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Webinar Mastery: The Proven Formula for Highly Engaged Webinars that Convert

I've run over 250 webinars that have converted into over 100,000 emails and over 3 million dollars in sales, all without the "slimey sell" – and today, I'm going to show you the blueprint on how to run an effective webinar yourself, too. This is the first time I'll be publicly sharing my methods, and I look forward to helping you finally create engaging webinars – from how to structure your talk, to how to pitch and follow up, I got you. Come join me on July 8th at 12:00pm PT (3:00pm ET) for a hands on workshop with me!

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Cameron Long

Cameron Long

Cameron is a seasoned CFO and CPA with 31 years in finance. He created the AI Trader's Playbook to help everyday investors use AI to find high-confidence trades — in minutes, not hours.

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18 Comments

  1. A question about asking for permission for the pitch – what do you do if someone says ‘no?’ If you keep going, it sort of invalidates you asking for their permission. But if other folks say ‘yes’, then what do you? Do you just politely tell the ‘no’ person that you’re glad they came but you want to pitch the people who are asking?

    I feel like that’s sort of a no-win scenario if someone says ‘no’. Thoughts?

    1. Great question, Sarah! I haven’t seen anyone reply no before, assuming that the “permission to pitch” is a way to tell the audience I’m about to go into a sales portion of the presentation and ppl are welcome to leave if they aren’t interested.

    2. @@sandymann4090 Oh, that’s an interesting way to look at it – so any potential naysayers could be politely told that the rest of the webinar just isn’t for them, maybe?

  2. REPLAY. Thank you for helping me in 2020. You literally gave me a reason to get out of bed every day.

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