Someone wrote me this curious question–
“I have a question regarding your recent promotion for The Secret to Attracting Money, I hope this doesn’t offend, it is a genuine question.
“You clearly want to help people out of poverty, so why are you charging $120 for the course? The people who need it most are people who are suffering greatly from having no money and because of this they can never buy the course to help them out of their situation?
“You are already a millionaire and do not need any more money to be financially secure, would it not be a wonderful gift of unconditional love to the universe to offer this course free so that it truly helps those who are suffering and cannot get out of their situation because they don’t have any money. In return the Universe will surely reward you.”
I say it’s a “curious question” because the person asking it doesn’t seem to realize a few facts —
1. I already give away my e-book, Attract Money Now.
Anyone who is broke — which is such a misleading term, as most people reading my emails or this blog actually have money and don’t appreciate or acknowledge it — but any “broke” person can go read it right now at http://www.attractmoneynow.com
2. Most people don’t respect anything handed to them.
Oh, there are exceptions to every statement, but in general “free” is not respected. You can have my e-book mentioned above absolutely gratis, but did you go get it? I’ve been giving it away for over two years now. Did you read it? Did you use it? (Be honest.)
3. A physical product takes a lot of people to create, all of whom need paid.
If I charge for my audio course, The Secret to Attract Money, it’s because about 300 people are involved in its creation, marketing and distribution. My trying to pay all their fees isn’t wise or sane or easily possible. It’d also be unfair, as it would cause an imbalance in the ebb and flow of the financial world. Money needs to circulate. I’m not the creator of it; I’m just a channel. So are you. I do my part. You are supposed to do yours.
But let’s look a little closer at this.
Limiting beliefs are also invisible beliefs.
That’s right: Limiting beliefs are also invisible beliefs.
You don’t see them or usually even realize you have them.
The person asking the above curious question doesn’t realize he or she is exposing their limiting beliefs about money.
What about you?
Do you think money is evil?
Do you think there’s scarcity in the world?
Do you think poor people should be handed things?
Do you think wealthy people should just give away everything?
Do you think you have enough — or too much — money?
Your answers help reveal your invisible limiting beliefs.
Money is neutral.
What you unconsciously think about money is what is causing you to attract it — or repel it.
If you want to become more aware of all of this, and free yourself to live a life of magic and miracles, and to have enough money to help the people and the causes you care about, then go check out — http://www.SecretToAttractingMoney.com
Ao Akua,
joe
PS — Remember, if you are “broke,” then you can go read my e-book, Attract Money Now, free, over at — http://www.AttractMoneyNow.com
How do you really attract success in life?
What’s the formula for having, doing, or being what you truly want?
Long term friends who’ve watched me achieve success in several areas — writing, speaking, movies, music, fitness, and more — say my formula for attracting and achieving goals is easy to spot. Basically, it looks like this:
1. Set Intention
2. Hire Coaches
3. Clear Fears
4. Take Action
5. Persist
That’s it. And that formula will work for virtually any goal you want to achieve.
Let me explain.
Currently I’m deeply involved in the production of my fourth music album. This is fairly startling news, because less than two years ago I had never written a song, or sung a tune, or played more than a few chords on the guitar, or recorded with a band, and so on. Yet today I am recording my fourth album.
In the studio with some legends of music — music producer Daniel Barrett, famous drummer Joe Vitale, bass player Glenn Fukunaga — everyone was commenting on how much my singing, guitar playing, and songwriting had improved. It wasn’t an incremental improvement. It was a leap ahead.
It was, in their words, dramatic.
And a few days later, when “Guitar Monk” Mathew Dixon came into the studio to play guitar on one of my new songs, he stopped everything to say the words you long to hear.
“I’ve been meaning to tell you something for a while now,” he began. “I was going to put it in an email. Then I was going to tell you at a dinner. But it feels like now is the time to tell you.”
He then paused and said, “I’m proud of you.”
Tears welled up in my eyes.
I wasn’t thinking about those words, but when I heard them, I knew they were the words I longed to hear.
Mathew went on to explain that he teaches lots of people, but not all do the work. He added, “You demonstrate what you teach. When you decided to become a musician, you gathered your support, you took action, and you stayed at it. Your life reveals the formula for success.”
I was pretty choked up to hear all of this. But I thought I would share it with you as the lesson is relevant. It reveals how YOU can achieve your goals.
So don’t think this formula is just for me.
For example, legendary drummer Joe Vitale told us he practices playing the drums two hours a day. Two hours! Talk about taking massive action.
Two hours every day!!!
Think about that.
Here’s a man who has been playing for over four decades. He’s a master at it. He’s the drummer rock and roll legends call — from Neil Young to Joe Walsh to Sammy Hagar to you name it.
Yet he continues to work on himself, stretch himself, stay sharp with constant action, and more.
Joe’s an inspiration to me. He knows the formula for success.
Again, the formula looks like this:
1. Set Intention
2. Hire Coaches
3. Clear Fears
4. Take Action
5. Persist
What do you want to achieve or attract?
Take each one of those steps and do them.
Here’s how it looked when I used the steps for my music:
1. Set Intention. I decided to become a musician. It all begins when you declare what you want.
2. Hire coaches. I put together a team of mentors and coaches. To excel in any area, you virtually always need a guide.
3. Clear Fears. I had fears bubble up. Self-doubt, lack of faith, negativity. I relied on my coaches and my background in self-help to erase all the fears as they arose. The more you get clear, the faster you attract.
4. Take action. I took guitar and voice lessons, I attended a songwriting seminar (with Ray Wylie Hubbard and Kevin Welch), I hired a famous singer-songwriter (Lee Coulter), I bought books, I wrote songs, I practiced every day.
5. Persist. I continued to take action, rely on my coaches, clear fears, etc.
As a direct result of using those five steps, I’m officially a musician with four — count ’em, four — albums to my credit.
What do you want to achieve?
The path is clear.
Start doing the above steps today and tomorrow you may hear the words you long to hear.
Ao Akua,
joe
PS – You can listen and even download the title track to my new album, titled “The Healing Song,” at http://www.TheHealingSong.com Grammy winner David Darling composed and played the beautiful cello music on that track. Give it a listen.
PPS – Here’s a short video of famed drummer Joe Vitale talking about my improvement (on the new album, The Healing Song) since the recording of my first singer-songwriter album (Strut!) just eight months ago:
The hit AMC television show, Mad Men, has been riveting and repulsing me since I first started watching it years ago. You’d think I’d turn it off. But there are moments in the show when brilliance comes through and I sit in awe. Then again, there are way too many moments where I’m just disgusted.
In case you didn’t know, Mad Men is a soap opera-ish adult drama about an up-start advertising agency in New York City in the 1960s. The characters are alive and easy to love or hate; the sets are so real it feels like you time traveled right to the sixties; the conflicts, personal and public, are engaging; the dialogue is human, real, and sometimes profound. All in all, it’s no wonder the show is a hit. It’s prime time drama with unique elements. And it’s won 15 Golden Globe awards and 4 Emmys — so far.
So why does it repulse me?
Virtually everyone on Mad Men has at least one psychological problem. The leader of the pack is of course Don Draper, brilliantly played by actor Jon Hamm. Draper has so many demons inside his skull, he’s a walking version of an internal hell. He’s self-destructive with women and booze, but he’s also often a genius at ad campaigns. He’s got so many secrets he might as well call himself Freud’s best candidate for therapy. In fact, he’s not even Don Draper. That’s the identity the character stole long before he became an ad man. Ah, the twists into mental hell.
Of course, I didn’t like it at all when Lane Pryce, a charming character in the show (played by Jared Harris), embezzled money from the company, was caught by Don Draper, and committed suicide. That episode is still stuck in my craw. I wasn’t even going to write a blog post about the show until after that unforgettably sad airing. I liked Lane. But he, too, was deeply flawed. More than that, people unconsciously model what they see. Seeing a strong character choose suicide is not showing wisdom. Again, we unconsciously attract what we believe and expect.
But the psychological issues don’t bother me so much as the business practices the agency demonstrates.
Lying, betrayal, manipulation, head games — it’s the way of life on the TV show. The series reveals the struggling agency is a prostitute that will sell anything for money. Their chief secretary, Joan Holloway (played by Christina Hendricks), even sells her body for a one night (actually, it was a one evening) stand to get a partnership in the agency and sway a voting client to give the agency a new account. And the agency itself takes on a car company they openly believe manufactures unreliable cars. Anything for a buck.
I know something about ad agencies. I’ve studied and written about some of the real life “Mad Men” in history. Most of the names are legends in the business (and sometimes dropped on the TV show for authenticity), but many you may never have heard of unless you go Google them: John Caples, Bruce Barton, David Ogilvy, Helen Woodward, Claude Hopkins, Rosser Reeves, and more.
These people were geniuses at writing copy and creating ads that pulled in sales. Some, like Maxwell Sackheim, created ads that were so powerful in making sales, they ran unchanged for forty years.
What I admire about the real Mad Men (and Mad Women) I studied were their creativity and sincerity. Bruce Barton, the cofounder of BBDO, and the subject of my book, The Seven Lost Secrets of Success, believed sincerity was the key to success. He turned down clients he didn’t believe in, walking away from thousands to millions of dollars.
John Caples, one of the most famous copywriters in history (he wrote the legendary 1926 ad, “They Laughed When I Sat Down At The Piano, But When I Started to Play…!”), said Barton’s secret was one word: sincerity.
I don’t see that secret practiced in the TV show.
Obviously, there is much truth to the stories and characters in the AMC series. You can read plenty of books about that era and discover many businesses practiced that sort of insincere, manipulative advertising, marketing, and selling. Some still do today. I’m not overlooking that reality. I’ve seen it first hand.
Decades ago in Houston I was in the offices of a corporation, there to write a sales letter for the company, when the president took a call and started yelling, “If you want a $#!&**!!! war, then you got it!” He then slammed down the phone. He turned to me, smiled, and continued our conversation as if nothing had happened. It was unnerving. I was seeing “Mad Men” the TV show in action.
I didn’t like it.
That’s the dark side of business; the side that repulses me.
But there’s also the bright side.
What I am pointing out is the fact that many people and businesses practice compassionate capitalism. They practice sincerity. They did then. They do now. They work hard to offer a product or service they believe in, and they market it in ethical ways. I think they should get equal time on the air.
The Internet helped me discover a more loving way of doing business decades ago. That’s when people who should be competitors of mine became affiliates, coauthors, and supporters of mine. It was refreshing to see online businesses openly share in the income, openly share credit, and openly work on deals together. I saw love in online marketing. I practice it, and teach it. I’ve written about it, too, numerous times, and in numerous books. This love based approach to business is alive and well. Not just online, of course, but everywhere — if you look.
But I rarely see that portrayed in the Mad Men series. Sometimes Don Draper will do a noble thing. Often he exhibits genius in creating or analyzing ads and concepts. Sometimes a young executive will reveal strong ethics (usually the character named Ken Cosgrove, played by Aaron Staton) in the show.
Unfortunately, more often than not, the show reveals the shadow side of business and life. If you don’t educate and enlighten yourself, the negative elements broadcast in the show may distort your view of reality; you’ll see the negative even in the positive.
That’s where I want to see a remedy.
Here’s what I suggest:
Quit watching the show. Yea, I know, I’m not going to stop either. Not with one episode left in the current season. So at least give your brain some balance and read some of the more loving business books and read about the more wholesome business characters.
Here are a few suggestions (in no particular order):
Start Something That Matters by Blake Mycoskie
The Man Who Sold America: The Amazing (but True!) Story of Albert D. Lasker and the Creation of the Advertising Century by Jeffrey L. Cruikshank and Arthur W. Schultz
The Seven Lost Secrets of Success by Joe Vitale
The King of Madison Avenue: David Ogilvy and the Making of Modern Advertising by Kenneth Roman
My Life in Advertising and Scientific Advertising by Claude Hopkins
Faith and Fortune: How Compassionate Capitalism Is Transforming American Business by Marc Gunther
Philanthrocapitalism: How Giving Can Save the World by M. Bishop
Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think by Peter Diamandis
Screw Business As Usual by Richard Branson
Anything You Want by Derek Sivers
The Real Mad Men: The Renegades of Madison Avenue and the Golden Age of Advertising by Andrew Cracknell
Mad Women: The Other Side of Life on Madison Avenue in the 60’s and Beyond by Jane Maas
And remember: You can be the positive example you long to see.
You may not see it on Mad Men, but you can live it.
Rather than look for inspiration, be the inspiration.
Be the hero.
Sincerely.
Ao Akua,
Joe
PS – What books have you read showing a more positive side of doing business? I’d love to know and I’m sure others would, too. Please post a comment and tell us. Thank you.
“The Healing Song” is an original hypnotic sonnet written and performed by me, with original music composed and performed by Grammy winner David Darling. You can listen to it — and download it for FREE — right here: Click here to get “The Healing Song” for free. Enjoy!
I have yet another amazing free gift for you.
I’ll tell you what it is in a minute, but notice how much more eager and attentive you are to read this post.
Why?
“Free” is the most powerful word in marketing. I’ve seen people scan entire sales letters unconsciously looking for the word “free” in it. I’ve seen people so eager for something free that they would read the word “fee” as “free” and misinterpret the offer.
A decade ago I offered an e-class on Hypnotic Writing. The fee was $1,500. But people fogged out over the price and misread “fee” as “free” and called to sign up. When I asked for their money, they were surprised. They truly thought it was free.
That said, I’ve been preaching the merits of giving things away for decades. I’ve always personally given away a lot, usually books, but in the last year alone I’ve given away five cars.
Yes, cars.
Giving is so important that I’ve written one book on it and coauthored another. It’s the core of my life. Obviously, I give away the posts on this blog, and my podcasts, and my videos, but I also give away items I could sell, such as my book, Attract Money Now.
As powerful as giving and the word “free” is in life, I’m a little confused that more people don’t do it. When I consult with people (usually for free), they fear giving away their product or service will cheapen their brand and ruin their business.
Even when I tell them Google gives a free service and yet is a billion dollar company, they don’t get it.
Even when I point out several books offer proof that free is a new business model, they are still reluctant.
Why?
I used to scratch my head about this until it came time for me to promote my music.
As you may or may not know, I’ve recreated myself as a musician. I have three albums out and a fourth being mixed in the studio right now. While I’ve been in marketing for decades, I’ve not had to promote music before. I found it a new breed of cat, and with three thousand new albums coming out weekly (!), the competition is staggering.
How do you stand out in the crowd?
Obviously music videos and concerts and publicity can help. I’ll have music videos up soon, and I’ll announce a public performance, too.
But what gets people to listen to your music in the first place?
I struggled with marketing my music for a few months. Oh, I did well offering it to my email list. They are fans and tend to support my passions. (I love you all.)
But how do you make a dent in the public’s mind?
One way is through videos on YouTube.
But that’s not enough. You still have to get eyeballs there.
What else can you do?
Enter the magic word FREE.
There are different ways of giving, of course.
Giving a song in exchange for an email address is one way, but that’s not really free, is it? You’re still asking for something (the email address).
Giving a lesser quality song in exchange and urging people to buy the CD with the higher quality song on it is also a version of free, but it’s manipulative. It’s still not free.
Free means no strings, or catches, or hidden barriers or steps.
Free means FREE.
So I decided to practice a more committed version of giving. I’m giving away the title track from my next album, tilted “The Healing Song.”
This is an original healing sonnet written and performed by me, with original music composed and performed by Grammy winner David Darling.
YOURS FREE: This is an original healing sonnet written and performed by me, with original music composed and performed by Grammy winner David Darling. You can listen to it — and download it for FREE — right here: Click here to get “The Healing Song” for free.
You can listen to it — and download it for free — right here: Click here to get “The Healing Song” for free.
Of course, I’m hoping you love the track and go tell all your friends.
So yes, I’m promoting my music in this post, but there’s a larger lesson here for you.
What are you giving?
In general, it goes like this:
If you want more money, give money. Give to wherever you receive inspiration.
If you want people to know about your service, give away your service. Let them sample it.
If you want more love in your life, give love away. Open the door to receiving by giving.
Get the idea?
In general, the more you give, the more you will receive.
Where will you give today?
And what will you give?
Ao Akua,
PS — My earlier healing music albums are: Strut!, Blue Healer, and Aligning to Zero. My next album, out in September, will have three Grammy winners involved and is called The Healing Song. All those sites have free samples from the albums on them. Enjoy.