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The document discusses common excuses people have for not writing a daily email, such as not knowing what to write about or feeling pressure to write every day. It argues that writing begets more writing, so the key is to start small by committing to writing just a few emails per week and allowing it to grow over time rather than feeling overwhelmed by a daily commitment. Fear of commitment, rather than failure, is the real reason people use lack of ideas as an excuse to avoid starting a daily email.
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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
94 views2 pages

Untitled Document

The document discusses common excuses people have for not writing a daily email, such as not knowing what to write about or feeling pressure to write every day. It argues that writing begets more writing, so the key is to start small by committing to writing just a few emails per week and allowing it to grow over time rather than feeling overwhelmed by a daily commitment. Fear of commitment, rather than failure, is the real reason people use lack of ideas as an excuse to avoid starting a daily email.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Common excuse that holds people from writing a daily email:

Not knowing what to write about.

Worse:

Feeling the pressure of having to write everyday when you don’t even know what to write about
now.

I know. Believe it or not, I once felt this pressure myself back when I started this very daily email.
I had heard all the fuss about daily emails and seen legends like Ben Settle and Matt Furey
pump out email after email for literal decades.

“How the F do they do that without running out of ideas” I asked myself.

So instead of a literal daily email, I made a commitment to write just 3 emails a week.

This quickly turned into five emails a week from Monday to Friday.

Which then eventually turned to a literal daily email.

And often multiple emails a day if I were running a promotion.

But unless your eyes are slantier than mine, you should see the pattern I’m drawing here:

Writing begets writing.

In other words, the more you write….. The more you end up writing.

I’m not going to go into the physics of forward momentum (just Google it if you must) but as
counterintuitive as it sounds….

The more you do something, the easier it becomes. Writing is no different. And writing a daily
email is certainly no different.

So why do people use this as an excuse to not start a daily email?

I have a hunch:

It boils down to fear. Not so much fear of failure…. But rather a fear of commitment.

Deep down they know they can write daily but they’re afraid to show up everyday.
Anyway….

If you’re one of the few who don’t hold this fear or perhaps you’re not one to give into your
fears….

And you’d like to start turning your daily writing into daily cash injections….

Then go ahead and tap this link to learn more about how my best selling email course has
helped other people achieve this:

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