How I make more money the more inadequate I feel

Thanks to the type of business I run, I regularly wake up to notifications telling me someone bought a product of mine.

Less regularly, but not THAT irregularly, comes along a feeling of inadequacy or imposter syndrome where I doubt if my products are actually worth what I’m charging.

It’s a funny feeling that.

And it happens to everyone in this business. I’ve never spoken with someone who hasn’t, at one point (most of the time at many points) in their career, felt the same way.

See, almost every single person with every single product will launch it at a certain price, more often than not severely UNDERvaluing the product.

Then through repeated additions, refinements, and customer feedback, it becomes clear that the product has significantly improvement in quality and a price increase is justified (if not necessary).

Yet after a few of those the question arises: “Is my product actually worth this much?”.

Yes.

Yes, it is.

Case in point: it’s helping more people than it was before, more people are buying it, and most, if not all, people who bought your product continue buying other products of yours (showing they were at least satisfied enough with your product, more likely completely ecstatic about it, to continue trusting you and wanting, even needing, more of your good stuff).

So why do I (and many others) get this feeling?

Well, for one, we clearly remember where we came from and how we started.

That $500 offer? I once sold it for $50. In fact, at one point long ago, people could get it for free (only then nobody seemed to want it, much less get the same amount of results from it—big lesson here).

Another point.

Everything inside my own products is obvious to me. I already know all that stuff. There’s nothing new to me. Nothing I need repeated either because I do it all the time. I created it. It’s based on my experience.

You wouldn’t pay someone $1,000 to tell you what your name is, where you live, how old you are, and what kind of work you do or to have them help you solve a math problem you solved 10 minutes ago.

My point is.

It takes a lot of experience, wisdom, and time to understand/see the value in the information you can offer people (As Dan Koe, who probably got it from someone else, often says, every single person has a $1,000,000 idea in their head right now, they just don’t see it).

But there’s a benefit to all of this as well.

Everytime I get this feeling, I can’t just sit around and do nothing until it passes. No I have to do something. I have to justify it to myself again and again and again that these products are in fact worth the price, if not many times more.

I just can’t help it.

And so I add new content, improve upon my old content, I add bonuses, share more value, write better stories, or even create new additional offers (more often than not entirely for free or at a large discount for existing customers) just to improve the product even more.

So I’m not sure if I’ll ever have a 100% completed product I’ll stop tampering with.

But then again, I’m not sure if I’d want to. After all, stagnation is a fate worse than death.

Anyway.

If you want to learn how to sell your own products so you can get a similar feeling of inadequacy so that you’ll in turn get the undying motivation to create more and better products, only to later increase the price and keep the cycle going (beware, it’s addictive).

Then check out Email Valhalla here: https://alexvandromme.com/valhalla

You don’t know what you know

Once in a while, I’ll receive a question similar to the following one I received recently:

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I don’t feel ready and don’t think I have enough knowledge to create something to sell as a product. I don't want to rip people off by making a course that won't help them.

What should I do?

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And I get it.

I’ve been there myself.

It’s so easy to get stuck in your own echo chamber of people you know, things you do, tips & tricks you know, experiences you’ve shared with others, and overall knowledge you’ve learned.

Everything you know seems obvious to you because you know it.

But that certainly isn’t the case for other people.

I can guarantee this: you can many facts & figures others do not, you’ve done countless things others haven’t even thought about, you’ve picked up hundred of lessons, went through thousands of small periods of trial & error, and talked to god-knows-how-many people from all sort of backgrounds, with all sorts of experiences, who all left their imprint on you, leaving you with a 100%—this isn’t even up for debate—unique perspective on life and everything that (doesn’t) interest you.

Yet you still wonder if you’ve got anything useful to offer to people?

Answer me this:

Is there something, anything, you know in life that helps you?

The answer is yes. Obviously. There are many such things you know.

Now think about stuff you know that helps you on a daily basis, doing things you like, things you’re passionate about and could talk about for hours.

That’s useful information.

Especially for people who want to do the same things—not the ones who’re already doing the same things, the ones you know and look up to, the ones you’re surrounded with who got you thinking “everyone knows this” in the first place.

Now your next question should be: “So how do I get these people together, show them I know my stuff, and sell my new product?”

Well, I’m glad you asked.

Because I’ve got just the thing for you. Let me introduce to you Email Valhalla. It’s my flagship course which will teach you how to build your Email Empire where you can grow your list, build your authority, get people to trust you, and consistently and efficiently sell your products—ones that’ll actually help them.

Click here to find out more about Email Valhalla: https://alexvandromme.gumroad.com/l/valhalla