Candidate,
How do you know something is going to work?
How do you know who to trust?
I think these are valid questions you should ask. Hell, I spent 3 hours watching YouTube videos before I bought my iron. If I'm telling you that I have a program to show you how to earn more, be your own boss, and control your income, of course you want to ask questions.
Can I promise you're going to make $10,000 in a week? No, of course not. Nobody who promises that is telling the truth.
Can I promise you can take your ONE idea and turn it into $100,000? Also no, because people who are married to ONE idea tend to be too rigid to listen to what the market is telling them.
But I can promise this:
- I will show you how to find a business idea that generates income for you
- I will show you the exact strategies and tools — including word-for-word scripts, actual recordings of sales calls, and real sales funnels — to turn that idea into a profitable business
- If you follow Earnable, I guarantee your success with a 100% money-back guarantee
Now, it will take time. Nobody is going to build a 6-figure business overnight. But if you set aside at least 5 hours per week, and you trust and follow the system, you have a very good shot at success. And I have the examples to prove it.
Guys, it would be easier for me to promise you the world, like some unscrupulous marketer who promises you $1 million in 2 weeks. I actually find it comforting to hear the real, nuanced truth about what I can commit to you...and what I expect from you.
And sometimes, those expectations come from showing you how to change your psychology.
Look at this. Here's an email I got from someone who was skeptical:
"I'm excited to attend your presentation because I honestly *do not* believe you when you say: 'How to go from "no idea" to your first paying client. I'll walk you through how to do it in 5 days.'
Well, actually, I believe *you* - but I don't believe that for me. Obviously I'm doing it anyway, since, what do I have to lose?
I mean, I could probably sign up for fiverr, propose a deal where I do something somewhat laborious or tedious (that anyone can do), and bam, make $5.
But it's not profitable, it's not scalable, and it's probably not what I want to do long term.
If I can go from 'no idea' to first paying client in 5 days in a profitable, scalable, and desirable way, you've got yourself a deal, sir. Shut up and take my money.
I know what I want to do, but I don't want to get too attached to the idea in case it sucks: Make a living helping online course creators make their courses *amazing*.
I just have such cognitive dissonance about that being true. Why haven't I been doing this all along? Is it really true that I can be that useful to someone? Do I really have the skillz?"
My response:
"You're already creating conditions for yourself. So what if it's not scalable?
You don't start by planning to be scalable, you start by getting someone to pay you at all.
I'd recommend you change your entire approach to business. Don't try to be 40 before you're 40!"
His reply:
"Ugh, you're totally right. I've always had cart-before-horse tendencies. Is there a term for someone who has to be obsessive about everything and has a hard time just letting go / experimenting / having fun / doing things the 'wrong' way? Did you just become my therapist? Got any recs for 'teaching people to let go'? I'm like 40% serious.
No but seriously, you're totally right.
'Get someone to pay you at all'
I just wrote that on a sticky note and now it's pasted on top of the webcam on my macbook."
This guy has probably spent the last few years agonizing over why his business isn't working for him. With one email, he realized his entire approach was off. Now that he's changed it, he's suddenly open to change — and to building real income.
You know those moments that suddenly show you a totally different way of thinking about the world?
What if you could get that — today — about earning more?
That's exactly why I built Earnable.
Oh, and one more thing: I added a 100% money-back guarantee.
Just click here and scroll down to the guarantee section at the bottom...