I stopped over 20 years ago and haven’t bought anything similar since except for raffle tickets for good causes. I see those as more of a donation than the chance of winning a prize. Perhaps I need to change my mental intent, and I might win something. Anyway, the main reason that people buy lottery tickets is that the act of buying gives them hope and a chance to dream of better things. It gives them a rush of adrenaline that they need in their, mostly, non-exciting lives. It’s the same feeling most people get when they discover making money online and begin buying those shiny objects that make other people money. They get a rush of hope that this time might be different, but 98% of them never take the first steps to test the method presented. The act of buying is enough to recharge the hope. Most of them never even go through all the information provided, let alone try any of it out. All of you who are building an email list will see similar behaviours in those who subscribe. They don’t even open the first email with the link to whatever it was that they signed up for. Maybe 10% of those who do open the email click on the link in that email. Ignore those who claim 60% of subscribers from cold email. The only way you get that is via bots signing up for you. The subscriber count is not relevant. The only thing that counts is the clicks. The only way you can make money online is when people click your links. When you give them hope, they’ll click. It’s better to give them more than hope, and you must also give them value and the incentive to follow through. But, as they say, you can lead a marketer to piles of cash, but you can’t make them pick any up. Sorry, that might have originally been something about horses and drinking. I think the analogy holds true regardless. There’s either a horse or a pile of cash behind this link. https://go.wm-tips.com/diamond. I know for sure that it’s not just evidence that a horse has been there. Regards, |