The Demand Letter Machine
You know that thing where a company owes you money and you call customer service six times and nothing happens? The gym that won't cancel your membership. The contractor who ghosted after taking your deposit. The airline that owes you a refund from three months ago. You're not getting anywhere because phone calls are easy to ignore.
You know what's not easy to ignore? A formal demand letter.
Go to Claude and type: "I hired a contractor to paint my house for two thousand dollars. I paid a thousand-dollar deposit on March first. He started the job, did one room, then stopped showing up. It's been six weeks and he won't return my calls. Write me a formal demand letter requesting my deposit back within fourteen days. Include references to my state's consumer protection laws, mention that I'll file a complaint with the Better Business Bureau and state attorney general if I don't hear back, and keep the tone firm but professional. Also tell me exactly where to send copies of this letter to put maximum pressure on them."
Claude writes you a letter that looks like it came from a lawyer's office. Most people fold the second they get something on paper with legal language in it. You didn't hire an attorney. You didn't spend three hundred bucks. You spent two minutes.
Now here's the business. Post in local Facebook groups and neighborhood apps: "I write professional demand letters for people dealing with shady companies, forty bucks." Landlords keeping deposits, mechanics overcharging, companies ducking refunds. Everyone's got one of these sitting in their life right now. Five letters a week is two hundred bucks, and each one takes you about ten minutes.
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Wil Waldon
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The Demand Letter Machine
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