Until I actually know how many copies are being made available I won’t be tempted with Sourcecode Millions and neither should you.

Yes it looks good and it probably is but what’s the point in buying it when you could well end up competing against hundreds (perhaps even thousands) of membership sites offering the exact same thing you are?

Out of those hundreds of competitors, many are going to be big players with huge lists already so they’ll have a jump on the average IM’er from the start. While the newbie is still unpacking Sourcecode millions, others will be quickly established and the marketplace will be flooded before they’ve even started.

The average Joe trying to convince folk to join their version of Traffic Python (the software that comes with Sourcecode Millions) instead of Guru bob’s is not going to easy.

It will probably end in a price war with people giving away more and more to try and entice new members and in the end most will be lucky to get back the $1300 Sourcecode Millions cost them.

So why hasn’t Brett announced how many will be sold? After all, in the original seminar he said he hadn’t yet decided but it would be strictly limited although he hadn’t yet come to a decision on the exact numbers.

As I’ve posted comments on the Sourcecode Millions blog asking this question and sent an email as per instructions if you ‘have any presale questions’ and have yet to receive a reply, it seems he still hasn’t decided what the cut off will be.

Call me a sinical bastard but my guess is the last 50 Sourcecode Millions will be announced once every last possible sale has been squeezed from the honey train.

When every list has been mailed to death and all fresh ideas for bonuses have dried up, that announcement of “the last few available” may well squeeze another $50K into the piggy bank.

 Why I Won’t Be Buying Sourcecode Millions  Why I Won’t Be Buying Sourcecode Millions  Why I Won’t Be Buying Sourcecode Millions

Original post by ady and software by Elliott Back