Why Most PLR Beginners Fail
45sContrasts success vs. failure in PLR, sparking curiosity and relatability for aspiring entrepreneurs.
▶ Play ClipThis video discusses the key differences between successful and unsuccessful PLR (Private Label Rights) product sellers. The main factors are a willingness to pay the price through hard work and sacrifice, and the importance of a solid contingency plan for handling ad account blocks.
Many people enter PLR without fully understanding the subject or being willing to pay the price, leading to failure.
People often have the illusion of becoming millionaires quickly, but the reality is that it requires hard work and psychological endurance.
Success comes from being willing to sacrifice, commit, and pay the price, rather than just gathering information from multiple sources.
Instead of jumping between courses and mentors, successful people choose one person and follow their process completely.
A major pain point for PLR producers is dealing with Facebook ad account blocks; a good contingency plan is essential.
Success in PLR requires a combination of a good product, aggressive offer, copywriting, and contingency planning.
Unlike copywriting or ads, a contingency plan cannot be bought; it requires hands-on work, which is often neglected in teaching.
Contingency planning is a gray area that needs more clarity and didactic explanation to help sellers succeed.
The key to success with PLR products is a combination of hard work, following a single mentor's process, and having a robust contingency plan for ad account issues, which is often overlooked but critical.
"The title promises the key to making money with PLR, and the video delivers actionable insights on mindset and contingency planning."
What is a major pain point for PLR producers according to the video?
Excessive blocks from Facebook ad accounts.
02:23
What does the speaker say is the main difference between successful and unsuccessful PLR sellers?
Willingness to pay the price through sacrifice and commitment.
01:21
Why can't a contingency plan be outsourced?
Because it requires hands-on work and cannot be bought from anyone.
03:53
What does the speaker recommend instead of jumping between multiple mentors?
Choose one person and follow their process completely.
01:53
What are the key pillars of PLR success mentioned?
Good product, aggressive offer, copywriting, and contingency planning.
03:07
Illusion vs. Reality
Highlights the common misconception that PLR is easy money, contrasting with the hard work required.
00:41Paying the Price
Key differentiator between successful and unsuccessful sellers: willingness to sacrifice.
01:21Contingency Plan Pain Point
Identifies the most common struggle for PLR sellers and emphasizes its importance.
02:23Non-Outsourceable Element
Explains why contingency planning is a unique challenge that requires personal effort.
03:53[00:02] main difference or differences between a player who has great results with PLR and a player who doesn't? Well,
[00:16] enter, we have to research and understand very well where we All the businesses I've entered that did n't work out were businesses where
[00:28] n't work out were businesses where I didn't fully understand the subject. And in the PLR field, it's no different. What happens is that many people enter the happens is that many people enter the market without really knowing the whole
[00:41] process, or they aren't willing to pay the price of that process. Because people enter with the illusion of becoming millionaires. The market makes that possible; there's a lot of
[00:55] potential for someone to become a millionaire in a short period of time, but what's the price? Many times I've seen Caique stay up all night drinking Coca-Cola and stay up until three or four in the morning, awake and awake and awake.
[01:07] the morning, awake and awake and awake. In other words, it's a job like any other, if not a much more psychologically exhausting one. So, many times people aren't... As you asked me,
[01:21] what's the difference between someone who gets results and someone who doesn't? It's mainly about whether the person is willing to actually pay the price, to sacrifice, to commit to doing it. And many times people
[01:37] gather information from many different people, so sometimes what else. So sometimes a person says, "But why? I saw a video on YouTube where so-and-so showed that doing this and that works," and sometimes the
[01:53] a course from so-and-so that he told me that if you do it this way, it works." So many times people jump from one person to another, buying courses from one person, reality they don't learn. They choose one person and say, "I'm going to follow
[02:07] and I'm going to do everything that this person is proposing to do." It's more like that. is proposing to do." It's more like that. In fact, one of the main pains of a PLR producer who doesn't get results is that they always complain about the excessive
[02:23] they always complain about the excessive blocks that Facebook offers. So, in fact, I even perceive a problem, a lack of people who teach, teaching exactly the process of... A good
[02:38] contingency plan is essential because this is a major pain point in the market: "Oh, I 'm running, my account crashed, I'm running, my account crashed." So I running, my account crashed." So I think one of the great pillars
[02:52] of PLR (Profit Sharing) is having a good contingency plan combined with a good product and an extremely aggressive offer to convince them to sell. In short, people who succeed with PLR are people who are
[03:07] willing to pay the price and who have sought to understand how a process, right? Because you might ask me, "What's most important is having a contingency plan? What's most important is
[03:23] important is having a product?" I'd say they 're all important, right? It's the same thing: a made only with eggs, right? So, you need a whole context. But in fact, contingency planning is a very valuable pillar in this process, as is the copywriting, which also has to
[03:38] be very good, and then the product delivery, etc. So, those are some of them. Pillars, but what I see as the main pain point for a person is indeed creating a good contingency plan because you can outsource the copy, you can
[03:53] copy, you can hire the best copywriter, the product—you can have a great product to deliver, you can know very well how to run ads— but one thing you can't buy from anyone, nobody sells you, is a
[04:09] contingency plan. Nobody is going to come to you and say, "Here, here, here's 500 bucks for you to run your ad," etc., so you have to actually get your hands dirty, and that's where people fail when teaching; they don't teach
[04:22] exactly what they are actually doing with the contingency plan. So that's one of the biggest pain points I see people facing. I thought what you said was very, very good because it's clear that I'm
[04:38] clear that I'm even saying it to show perhaps the perspective of the right? People say, "Ah, when we think about traffic management, they understand that in the simplest way possible, I can just grab the
[04:51] I know... What I need is a Business Model (BM) to start building the campaign. It's a combination of things; people understand each other when we talk about cups and creating offers, something create a sales text where I can spark desire, overcome
[05:05] person thinks, "What's a good product, right? A product that delivers this, that solves my problem, and so on." But when we talk about contingency, it's something So we talk about it and it 's a bit of a
[05:20] 's a bit of a gray area, so they need more clarity. It's true, exactly
[05:41] clear, so we can really see it happen, if they need to open a BM, but if you could explain in a didactic way what a good contingency is, what it comprises, so that people can hear about it,
[05:53] like I told you [Music]
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