Regarding Adwords Empire…
I spent most of today reviewing the 10 HOURS of tutorial information on the six DVD’s from Adwords Empire. They were excellent. I got really excited about the possibility of building my own Adwords Empire, and shot this testimonial over to Fabian…
“Fabian… I’m sorry it’s taken me time to get back to you… the DVD’s are sooo loong and chock full of great info! I’ve been glued to them.
Anyone looking for a “nothing held back” guide to making profits with Google Adwords should see investing in Adwords Empire as a “no brainer”.
This is a very, very highly recommended purchase for anyone looking to get traffic from Pay Per Click search engines and profit from it.”
Unfortunately, it looks like Fabian’s server isn’t handling the launch very well… it’s as slow as molasses at the moment.
I strongly suggest you grab a copy of Adwords Empire at the low launch price… if you can get the webpage to load. Here’s the link… Adwords Empire Early Bird Pricing and Bonuses.

September 8th, 2006 at 1:40 am
I’m considering buying adwordsempire, here is my list so far:
Good:
landing page format that converts like crazy (what percentage? 2%?)
it might work
Bad:
on 6 DVDs marketing hype technique 6 is the biggest you can easily have in certain dvd style cases
buy now or the price goes up
potentially no returns
$2.00 gives $500.00 return outrageous claim
triple digit click through rates, yes on 1 click
most images are blury on my system
never lose money on your campaigns ever again
many of the screen shots are pre google slap
If there was a real review, that would be good
September 10th, 2006 at 10:36 am
Hi Kev,
Landing pages pre-sell the visitor. If you tailor your landing page to what you know about the visitor (the keywords of the ad they clicked on), you can dramatically improve your product sales compared to just sending clicks from Adwords directly to a merchant.
The point of the high conversion ratios is to show you how important it is to segment your keyword list… you’ll get lower cost per click with higher ad effectiveness.
I didn’t see any mention of a refund policy. I’ll let Fabian know. I’m sure that’s an oversight and if you’re unhappy and return the product you’ll get a refund.
September 11th, 2006 at 1:17 am
I’m referring to the ambiguity of “crazy”.
Without “qualified numbers” relative terms are meaningless.
Here is another one I like:
I made $80,000.00 in one day actually means:
Gross profit $80,000.00
Advertising Costs $90,000.00
Total qualified result: I lost $10,000.00
September 11th, 2006 at 8:45 am
Yes, you’re right about the income claims. It also works for all other products where people claim sales of $X thousands. For all we know, they could be paying affiliates 95% and have 5% overheads.
By the way, regarding the missing refund policy, Fabian emailed me with…
“That was certainly an oversight!
I’ve since added a 60 days guarantee on the sales page.
Thanks for the heads-up.”