Hey there, beautiful!
Yesterday I was sitting down, trying to plan Islaโs 7th birthday (how is that even possible?!), and in between picking a cake theme and figuring out where to fit a bunch of excited 7-year-olds, I found myself scrollingโฆ
And there it was. Another $5,000 course, promising to be the 'only thing' Iโll ever need to succeed.
Weโve all seen them. The fancy high-ticket coaching programs, the exclusive masterminds, the courses that promise to change your lifeย (but cost more than a family vacation to Disneyland).
And honestly?ย Iโm over it.
$5,000. $8,000. Heck, Iโve even seen $20,000+ programs that are just a handful of pre-recorded modules and a Facebook group.
And hereโs the thingโmaybe I could sell a $5,000 course.
I have some skills, experience, and the receipts to back it up.
But I wonโt. And Iโm going to tell you why.
There was a time when high-ticket coursesย kind ofย made sense.
Back when online education was just taking off, and before you could learnย literallyย anything on YouTube, paying thousands for expert knowledge was the norm...
But now?
The high-ticket game has turned into a bit of a pyramid scheme....
Hereโs how it usually works.
Someone creates a course that teaches somethingย (business, mindset, marketingโwhatever).
The price is set sky-high to create theย illusionย of exclusivity.
They spend most of their timeย sellingย the course instead of actually improving it.
Once youโre inside, you realize a big chunk of the course is justโฆย teaching you how to sell that same high-ticket course of your own.
And so the cycle repeats.
Itโs not about helping people.ย Itโs about making the most money with the least effort.
I hate that.
I can already hear the high-ticket coaches:
โBut if people pay more, theyโll value it more!โ
Thatโs the excuse they use to justify the price.
And yeah, I get itโwhen you invest in something, youโre more likely to take it seriously.
But letโs be honest.ย Do you really believe a PDF workbook, some pre-recorded videos, and a couple of Zoom calls are worth $5,000?
I donโt.
A high price tag doesnโt magically make content more valuable. It just makes it less accessible to the people who actually need it.
Which is exactly why I refuse to play that game.
I donโt want to run a business where the only people who can afford to learn from me are the ones with deep pockets.
I want to create products that people can actually affordโand actually use.
So instead of a $5,000 course, here's what I focus on instead...
๐ Simple products that people actually need and can grabย without overthinking or second-guessing.
๐ Practical tutorials that give you quick winsโno 10-hour fluff-filled courses required.
๐ Supportive community where everyone gets value,ย not just the ones paying top dollar.
๐ Real education that helps you create things people actually wantโnot just programs about selling programs.
Listen, if you genuinely want to sell a high-ticket offer because youโre providing insane, hands-on, high-touch valueโgo for it.
But if youโre doing it because you think itโs the only way to make good money online?
Youโve been lied to.
The people making the real money arenโt the ones selling $5,000 courses.
Theyโre the ones selling products people actually want and can afford.
And thatโs what Iโm here for.
If youโre sick of overpriced, overhyped, overcomplicated business models that drain your wallet and waste your timeโstick with me.
Iโm building something different.
Something built on actual value, not fake exclusivity.
Something that helps people, instead of just preying on their desperation.
Something that works without a high-ticket sales pitch.
And if that sounds like what you need?
Then youโre exactly the kind of person I want in my world.๐
Amber xo
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