it easier to keep them through to the end.

For fixed-terms, all you've got to do is spread out your content to cover the period of time. Structure the delivery of the newsletter so that you start with the basics, get to the intermediate stuff mid-way and save the essential stuff for last. The fixed term membership is great for course-type learning modules. The fixed-term membership is tailor made for any of the "How to Do (Something)" niche topics.

I hope this information helps anyone who wants to investigate this model.

Thanks
(Princess) Layna61524 Wink
Thanks for the share Layna.

Reps+ added.
thank's for sharing
Thanks layna61524
Thanks sharing and your insight
This share is more than a year old and no one posted a mirror link. Can I get a little help here? Please?

Thanks
for reading!
Layna61524
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