My keyboard stopped orking

I used to be an avid gamer.

I’m talking 10+ hours a day (or however many hours of free time I had available that day) for weeks, months, and years on end.

These days I still like to dabble in the occasional video game—it’s part of my job in some way and helps me in the pursuit of my curiosity and content creation endeavors—but it’s nowhere the same amount as I used to.

Still, it left me with many valuable experiences, and insights, not to mention social skills and English language proficiency (I taught myself how to read, speak, and write English from a young age through video games—true story) and a unique frame of mind about how I see and approach the world that I wouldn’t have if it weren’t for my years of gaming.

Some other things I gained are the tools and equipment.

One of which is a mechanical Corsair gaming keyboard—something that makes writing a simple email a lot more fun.

But with a mechanical keyboard comes the problem that once in a while one of the switches (the things underneath the keys that push down when you press them and spring back up when you release the key) stop working.

I had one such faulty key a few days ago.

So there I was, without a working ‘w’ key.

The solution?

Take apart my entire keyboard, unscrew a dozen of screws, dismantle it piece by piece, remove the switches, see why it’s not working, try to come up with something to fix it.

Long story short, I got it working again.

Now it was time to reassemble my keyboard.

But just then I happened to get stuck when it came time to screwing the screw in the right places. Some wouldn’t fit and others fit too easily. I was stumped for a while until I realized the keyboard used 2 different size screws, yet the difference was so small it was hardly visible.

After figuring this out I easily got the right screw in the right places on got the keyboard together and working once again.

Moral of the story is, sometimes you’re doing everything just right, only to have used a wrong-sized screw in the wrong place and nothing works.

That’s often the case when it comes to writing copy, and more specifically email copy, as well.

I’ve had plenty of emails that bombed early in my career only to try that same email again a year later, with just one or two small revisions, and suddenly they turned into top-performing emails that earned me anywhere from $500 to $1,000 per email.

The difficult part is realizing you’re working with 2 different-sized screws.

So to help you out, I’m doing something I’ve never done nor advertised publicly yet, something I’ve only done with clients behind closed doors (and with wonderful success stories).

And I’ll do it entirely for FREE.

Well, more or less. I’ll do it for free for everyone who’s bought Email Valhalla.

Here’s what I’ll do:

If you own Email Valhalla (whether you bought it 2 months ago or you buy it today), you may send me up to 2 of your emails for me to critique. I’ll tell you what I like, what I don’t like, where you should pay more attention to, how you can improve your emails, and most importantly, how you can revise your email to generate more sales, clients, clicks, opt-ins, referrals, or whatever your goal is.

There’s only one condition:

You have to send me your 2 pieces of email copy within the next 48 hours for me to critique your copy.

It can be anything, an email you’ve previously sent out for example or a new one you’re planning to send as a standalone or ones that’s part of an upcoming launch—whatever you want.

Anyway.

If you don’t have Email Valhalla yet and you’d like me to critique your email copy, then get it here today: https://alexvandromme.com/valhalla

PS:

Once again, here’s what to do:

  1. Make sure you’ve bought Email Valhalla previously or buy it today

  2. Send me up to 2 emails you’d like me to critique within the next 48 hours

  3. ???

  4. Receive my copy critique and use that to write better emails in the future that’ll help you get paid.

Final time, here’s the link to get Email Valhalla: https://alexvandromme.com/valhalla