Do You Tend To Stay Away From Products Like This?

8 replies
Products that people who know you wouldn't really be convinced that you use or know anything about? For example someone in a committed relationship or no relationship selling dating and seduction products.
#products #stay #tend
  • Profile picture of the author svsets10
    I try to stay away from things that I would never sell to anyone that I know in "real" life. If I don't feel strong enough about something to recommend it to people I see daily then I probably shouldn't be selling it at all.
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    • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
      Banned
      I have a fairly simple "test question" for everything: is it something that I'd happily and openly recommend to my parents (if they were interested in the niche)? It has to satisfy that criterion, in a sense, because they're subscribed to all my lists anyway (though they're not really interested in many of my niches).
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  • Profile picture of the author sbucciarel
    Banned
    I only sell products, like Lexy, that I would sell to friends and family.
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  • Profile picture of the author EFFOR
    This is the problem I have. I've been trying to expand into the world of CPA offers, but the vast majority appear at least on the surface to be pretty misleading or unconvincing.

    I'm not the kind of person that wants to funnel people to an offer that promises a free "xyz" but then has about 20 steps they must jump through to get it, worse yet some of those steps often cost money which makes it definitely not free.

    Other products promise miraculous results but short of the authors testimonials proof is nowhere to be found. The ones that appear the most genuine are also the most competitive which is daunting when you have limited CPA experience.

    Do any of you purchase the products you promote prior to signing up to see if they pass muster?
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  • Profile picture of the author Dan C. Rinnert
    Originally Posted by Jon Tees View Post

    Products that people who know you wouldn't really be convinced that you use or know anything about? For example someone in a committed relationship or no relationship selling dating and seduction products.
    If they're in a committed relationship, clearly they were successful in their dating or seduction efforts.

    Likewise, someone with no relationship could also be said to be successful in their dating or seduction efforts.

    Depends upon how you define "success" in those cases.
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  • Profile picture of the author guypeleides
    It's a great question and the answer is don't...

    If you don't believe in it, it will reflect in your ability to sell it anyway. For example, I once tested 100s of CPA offers and I failed miserably with ones I knew sucked and took advantage of people.

    However, once I learned what I believed in, "selling" it came naturally.

    Think about it and you'll realize you don't have to compromise your integrity to sell a lot of stuff.
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  • Profile picture of the author VictorDamasio
    It's ok to me to sell something to a niche I'm not included in.

    If I need a hero I'd pick another person or build up an avatar.

    Look what Eben Pagan/David DeAngelo did on the seduction niche... Awesome!
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