Is failure a thing when the cost is zero?
The only way to fail in Internet marketing is to do nothing.
Do heaps, do it often, publish it when done, fix it later, or not.
No one will remember the things that flopped.
Hell, they probably won't ever see them.
You may be the ONLY person to know it failed to make an impression.
What they will see and remember are the things that work.
Almost no creator has a career of only masterpieces.
I'm currently reading a book by Mary Shelly that I never knew she wrote.
The only one that I previously had heard of was Frankenstein.
She also wrote another five novels and several other books between the ages of 19 to 53 when she passed away.
Stephen King is now a very successful writer, but the first three novels he wrote were rejected despite King having sold several short stories to magazines.
Imagine what his career would have looked like if he had given up after the first two.
The cost of failure for those two authors was the time they spent writing for no return, but when they had some success, they could leverage that.
Writers write because they have to.
Something drives them to keep putting words on paper or screen.
Non-writers sometimes talk about writing but never get started, or if they do start, never finish.
With anything to do with Internet marketing, you'll have to write something and generally often.
I write these emails six days a week, but it's not the only writing I do.
Most days, I would write 500 to 1,000 words at least.
I haven't run out of things to say and don't expect to.
Your turn, write stuff even if it isn't great because you can only get better when you write more.
Regards,
Brent.
P.S. You may think that you have nothing to write about, but I suggest that you would have to be living under a boat on a deserted beach for that to be even vaguely true.
Even there, I suspect that I could write about the crab that joined me or the noise of the waves etc.
You can always leverage something into a blog post or an email.
Try this.
Go to Clickbank, find a product that you like the look of and write a review based on the information on the sales page.
Slap your affiliate link on the review and post it on ezine articles, your blog, a Facebook post (Nah, don't do that, they don't like it.).
Find somewhere or several somewheres to post it and see what happens.
Make sure you control that link though.
Set up link tracking in your LeadsLeap account.
It's free and reliable. https://go.wm-tips.com/llhome.