sandalwood
July 29, 2012, 10:51 AM
Hi Gordon,
I'm not sure what you mean by "blind ads"...
Do you mean ads for information products which don't "give away" the information in the ad? I think any "instructional" product can't give away everything in the ad - otherwise there's nothing to sell...
That holds for not only "money-making" products, but any kind of instructional product (e.g. topics like: how to beat writer's block, how to draw using the right side of your brain, how to win friends and influence people, etc.)...
Maybe that's not what you mean...
Best wishes,
Dien
Dien,
This is how the business dictionary defines a blind ad:
An advertisement with limited contact information that fails to include the name of the party placing the ad. For example, a business may place a help-wanted advertisement that includes only job requirements and a box number for mailing applications.
I am not saying this is Gordon's definition, I am saying this is how the business dictionary defines it.
Tom
I'm not sure what you mean by "blind ads"...
Do you mean ads for information products which don't "give away" the information in the ad? I think any "instructional" product can't give away everything in the ad - otherwise there's nothing to sell...
That holds for not only "money-making" products, but any kind of instructional product (e.g. topics like: how to beat writer's block, how to draw using the right side of your brain, how to win friends and influence people, etc.)...
Maybe that's not what you mean...
Best wishes,
Dien
Dien,
This is how the business dictionary defines a blind ad:
An advertisement with limited contact information that fails to include the name of the party placing the ad. For example, a business may place a help-wanted advertisement that includes only job requirements and a box number for mailing applications.
I am not saying this is Gordon's definition, I am saying this is how the business dictionary defines it.
Tom