Thursday, January 24, 2008

MESSAGE #296 - 42% or “THE TASSEL IS WORTH THE HASSLE.”

This message is for college students,
but not just for college students.

This message is especially for you
if you’re in college,
if you’re planning on going to college,
or if you’re paying for someone else to attend college.

If you’re in college –
you want to make sure you’re part of the 42%.

If you’re planning on going to college –
you want to make sure you’re part of the 42%.

If you’re paying for someone else to go to college –
you want to make sure they’re part of the 42%.

So what’s the 42%???

Get ready for an amazing statistic.

Only 42% of students who are accepted
to four-year colleges in the U.S. ever graduate.

ONLY 42%!

Amazing!

Why?

Because everyone who’s
accepted to a college or university
has the academic and intellectual
ability to graduate.

EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM!

Colleges don’t accept people
that they expect to fail.

They reject those people.

But 58% of those accepted -- fail.

Sad.

If you were accepted,
you’re expected to graduate.

You’re expected to be part of the 42%!

I want to help you graduate.

Here are
five easy things
and one hard thing
you can do right now
to make sure
you’re part of the 42%:

First, the five easy things . . .

#1. Get a pen and a notebook.

#2. Call 1- (641)-715-3413

#3. When asked for the access code, enter: 1072571#

#4. Listen to the one-hour tele-seminar on “How to Be Outrageously Successful in College.”

#5. Take notes.

Now the one hard thing:

APPLY WHAT
YOU LEARN.

In other words, change your behavior.

Change your habits.

If you do
what you’ve always done,
you’ll get
what you’ve always got.

On this pre-recorded tele-seminar,
you’ll hear two experts on college success:
Melissa Sapio and Ed Tseng.

Can they help you?

I guarantee it!

Look, what I’m asking you to do is very easy,
but I’ve found . . .

IF IT’S
EASY TO DO,
IT’S ALSO
EASY NOT TO DO.

PLEASE NOTE:
THIS SEMINAR
WILL ONLY BE
AVAILABLE UNTIL
FEBRUARY 1, 2008.

See you at graduation,

Rob Gilbert

P.S. Remember: “The tassel is worth the hassle.”