Finally! A Comprehensive Guide To Winning Contests
Learn how to win even if you’ve never won anything before!
How many times have you said, “I never win anything?” If you’re like most folks it’s probably every time you buy a lottery ticket or fill out one of the tear off forms at a PTA meeting!
The time has come to change that to “I win all the time!”
Competition Commando is just what you need to turn contests into your own lucrative hobby or avocation. No matter where you turn you will find opportunities to enter a contest. Doesn’t matter if it’s tickets to a first run movie or a chance to win a brand spanking new car. Contests can be fun and profitable!
You can learn how to win. New cars, clothes, luxury vacations. . .all are there for the winning and it really has nothing to do with luck. Other people win these things, why not you? The primary differences between “you” and “them” are:
They enter more contests than you.
They enter them more often.
They are more methodical.
They are selective.
They put more effort into it.
Are there some “insider tips and tricks” that you can put to work? Yes, of course there are, and Shaw lays them out for you.
Some contests require that you “fill in the blanks in your own words.” Shaw teaches you how to prepare the answer just right and boost the odds of winning. And, that’s before you even get to using “winning words” that teach you how to tie in with the contest sponsors product.
People have lots of different hobbies like stamp collecting, crossword puzzles, knitting, model airplanes and so on.
Then there are the folks who take their “hobby” to a whole new level! They use what they learn in Competition Commando as an exercise in mental agility. They enter contests following the guidelines in Competition Commando and the prizes they win are just a bonus!
Shawn tells us that the only competitions you CAN’T win are the ones you don’t enter! What have you got to lose? A few bucks and a handful of stamps?
Discover more from Personal Blog of Richard Tong
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Thanks for this wonderful article. Also a thing is that the majority of digital cameras can come equipped with any zoom lens that enables more or less of a scene to be included by means of ‘zooming’ in and out. Most of these changes in concentration length are usually reflected within the viewfinder and on large display screen right at the back of your camera.