How To Buy
Online Without Getting Ripped Off
By
Jim Edwards
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I
frequently get similar questions from viewers and subscribers
all over the world.
They
often ask me "Jim, what do you think of So-and-So's product?"
or "How does So-and-So's product compare to your product?"
or "Should I buy So-and-So's product?"
Typically
these questions are about physical products, software or information
products.
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People
ask for my opinion not only because I write a newspaper column,
but also because I've produced and sold tens-of-thousands of products
to people all around the world for the past nine years.
Bottom
line: people want a clear, concise "yardstick" against
which to measure any online purchase so they never feel ripped off.
Let
me say right up front that I believe 100% in free-market competition
and that having multiple products and perspectives on the same topic
ultimately improves any marketplace for everyone.
I thank
the Firefox browser and Linux operating system for getting Microsoft
off its gigantic backside and addressing some serious issues.
But,
with so many new products coming to market online, everyone must
operate with a simple, effective criteria for evaluating any offer,
especially in the business arena.
Let
me offer you the exact same 2-part benchmark I use to evaluate any
business offering that crosses my desktop.
This
will help you avoid getting caught up in the "hysteria"
of the moment and buying on impulse, rather than on careful thought.
Part
#1 - I ask myself this question: Do I really need this in my
business or is this just something "new" for the sake
of something new?
If
I realize that I'm just getting sucked into the "try something
new" mentality, I put the purchase on hold for 48 hours to
"cool off."
If
I honestly decide I need the product, then I move on to part 2.
Par
#2 - I ask myself this question: Has the person selling me this
software, product or course actually DONE (more than once) what
they are selling me "how to" do - and can they prove it?
If
someone sells a piece of software, I want to know how much time
it saved, how much money it saved, how much effort it helped avoid,
and how much money was made as a result of using it - and I want
proof!
Let
me simply repeat the mantra of the classic Wendy's commercial from
the 1980's: "Where's the beef?"
If
someone tries to sell you a piece of software that claims to get
10,000 visitors to your site, ask to see screen shots of their server
logs and sales in their merchant account.
If
someone tries to sell you a course on creating website video, ask
how many money-making videos they've put online over the years (ask
for specific URLs) and run like heck if their personal website doesn't
have the first video on it (or if they just put one up this week)!
You'll
never go wrong if, before you buy anything online, you demand concrete,
demonstrable proof that lives up to the claims made by the person
or company selling it.
In
the immortal words of Ronald Reagan, "Trust but verify!"
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About
the Author: Jim Edwards is a syndicated
newspaper columnist and the creator of an amazing course that
will teach you step-by- step and click-by-click how to finally
create your own money-making mini-sites...
"Finally!
A Quick and Easy Way For YOU to Painlessly Set Up Your OWN
Moneymaking 'Mini' Websites... Without Being a Computer Geek,
Buying Expensive Software, or Paying Outrageous Fees To A
Webmaster!" Click Here => www.MiniSiteCreator.com
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