Traditionally, writing's been considered a dodgy profession. It used to make horse racing look reliable by comparison. Then something changed, in around 1994. The web happened. At the time, I was giving presentations called:
The Internet Age, The Age of Creativity, because I LOVED the web immediately, with a deep passion.
I could see that writers' lives would be fundamentally changed, forever.
Finally, writers were in charge of their own destiny: the gatekeepers to traditional publishing in newspapers, magazines and books were fading away...
Unfortunately, however, the web is a huge, complex environment, which is intimidating to new (and established) writers. It's easy to get bogged down in swamps, and to chase mirages.
Writers look at the web, and some immediately get ensnared by cunning advertising, and other writers' tales of woe. They chase "writing jobs" mirages, or come to believe that they need to write for peanuts.
They just don't know enough to make good use of the web.Writing web articles is fast, easy, and it can be hugely profitable. BUT, unfortunately, many writers spin their wheels.
I've been aware of this for a long time, but resisted writing a complete how-to-write-web-articles-for-great-money product. It just didn't seem that big a deal to me. I figured that if they wanted to, writers would discover the traps and pitfalls for themselves.
Then I saw writers both new and experienced making the same mistakes over and over again. And they couldn't see the mistakes until someone pointed them out.I faced the fact that what were self-evident truths to me, were mysteries to many writers.
So I created
"Article Dynamite: Make $100,000 a Year Writing and Selling Articles" as a guide to help writers to see how it's done. (I promise you, this product will open your eyes.)