English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-01-27 19:48:33 · 2 answers · asked by james c 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

2 answers

Quite simply,there is no best one. There are some that have the style you might grasp, and you would insist that your guru is the best. Another might say ooh that ones course is garbage, for every sort of angle you can imagine there is a guru. Most of them are pitchmen and are all selling the same worn out ideas. The fact a person bought a course and invested in their own future probably has as much value as the course itself. I personally know Ron LeGrand, Russ Whitney, Robert Allen, Jeff Kaller, T J Marrs, Ernie Kessler, Pete and Tony Young, and dozens more that arent on television. They all have an angle and some of them really have a great boot camp,course, etc. Most of what they learn is gleaned from their sucess coaching staff. When a deal is made under new and innovative terms that closes often the dynamics of that deal will ammend next years course. Ron LeGrand has made tons of cash from his students that way. My question to all of the TV pitchmen is always this, if you are supposed to be such great negotiators, why do you have to give 1/2 of your gross sales to the infomercial company? My advice is go to a library and check out any book by any guru for free and dont waste your money. Most gurus are in a market where depressed sellers and low values are abundant. A Carlton Sheets student would be laughed off the porch in almost any west coast market. A T J Marrs student from the west coast would probably be too detailed in a deep south market. Locate a regional expert and emulate their style and you should do fine.

2007-01-28 02:55:52 · answer #1 · answered by Kevin H 4 · 0 0

ron legrand hands down! All the others learned from him

2007-01-28 03:54:13 · answer #2 · answered by newcar99 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers