https://seniormindset.com/ – book and workshop helping people with the shift in mindset that goes into being a senior [software] engineer.
You can tldr my philosophy as “business results trump technical excellence”
No MRR but made about $40k in sales last year. Biggest challenge is figuring out how to turn that into stable revenue. Biggest opportunity is that unlike my previous (technical) infoproducts, this one doesn’t expire in 6 months.
I might be alone in this thinking but the "price goes up every 100 purchases" really gives off the wrong vibe. I understand you are trying to convey scarcity and value, but it comes off like some sort of used car salesman pitch.
Maybe I just too cynical these days, but when I hear certain phrases from salespeople, I immediately shut down the conversation and move on. Am I being too critical? Or is there an angle that I'm just not getting?
I love the product by the way! And the price is very reasonable. So I'm just a little bewildered by the hard sales pitch.
That's there to help bump people over the "Eh I'll buy this eventually" hump, which is common with nice-to-have infoproducts. Because I don't want to do the open/closed cohort based approach at this time.
I don't have the traffic volume or brand strength to go with the "You'll remember to come back when you're ready" approach ... yet?
Depends how you count. It's based on ~10 years of working on my own career. But it's also a collection of essays so a lot of writing happened live while the career was happening.
My time tracker says I spent 139 hours last year on this project.
You can tldr my philosophy as “business results trump technical excellence”
No MRR but made about $40k in sales last year. Biggest challenge is figuring out how to turn that into stable revenue. Biggest opportunity is that unlike my previous (technical) infoproducts, this one doesn’t expire in 6 months.