Book Description
Truth, hype or tripe (worthless)? Do you believe that you can tell the difference before you jump into a new internet venture? Or, do you have to wait until your pockets are empty before hype and tripe become “gripe?”
Don’t be ripped off – get tipped off up front by Paul Hadinger’s latest book, How To Avoid Internet Marketing Scammers: How To Identify And Beat The Gurus Of Greed. Learn what to look for and how to analyze internet marketing promotions that are more likely to enrich the promoter than you and at your expense. Among many internet marketers, arrogance and greed prevail over honesty and ethics. (Only the guilty will be offended by that statement.)
Paul regards the “Gurus of Greed” as internet predators whose chief concern is to nail a sale by any means that works, with ethics, morals, honesty, full disclosure and the like being in scarce supply. The focus is on whatever works to make a sale and to add to that sale with “upsells” or “upgrades” that often catch people by surprise. Total truth could cost sales, so it is usually avoided. (Again, only the guilty will be offended by that statement.)
Paul also tells readers why these internet predators push their programs aggressively (at least one of these reasons will surprise most people) and why people are not likely to get responses or adequate ones to their inquiries about program details.
If you’ve ever been conned, scammed, ripped off, hoodwinked or whatever word fits what happened to you in your attempt to invest in a good online business, Paul’s book will help you to avoid any of this the next time. And, if you happen to get caught again by someone who is even smoother than the last one, Paul’s book will tell you how to go about recovering your investment.
In this book, you can learn the difference between truth and fiction through insights on how to identify phony baloney, whether it’s in promises, endorsements, earnings, actual costs or something else. You will also learn why – in most cases – the stated price of a program is not likely to be all that you will have to shell out to make the program “work.”
Readers will be given an in-depth look at one of Paul’s pet peeves: promotional videos that are overly-hyped, information-deficient, and time-wasting. A second pet peeve is the reluctance of internet marketers to provide text options for those who can still read and who are capable of absorbing information five to ten times faster by that method.
Because of overselling and under-informing, many readers (or, perhaps, more correctly, watchers of slick promotional videos) end up being conned into buying programs that they don’t understand, might not learn, and are likely to drop after too many frustrations over a lack of information and a lack of support from the promoter.
The importance and role of personal research on promoters and programs before making buying decisions is emphasized.
Finally, Paul tells readers how and why they can pursue their passion without having to try to find an honest internet marketer with a workable, affordable program. For any who are not sure about their passion, Paul provides some novel ways to discover what you might like to do most. Once that is determined, success and satisfaction are more likely to be realized.
_____________________
Truth, hype or tripe (worthless)? Do you believe that you can tell the difference before you jump into a new internet venture? Or, do you have to wait until your pockets are empty before hype and tripe become “gripe?”
Don’t be ripped off – get tipped off up front by Paul Hadinger’s latest book, How To Avoid Internet Marketing Scammers: How To Identify And Beat The Gurus Of Greed. Learn what to look for and how to analyze internet marketing promotions that are more likely to enrich the promoter than you and at your expense. Among many internet marketers, arrogance and greed prevail over honesty and ethics. (Only the guilty will be offended by that statement.)
Paul regards the “Gurus of Greed” as internet predators whose chief concern is to nail a sale by any means that works, with ethics, morals, honesty, full disclosure and the like being in scarce supply. The focus is on whatever works to make a sale and to add to that sale with “upsells” or “upgrades” that often catch people by surprise. Total truth could cost sales, so it is usually avoided. (Again, only the guilty will be offended by that statement.)
Paul also tells readers why these internet predators push their programs aggressively (at least one of these reasons will surprise most people) and why people are not likely to get responses or adequate ones to their inquiries about program details.
If you’ve ever been conned, scammed, ripped off, hoodwinked or whatever word fits what happened to you in your attempt to invest in a good online business, Paul’s book will help you to avoid any of this the next time. And, if you happen to get caught again by someone who is even smoother than the last one, Paul’s book will tell you how to go about recovering your investment.
In this book, you can learn the difference between truth and fiction through insights on how to identify phony baloney, whether it’s in promises, endorsements, earnings, actual costs or something else. You will also learn why – in most cases – the stated price of a program is not likely to be all that you will have to shell out to make the program “work.”
Readers will be given an in-depth look at one of Paul’s pet peeves: promotional videos that are overly-hyped, information-deficient, and time-wasting. A second pet peeve is the reluctance of internet marketers to provide text options for those who can still read and who are capable of absorbing information five to ten times faster by that method.
Because of overselling and under-informing, many readers (or, perhaps, more correctly, watchers of slick promotional videos) end up being conned into buying programs that they don’t understand, might not learn, and are likely to drop after too many frustrations over a lack of information and a lack of support from the promoter.
The importance and role of personal research on promoters and programs before making buying decisions is emphasized.
Finally, Paul tells readers how and why they can pursue their passion without having to try to find an honest internet marketer with a workable, affordable program. For any who are not sure about their passion, Paul provides some novel ways to discover what you might like to do most. Once that is determined, success and satisfaction are more likely to be realized.
_____________________