Ben Settle Email | Players 1 15 Portable
Ben Settle’s Email Players philosophy (specifically the 1:15 mindset) proves that you don't need to be a "big brand" to win. You just need to write one good email a day to a small group of people who trust you.
For those using the Ben Settle Mobile App , much of this foundational "Acoustic Settle" content (over 40 hours) is available to bridge the gap between his daily free tips and the paid physical newsletter.
If you’ve spent any time in the world of direct response marketing, you’ve heard the name . Known as the "pope of email marketing," Settle has built an empire on a simple, contrarian premise: send one email every single day, be unapologetically yourself, and stop obsessing over open rates. ben settle email players 1 15 portable
Ben
While a digital "Portable" edition of the first 15 "Email Players" issues may not be an official product, the search term itself shows an intelligent goal: to access foundational marketing wisdom in a convenient, study-anywhere format. By subscribing to the newsletter or exploring other avenues, you can still learn directly from one of the most effective, unconventional, and results-driven email marketers in the world. If you’ve spent any time in the world
The package is called "portable" because it can be used in a variety of contexts and niches. Whether you're promoting a product, service, or opportunity, the Email Players 1-15 Portable templates can be adapted to suit your needs.
Print out the 2 or 3 most aggressive sentences from Issue 1.15. Tape them to your monitor. While "portable" means you can take it anywhere, its real power is visibility . Put his hooks where you write your own emails. By subscribing to the newsletter or exploring other
Elias sat in a cramped airport terminal, clutching a small, travel-sized field manual—the Email Players Portable Edition
When Ben Settle launched Email Players, the prevailing marketing wisdom leaned heavily toward long, automated, dry, information-heavy product launches and corporate-sounding newsletters. Settle took the exact opposite approach. He advocated for short, frequent, personality-infused emails that treat the reader like a friend—or an enemy—but never like a nameless metric.

Why does it seem like the run blocking went back in the toilet with Sundell coming back? Feels like I'd rather see him take Bradford's place and let Olu keep playing C.
The offense is a concern, but there are two things I find encouraging. Darnold’s turnovers are down substantially since the Rams game, and despite looking timid and off in the first half of games, he does look good in the 2nd half of the last two games. He doesn’t fold under pressure. I also think there is a Seahawk offense that can play well start to finish, and a Seahawk offense that can keep it moving from the opponent’s 25 into the end zone. However the time to go looking where it is, is over. We need to find it for Thursday.
Shaheed looks better each week. Today he was there and clutch. Darnold and he are synching up well, and just in time.
We will need to find one more solid piece on the O-line next year. Maybe that will not only help the run game, but improve pass protection.
All is still good for the Hawks. A win Thursday and in all likelihood the experts will start talking about the Seahawks as the team to beat. I have faith! Let’s all keep the faith!