Below is a snippet from the âGran Torinoâ screenplay. In the scene the old grouchy main character Walt â played by Clint Eastwood â is talking to the young loner teen Tao who he befriends about the valuable tool set in his garage, and how he got it. WALT: What? TAO: I canât afford to buy all this stuff. WALT: I didnât buy all this stuff at once, blockhead. Iâve lived here for fifty years. A man stays in one place long enough he tends to attract a decent set of tools. TAO: Yeah, but... WALT: Look, kid, I think I know where youâre going with this. You donât need everything to maintain a house. Iâm going to let you in on a little secret. [Walt rattles around his tool bench and slaps down THREE items in quick succession.] WALT: This is for you. Roll of duct tape, can of WD-40, and a pair of vise-grips. Any man whoâs worth a shit can do half his household jobs with these three things. In the odd chance that doesnât work out, you can borrow something. And so the script goes⦠Hereâs the point: When it comes to starting, growing, and eventually conquering in the freelance game especially â copywriting, coaching, any other kind of service business of the sort â you donât need to have every info product, every piece of software, every leadâs contact info, or every anything else to get things rolling. Way back in 2002 I barely had enough money to buy a book on copywriting. So I spent what I had: Time. Time to research who the best teachers at copywriting were. I chose Dan Kennedyâs Ultimate Sales Letter book. Cost probably $12 or so at the time. I donât really remember. I read that book several times â many of those read-throughs in one sitting â and then I found a small forum of other online marketers and, following the forumâs rules, made an offer to everyone there for my services. That got me something like 5 clients. Not a single one paid me even a single penny, due to my inept negotiation skills. But it did get me experience dealing with the realities of clients. It did get me testimonials. And, most important of all... it did get me in the game working hard to write full length sales letters using nothing but what I learned from that one book, from which I produced a pretty decent newbieâs portfolio. And I took that portfolio to one of the freelancer sites (the old eLance site) and that got me my first for-real paying assignment that added up to $850 in fees. I took that money and immediately invested it in two higher-ticket copywriting products to further my education. Then I took the money from applying that info to buy more info products & education. Then I took the money from applying that new info to buy even more education. And so on, and so forth. Eventually I got into some JVâs that paid enough to wipe out my credit card & car payment, and be able to move out of the shyt hole state Iâd lived in my whole life as well as get my toe into some bigger doors in the industry. Which brings me back to the above movie script: When a man sticks with a skill long enough, he attracts a decent set of info products on the subject. This is especially the case with copywriting & marketing. Although the glut of crap products available today that werenât around then makes discernment a lot more important than it was for me. But you donât need to start out with a huge budget. You need only the copywriting equivalent of duct tap, WD 40, & vise-grips. Then you work, invest, acquire more. Work, invest, acquire more. Work, invest, acquire more... Over time. And, yes, for the rest of your business career. That is, if you want to be not just good but great at what you do. Iâll be talking a lot about this from the purely copywriting side soon. Especially since the May Email Players issue is all about that. In the meantime you can read more about it here: [httpsâ¶//www.EmailPlayers.com]( Ben Settle This email was sent by Ben Settle as owner of Settle, LLC. Copyright © 2021 Settle, LLC. All Rights Reserved. No part of this email may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from Settle, LLC. Click here to
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