Ok, what the heck is this?<p>I decided to go ahead and throw an email at this to see if anything came up. The wording sets my "scam" sensors off like mad. Maybe I just have a learned response to "one step away", "just one click away', "don't let anything stop you know" types of wording.<p>Anyhow, after seeing that the "click here to enroll for free" thing ... actually seemed to do that, it sent me a confirmation email -- with more "red-flag" wording, a confirmation link, <i>and a VCard</i> on it of all things.<p>The link did the normal confirmation jump, and included a download to a "cheat sheet" for creating a business website that sells.<p>The cheat sheet has actual content. A lot of it. A lot of it's "common sense", and there's an interesting consistent misspelling, but it's not bullshit.<p>This is either a very prolonged scam, which I'm starting to doubt, or what could be a hugely successful marketing campaign for this person and their company. If they're being legitimate in their claim of sending out "one email a day" with a tip to people, for free, where that tip isn't bullshit but is just something that the type of people who respond to "red-flag" wording don't know (or might not, or whatever), that's .... that's a huge market. That will pay you. And you'd be "doing good", reducing ignorance.<p>Maybe I'm reading too much into this, maybe I'm not. Guess I'll have to wait a few days to make a call though.<p>Edit: Found the product, at $197. That said, if the emails he sends out are legit, it's a novel (to me) method of using this type of thing for sales / marketing of a product that has any sort of substance, and it may very well be worth $200 for the type of people that would buy it. I'm keeping an eye on this.