
The ebook kick starts “surprisingly” with a box art, copyright warning and even a disclaimer - things that you normally don’t see on those reports sold on Digital Point. Then comes the author’s introduction on the book being a no BS guide and why he wants to lead us right into the middle of the action. So far so good. All these have raised my expectations. Now 19 pages later, the question is did it quench my thirst for innovative blackhat stuff. Read on.
The book contains 5 methods, 3 out of which are blackhat. A variation of one of the whitehat methods discussed, is pretty common and is actually very popular in DP. The other one might be one of the oldest tricks in the webmasters’ book.
Coming to blackhat, 2 out of 3 methods are relatively new. One does require you to make an investment to the tunes of $10 to $50 though. The third and the final method would have been stale if it weren’t for the sample email templates the author included, which earns some points from me. The author claims some of them actually worked for him and after going through the email templates, I too agree with him to a good extend. My only concern is the razor sharp spam filter that every inbox today has.
Now for the big question - is it really worth buying? As per the current pricing structure, the first 15 customers get it for $9 to $14 and for the rest it is $27. I would say anything less than $15 is a decent price.
Verdict
Recommended for newbies who know nothing about blackhat. Experts, look elsewhere.
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Tags: Black Hat, CPA, Craigslist, Youtube
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