Economy have you worried?
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If you made $280,000.00 by the end of the summer you wouldn’t be worried about what any newscasters is talking about the economy. Seriously.
“The Guerrilla Balance Sheet helped me sell $280,000 of a training product in less than 6 months…” ~Martin Wales
Traditional balance sheets have you focus on costs and expenses. All the wrong stuff. This report shows you a better way. You build mini-profits centers easily that we guarantee will work.
This is a simple mind-set switch. Reading this 63 page report puts a more profitable idea into your head. You can’t help but see the profits. This report restructures the way you see business.
Plus you’ll see step-by-step how to do $280,000 for yourself. Plus, there’s a free teleseminar with Jay Conrad Levinson, the man who invented Guerrilla Marketing and he has sold 17,000,000 books without a single ad that he’s paid for. You need this.
You”ll be able laugh in the face of ANY economic climate when you learn how…
Click the link above and read it now.
Read this report now and have the best summer of your life! Best of all, we guarantee it, 100%.
To your success,
Mike Paetzold











February 23rd, 2008 at 12:41 am
Hi Mike,
In your copy on ‘Guerrilla Balanc Sheet’ you’ve repeated a line that the authors have used in their Report, i.e. “Traditional balance sheets have you focus on costs and expenses.”
The authors are totally incorrect in that statement. In fact, as most business people and all business professionals know, Balance Sheets do NOT focus on Costs and Expenses at all.
The authors criticise the accounting profession, but show a total ignorance of even the most basic aspects of accounting or business reporting.
They talk about ‘profit centres’ apparently without knowing that this is an accounting concept.
They talk about the asset that is intellectual property - although there is no indication they know that’s what they are talking about. And again they criticise the accounting profession by showing their own total ignorance of the relevant accounting standards or the discussion in the accounting profession (which originally commenced many years ago, but is still ongoing) for the treatment of intellectual property in the accounts of a business.
There are a few reasonable ideas in the Report, but none of it is new. In fact, in my view, whilst purporting to be original thinking,the whole Report actually reveals convoluted thinking which is the result of a lack of understanding of the professional business principles discussed.
It is a great pity that Mr. Levinson allowed his name to be associated with this Report, because I think it is primarily the work of the other authors.