They hired us to promote their AI tool. Here's what that means for you.
Something weird happened a few months ago.
Someone reached out asking if we could write a 14-day email sequence promoting Jasper. You know Jasper, right? One of the biggest AI copywriting platforms out there.

Now here's where it gets interesting.
This person who hired us has unlimited access to Jasper...
They could sit down right now and generate hundreds of promotional emails without paying a cent. The tool is literally built for this exact purpose.
But they didn't use it.
They paid human copywriters to write their emails instead.
When I asked why, their answer was simple: "Because I need emails that actually make money."
Think about that for a second. Someone who promotes an AI copywriting tool doesn't trust that same AI tool to write emails when real money is on the line.
That tells you everything you need to know about the difference between AI-generated words and psychology-driven copy that actually converts.
AI is incredible at a lot of things.
But understanding human psychology?
Knowing how to move someone from skeptical to buyer?
Building the kind of urgency that makes people take action?
That requires frameworks. The kind that legendary copywriters like Frank Kern, Ben Settle, and Dan Kennedy have spent decades perfecting.
Which brings me to why I'm writing you today.
We built something that gives you access to those same frameworks without hiring a $5,000-per-month copywriter or spending years studying the craft yourself.
Click here to see how EmailWritr gives you legendary copywriter frameworks
It's called EmailWritr 3.0, and it's trained on the exact methods of 20 legendary copywriters who've generated tens of millions from email.
I'll tell you more about it tomorrow. But for now, I want you to sit with this question:
If someone who promotes AI copywriting tools won't use AI for their own emails when money matters, why are you?
See EmailWritr in action - Get all the details here
Talk soon,
Coach Richard
P.S. - The email you just read was written using EmailWritr. Same tool I'm telling you about. Click to see the frameworks that wrote this
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