A few years ago, I was ready to give up emailing my list and was close to
canceling my account.
It was the spring of 2016, and up until then I was doing what most other people do with their email lists. I was mailing it once a week, or twice a week, or once every two weeks.
I was inconsistent, and the emails were boring.
And I was seeing nothing but tumbleweeds blowing through my email town.
Since I had no results to show from it, I thought to
myself:
"Screw it, I'll cancel my Aweber account and save a few bucks a month"
But instead of doing that, I decided to do something that seemed "crazy" at the time:
I started emailing my list daily.
Friends thought I was nuts and warned me that I was committing business suicide by doing it.
They said that it was too much, that people would
unsubscribe and curse my name for eternity for doing such an outrageous thing.
I had absolutely nothing to lose, since I was going to cancel my email account anyways, so I just started doing it.
A funny thing happened with my daily email experiment ...
The sun came up the next day and people weren't throwing darts at a picture of me (that I'm aware of) ...
And I
started getting clients and customers from my email list!
I built a stronger relationship with my subscribers (getting a number of "replies" from every email that I sent out), and for the first time ever emailing was fun.
Today, email is a big source of revenue for my online business, and I've emailed my list for 892 straight days.
I haven't missed a single day yet, and I won't
- unless there's a zombie apocalypse and in that case, I'll have other things to worry about.
Maybe you're feeling the same way that I used to about email.
Maybe you're thinking "This sucks, I'm going to quit".
If so, please don't.
At least not until you watch the live training that I'm doing next Thursday, where I'll walk you through how I do daily emails so you can
get the same results as I do.
The training is called How To Use Daily Emails To Create A Money Machine! and here's the link to register for it:
See you
there,
Marc