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Fluency Formula Lite

3.6k members • Free

Daily Email House

495 members • Free

161 contributions to Daily Email House
SUCCESSFUL COURSE LAUNCH!
Hey @John Bejakovic ! SO STOKED today! I did a launch for my mid ticket digital course called “First Door Formula” this week… AND I MADE MY FIRST SALE!! $197 IN THE BANK PEOPLE! It’s SO COOL because I can and will continue to sell this content going forward! First of many Lord willing! Anyone in this ‘ere community in the real estate space wanna team up and do a list swap?
1 like • 2d
Well done and celebrated! 🎉🎉🎉
Gratuitous Fun Fridays
We need a thread for gratuitous fun: Stuff that has nothing to do with marketing, business, copy, daily emails... but that is fun for fun's sake. (Even a little bit of fun is better than none.) I'd like to kick things off with the attached (and real, not AI) photo of a beaver, which I put in an email a long time ago, apropos of nothing. If you have jokes, funny pictures, memes, ideas for "disconnected infotainment," put 'em in here. On Fridays... or really on any other days.
Gratuitous Fun Fridays
2 likes • Apr '25
I am in love with Phoebe Waller-Bridge because of this story. And Fleabag, of course. Warning: it's in really bad taste. 😂 https://youtu.be/B31s0pLCGdc?si=tnIUJH0TgH5jw44k
0 likes • 2d
@Samantha Kindheart Wow! There's so much in this share. Celebrating you. 💪🔥
High percentage of failures
I recently rewatched an old movie called Seconds. Uncomfortable, but also very interesting. I won't give away the plot here, in case you ever want to go see it yourself. I'll just share a quote I wrote down, because it was relevant to what we all do: "You know son, when I began this business, I was a young man with an idea. I wasn't aiming to make a lot of money. Helping others, help them to find a little happiness. Oh heck, not just the rich. You see, I got tremendous comfort in the thought that in my small way I was waging a battle against human misery. And I was, too! Except we do have a high percentage of failures. I guess that's to be expected, but it hurts me." If you are in the information selling business... I reckon you got into it at least in part to wage a battle against human misery, in your own small way. I also reckon that you have a high percentage of failures. Regardless of how good your information is. Regardless of how accessible you try to make it. Regardless of how hard you try to motivate people. People just don't get the results that you know are possible, or any results at all. Does this hurt you? Do you just shrug it off and say, "That's to be expected"? I'm curious about your experiences, what you think about this, and what if anything you do about it. Let me know. And if you like I can share what my experiences are and what I think and do.
High percentage of failures
2 likes • 15d
I used to sell information products and business coaching packages focusing on strategy. Over time, it did get me down. I knew so much more was possible, and I wasn't helping people the way I really wanted. We'd come up with a killer strategy, and then people wouldn't do it. Or they'd do it, but it didn't get the results we hoped for. It led to one of many mid-life crises. "What am I doing with my life?" I started working with a business coach, and discovered how transformational the coaching aspect could be. Slowly, I stopped selling information and started helping people discover the resilience and resources within themselves. I started facilitating the kind of deep, lasting change I'd always knew was possible, but couldn't reach before. These days, I sprinkle the information in sparingly. I focus on experience, reflection, insight provocation. If you're still in the business of selling information, it might help to keep these things in mind: #1 - A pure intention to help is more powerful than you know. People can feel it when you care, and it makes a difference. #2 - You never know the real impact of what you sell. Hope is a force. Maybe they don't get the results, but they find the courage to keep going, or they get introduced to the next step on their journey that they never would have found without you. Because you can't know the impact, it's not worth obsessing over. For me, the greatest impact with my clients comes from the fact that I see them as whole, complete, capable. On some level, they've lost faith in themselves, and I don't buy their bullshit stories. They feel what I see, and it reminds them of the truth of who they are. I love watching people come alive to their own awesomeness and the simple joy of being human.
0 likes • 15d
@John Bejakovic 😍
New boy on the block
Hi guys: Just signed up for Daily Email Habit yesterday; got my first email puzzle today. So I wrote the email - and it pretty much flew off my fingers. And I sent it too - to my lone subscriber, me! (It's a new list.) What a great prompt! Looking forward to tomorrow....
1 like • 30d
Welcome and well done. 🤗
Do you have a welcome sequence?
This morning I woke up and saw that i have a new ThriveCart order notification. I'm not promoting anything new, I have no current deadlines, and this was not simply a rebill notification for a Daily Email Habit subscriber. What could this order be? I opened up the email to see: DESCRIPTION: Copy Riddles AMOUNT: $997.00 I started to pat myself on the back. For one thing, it's always nice to get a $997 course sale. For another, I figured that this emails an email I wrote a few days ago, in which I promoted Copy Riddles, can now go into my "Emails that did well" file. And sure enough, the dude bought thorugh that email ("A new episode about clever product names"). Only one problem though... The dude got onto my list on May 18. He bought today, May 28. I haven't reached out yet to this guy. I don't know what he knows about me, how presold he was, or whether this email really did do magic. I suspect that ANY decent email promoting Copy Riddles might have gotten this guy to click through, at which point, maybe the sales page is what really sold him. On the flip side, had I not sent this email a few days ago, promoting Copy Riddles, odds are excellent I would NOT have made this sale. That's an argument for regularly promoting offers from your back catalog in your daily emails. It's also an argument for having a welcome sequence, in which you gradually guide new people along through the offers you have. I don't have a welcome sequence. I'm apparently losing money. Do you have a welcome sequence? Why or why not?
Do you have a welcome sequence?
0 likes • 30d
I have a welcome email, but not a sequence. I think it's a good idea because you can intentionally introduce people to what's on offer and invite them in right away. Then they don't have to wait for the right match daily email.
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Steph Benedetto
6
1,354points to level up
@steph-b-2125
Creative Catalyst, Coach and Storyteller with a love for dragons and impossible questions. Inappropriately joyful.

Active 8h ago
Joined Dec 20, 2024
Portugal
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