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	<title>Comments on: Things have got to change</title>
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	<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/</link>
	<description>Internet marketing</description>
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		<title>By: Sucker</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-39743</link>
		<dc:creator>Sucker</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 05:54:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-39743</guid>
		<description>Why is changing your name an indicator of unethical behavior?  I&#039;m sure Reginald Dwight and Richard Starkey would disagree...you probably know them as Elton John and Ringo Starr.  

Secondly, have you ever read a college course catalog?  Or a class syllabus?  No concrete promises or clear deliverables there.  I know people with Master&#039;s degrees who can&#039;t find a job.  Does that mean university degrees are a scam?

A scam is when people take your money after promising something that&#039;s fake.  They usually don&#039;t give it back.  From what&#039;s been said on other sites, AWAI has a more than generous refund policy and they bend over backwards to satisfy any complaints.  

I&#039;ve bought AWAI products and I have to say I was a little underwhelmed.  Then again, I graduated as an English major and I&#039;ve written for small newspapers.  There probably wasn&#039;t much I didn&#039;t know about writing.  But the AWAI course gave me some good tips to get me started and told me some things I didn&#039;t know.

Sounds like a lot of sour grapes.  I&#039;d be willing to show you a real scam...for the price of $95.99, and I&#039;ll even add a second scam for free.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Why is changing your name an indicator of unethical behavior?  I&#8217;m sure Reginald Dwight and Richard Starkey would disagree&#8230;you probably know them as Elton John and Ringo Starr.  </p>
<p>Secondly, have you ever read a college course catalog?  Or a class syllabus?  No concrete promises or clear deliverables there.  I know people with Master&#8217;s degrees who can&#8217;t find a job.  Does that mean university degrees are a scam?</p>
<p>A scam is when people take your money after promising something that&#8217;s fake.  They usually don&#8217;t give it back.  From what&#8217;s been said on other sites, AWAI has a more than generous refund policy and they bend over backwards to satisfy any complaints.  </p>
<p>I&#8217;ve bought AWAI products and I have to say I was a little underwhelmed.  Then again, I graduated as an English major and I&#8217;ve written for small newspapers.  There probably wasn&#8217;t much I didn&#8217;t know about writing.  But the AWAI course gave me some good tips to get me started and told me some things I didn&#8217;t know.</p>
<p>Sounds like a lot of sour grapes.  I&#8217;d be willing to show you a real scam&#8230;for the price of $95.99, and I&#8217;ll even add a second scam for free.</p>
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		<title>By: Sucker</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-39502</link>
		<dc:creator>Sucker</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Aug 2009 18:27:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-39502</guid>
		<description>Tim is right - Michael Masterson, Mark Ford, AWAI, Early to Rise, MaryEllen Tribby, these folks are all scam artists. Just dig into what they do - create newsletters full of hopeful language, with no concrete promises or clear deliverables, and scam the innocent (or ignorant) out of their money.  It&#039;s all about foreplay.  There is no there there.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tim is right &#8211; Michael Masterson, Mark Ford, AWAI, Early to Rise, MaryEllen Tribby, these folks are all scam artists. Just dig into what they do &#8211; create newsletters full of hopeful language, with no concrete promises or clear deliverables, and scam the innocent (or ignorant) out of their money.  It&#8217;s all about foreplay.  There is no there there.</p>
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		<title>By: Doug</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-39002</link>
		<dc:creator>Doug</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Jul 2009 22:37:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-39002</guid>
		<description>I&#039;m glad Katie chimed in. I&#039;m a student of AWAI and have found their material to be excellent. I am using it to build a business in copywriting, and am already making money with it. Tim&#039;s comments were lifted straight from another web site listing the same rants, so Tim&#039;s credibility is down the toilet. 

I never thought AWAI was a school that hands out diplomas. They never claimed to be, and you&#039;d have to be pretty stupid to think they were trying to position themselves as a school. They offer courses for a fee. Anyone can see that. But that doesn&#039;t make it a scam. Yes, I wish their prices were lower, but I still got some good material from them. And there are enough real, successful copywriters out there making great incomes who endorse AWAI&#039;s methods. 

Sorry, but this isn&#039;t a scam. Sometimes overpriced, yes (like so many products). But I&#039;ve gotten a ton of great material, even for free, from their Member&#039;s area on their site.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m glad Katie chimed in. I&#8217;m a student of AWAI and have found their material to be excellent. I am using it to build a business in copywriting, and am already making money with it. Tim&#8217;s comments were lifted straight from another web site listing the same rants, so Tim&#8217;s credibility is down the toilet. </p>
<p>I never thought AWAI was a school that hands out diplomas. They never claimed to be, and you&#8217;d have to be pretty stupid to think they were trying to position themselves as a school. They offer courses for a fee. Anyone can see that. But that doesn&#8217;t make it a scam. Yes, I wish their prices were lower, but I still got some good material from them. And there are enough real, successful copywriters out there making great incomes who endorse AWAI&#8217;s methods. </p>
<p>Sorry, but this isn&#8217;t a scam. Sometimes overpriced, yes (like so many products). But I&#8217;ve gotten a ton of great material, even for free, from their Member&#8217;s area on their site.</p>
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		<title>By: Katie Yeakle</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-12278</link>
		<dc:creator>Katie Yeakle</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Oct 2007 03:09:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-12278</guid>
		<description>A word (or two) about AWAI ... 

Boy, looks like someone really has it out for us.  (I&#039;m Katie Yeakle, Exec. Dir. of AWAI) And thatâ€™s okay. AWAI makes some aggressive claims, so scrutiny is to be expected. 

I will say this though. We have hundreds of letters from people who love our material. 

Many... those who really want it and really apply themselves have gone on to successful copywriting careers. Iâ€™ll stand by the information we deliver. I believe itâ€™s the best you can get, short of working side by side, day in day out with an experienced copywriter. 

But hereâ€™s the real secret of associating yourself with AWAI â€” something even the best of all the very good books out there on copywriting canâ€™t offer. 

And Iâ€™ll premise it with something we say in our promotions...something that is very much a fact: our industry is screaming for good, competent copywriters. So hereâ€™s the secret: if youâ€™re eager...and youâ€™re smart...AWAI offers insight and access to the industry. 

If you learn to write copy â€” and youâ€™re aggressive and youâ€™re smart, and you take the initiative â€” youâ€™ll learn who the marketers are and find a way to get your samples on their desks. 

From there, the copy does the talking. Letâ€™s face it. You can be a great artist, but if no one sees your work, youâ€™ll toil in obscurity. You need your â€œbig breakâ€. And AWAI can offer you that, like itâ€™s done for others whoâ€™ve figured it out.  

But the fact is, the nature of this or any other â€œself improvementâ€ product is that 99% of the people do nothing with it. And only a fraction of the remaining 1% want it bad enough to make it happen. (Which is why we offer a refund to anyone â€” even after the publicized trial period). 

Itâ€™s very easy to be suspicious and skeptical. (Though, granted, itâ€™s slightly more of an effort to come up with 27 reasons why our course is a scam!) 

As Paul Hollingshead explained recently; &quot;I could argue that the $350 golf lesson I took at the Leadbetter Academy was a rip-off because Iâ€™m not on a scratch golfer as a result of it. 

But I canâ€™t say that because I learned something from it. And if I really wanted to be a scratch golfer, I could have hunkered down and spent six hours a day for the next month mastering the one thing I learned. And then gone on to take two, four, 10 or 20 more $350 lessons. As an avid golfer, I can say with a great deal of confidence that becoming a six figure copywriter is a heck of a lot easier than becoming a scratch golfer.&quot;

But, Paul also points out, that&#039;s only if you really want it, and youâ€™re eager to master the skills our programs teach â€” and have the â€œcreativityâ€ to look beyond words on a piece of paper...and see the value of associating yourself with an organization with so many ties to the business we write about. 

Thatâ€™s my take on it, though I doubt it will satisfy anyone who might have some personal vendetta against AWAI or Michael Masterson. 

Expecially Jim above ... who through simple internet research, we were able to identify as Charlie Crowell.  

We believe that Charlie is behind many of these inflammatory posts about Michael Masterson, American Writers &amp; Artists Inc. and Early to Rise.  He and his wife, Maggie, are former employees of either AWAI or ETR.  They both profited from their association with us and benefited from Michaelâ€™s tutelage.  However, they are both now disgruntled because they are no longer employed by us â€¦ a direct result of inadequate job performance.

They have turned to this forum to post their highly inaccurate and malicious rants â€¦ under cover of false names â€¦ which, ironically, is something they condemn.

To learn the truth, I encourage you visit AWAIâ€™s and ETRâ€™s websites â€¦ where you will find real reviews from real customers.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A word (or two) about AWAI &#8230; </p>
<p>Boy, looks like someone really has it out for us.  (I&#8217;m Katie Yeakle, Exec. Dir. of AWAI) And thatâ€™s okay. AWAI makes some aggressive claims, so scrutiny is to be expected. </p>
<p>I will say this though. We have hundreds of letters from people who love our material. </p>
<p>Many&#8230; those who really want it and really apply themselves have gone on to successful copywriting careers. Iâ€™ll stand by the information we deliver. I believe itâ€™s the best you can get, short of working side by side, day in day out with an experienced copywriter. </p>
<p>But hereâ€™s the real secret of associating yourself with AWAI â€” something even the best of all the very good books out there on copywriting canâ€™t offer. </p>
<p>And Iâ€™ll premise it with something we say in our promotions&#8230;something that is very much a fact: our industry is screaming for good, competent copywriters. So hereâ€™s the secret: if youâ€™re eager&#8230;and youâ€™re smart&#8230;AWAI offers insight and access to the industry. </p>
<p>If you learn to write copy â€” and youâ€™re aggressive and youâ€™re smart, and you take the initiative â€” youâ€™ll learn who the marketers are and find a way to get your samples on their desks. </p>
<p>From there, the copy does the talking. Letâ€™s face it. You can be a great artist, but if no one sees your work, youâ€™ll toil in obscurity. You need your â€œbig breakâ€. And AWAI can offer you that, like itâ€™s done for others whoâ€™ve figured it out.  </p>
<p>But the fact is, the nature of this or any other â€œself improvementâ€ product is that 99% of the people do nothing with it. And only a fraction of the remaining 1% want it bad enough to make it happen. (Which is why we offer a refund to anyone â€” even after the publicized trial period). </p>
<p>Itâ€™s very easy to be suspicious and skeptical. (Though, granted, itâ€™s slightly more of an effort to come up with 27 reasons why our course is a scam!) </p>
<p>As Paul Hollingshead explained recently; &#8220;I could argue that the $350 golf lesson I took at the Leadbetter Academy was a rip-off because Iâ€™m not on a scratch golfer as a result of it. </p>
<p>But I canâ€™t say that because I learned something from it. And if I really wanted to be a scratch golfer, I could have hunkered down and spent six hours a day for the next month mastering the one thing I learned. And then gone on to take two, four, 10 or 20 more $350 lessons. As an avid golfer, I can say with a great deal of confidence that becoming a six figure copywriter is a heck of a lot easier than becoming a scratch golfer.&#8221;</p>
<p>But, Paul also points out, that&#8217;s only if you really want it, and youâ€™re eager to master the skills our programs teach â€” and have the â€œcreativityâ€ to look beyond words on a piece of paper&#8230;and see the value of associating yourself with an organization with so many ties to the business we write about. </p>
<p>Thatâ€™s my take on it, though I doubt it will satisfy anyone who might have some personal vendetta against AWAI or Michael Masterson. </p>
<p>Expecially Jim above &#8230; who through simple internet research, we were able to identify as Charlie Crowell.  </p>
<p>We believe that Charlie is behind many of these inflammatory posts about Michael Masterson, American Writers &amp; Artists Inc. and Early to Rise.  He and his wife, Maggie, are former employees of either AWAI or ETR.  They both profited from their association with us and benefited from Michaelâ€™s tutelage.  However, they are both now disgruntled because they are no longer employed by us â€¦ a direct result of inadequate job performance.</p>
<p>They have turned to this forum to post their highly inaccurate and malicious rants â€¦ under cover of false names â€¦ which, ironically, is something they condemn.</p>
<p>To learn the truth, I encourage you visit AWAIâ€™s and ETRâ€™s websites â€¦ where you will find real reviews from real customers.</p>
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		<title>By: Flicka Ford</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-11175</link>
		<dc:creator>Flicka Ford</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Sep 2007 18:26:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-11175</guid>
		<description>For the record, Justin Ford is actually John Ford.  Justin is his middle name, and apparently he is trying pass it off as his first name.  He is a sleazy character, just like his brother. I met Mark Ford once, he made my skin crawl.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For the record, Justin Ford is actually John Ford.  Justin is his middle name, and apparently he is trying pass it off as his first name.  He is a sleazy character, just like his brother. I met Mark Ford once, he made my skin crawl.</p>
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		<title>By: Tim</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-8332</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 2007 22:14:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-8332</guid>
		<description>Here&#039;s a little follow up to the above - a string of newspaper articles chronicling the Feds taking down self proclaimed copywriting guru Michael Masterson (his real name is Mark Ford) and his history of mail fraud and money laundering? 

Go to Goggle News Archives, type in &quot;Mark Ford&quot; fraud. The articles are not current so make sure you go into the archives. 

&quot;Ford violated civil mail fraud and money laundering laws&quot; (Miami Herald) 

&quot;The government seized $6.6 million from 52 bank accounts in New York and South Florida&quot; controlled by Mark Ford and his associate says the Miami Herald. U.S. Magistrate Ann Vitumec authorized the seizure based in part on an affidavit filed by a U.S. Postal Inspector. 

The Palm Beach Post called it a &quot;nationwide fraud&quot;. 

The Herald also noted &quot;Thousands of complaints from consumers and regulators around the country&quot;. The government tried to work out a plan to repay the thousands of people who were scammed. 

All of which explains why he changed his name to Michael Masterson? I&#039;m sure it&#039;s something Mr. Ford would have like kept buried... but that&#039;s kinda the way it goes. 

And this is the same guy who occasionally writes about the evils of fraud and scams in his ezine Early To Rise (ETR). Earlier this year have gave a talk about how to make money on the Inertnet and still sleep at night (or words to that effect). Incredible shamelessness.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s a little follow up to the above &#8211; a string of newspaper articles chronicling the Feds taking down self proclaimed copywriting guru Michael Masterson (his real name is Mark Ford) and his history of mail fraud and money laundering? </p>
<p>Go to Goggle News Archives, type in &#8220;Mark Ford&#8221; fraud. The articles are not current so make sure you go into the archives. </p>
<p>&#8220;Ford violated civil mail fraud and money laundering laws&#8221; (Miami Herald) </p>
<p>&#8220;The government seized $6.6 million from 52 bank accounts in New York and South Florida&#8221; controlled by Mark Ford and his associate says the Miami Herald. U.S. Magistrate Ann Vitumec authorized the seizure based in part on an affidavit filed by a U.S. Postal Inspector. </p>
<p>The Palm Beach Post called it a &#8220;nationwide fraud&#8221;. </p>
<p>The Herald also noted &#8220;Thousands of complaints from consumers and regulators around the country&#8221;. The government tried to work out a plan to repay the thousands of people who were scammed. </p>
<p>All of which explains why he changed his name to Michael Masterson? I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s something Mr. Ford would have like kept buried&#8230; but that&#8217;s kinda the way it goes. </p>
<p>And this is the same guy who occasionally writes about the evils of fraud and scams in his ezine Early To Rise (ETR). Earlier this year have gave a talk about how to make money on the Inertnet and still sleep at night (or words to that effect). Incredible shamelessness.</p>
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		<title>By: Tim</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-3855</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2007 15:15:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-3855</guid>
		<description>Great article. Great to hear there are people still concerned about honesty in business.

Just as an example of what we&#039;re talking about here, Joe above mentioned Michael Masterson. Be careful with this guy.

Here are 27 things you need to know about AWAI and Michael Masterson&#039;s Accelerated Six Figure Copywriting Program. It&#039;s hard to decide which word best describes this whole scheme. But words that come to mind are fraud, scam, rip off, con, fake or hoax. In fact sleeze might be a good one to throw in to.

1 For starters, AWAI is not a school. In fact, they recently got into some legal difficulties with the State of Florida for pretending to be a school. That&#039;s why they had to change their name from &quot;institute&quot; to INC.
 
2 The program is nothing more than a cheap correspondence/home study course. There are no graduates, no diplomas. And after completion, you&#039;ve gained no credentials or credibility.
 
3 The critiques they offer to do on your assignments are done by copywriter wannabes, not real, talented, professional, accomplished copywriters. They pay these wannabes a lousy $10 for each critique.
 
4 The company operates out of a dingy little building on a dumpy side street in Delray Beach, Florida. If you ever visited the place, you wouldn&#039;t buy anything from them.
 
5 Most (if not all) of the so-called copywriting experts who answer student&#039;s questions are not even copywriters.
 
6 The promotions they use to sell the course is absolutely bloated with careful omissions, half-truths, lies, distortions, deceptions, selective memories, phony testimonials, exaggerated claims, over-simplifications, forced conclusions, unsubstantiated â€œfactsâ€, hype, fluff and good old fashioned trickery. It really is a remarkably involved and finely crafted charade that convinces people they can truly earn over $100,000 a year after taking some poorly written, lame correspondence course or attending a silly 3-day rah-rah â€œbootcampâ€â€¦ for a hefty price. 
 
7 The testimonials they use a worthless, many written by people who are paid to speak at AWAI seminars and who have other business dealings with the company. Michael Masterson often uses testimonials from family members (his brother&#039;s name recently changed from Justin to Jason, a most curious thing). Many are written by copywriter wannabes who are trying to boost their careers. These are people who have failed as copywriters but are trying to project the image of a winners in the hopes of gaining some recognition. Their claims are completely unsubstantiated and fall in the category of wishful thinking. 
 
8 At AWAI &quot;bootcamps&quot;, the so-called job fair is nothing more than a bunch of Michael Masterson&#039;s cronies setting up booths and pretending to be interested in AWAI students.
 
9 The program is so lame that they have to throw in a bunch of &quot;valuable&quot; booklets with revealing &quot;secrets&quot; in an effort to entice you to buy. None of this extra stuff is any better than the course itself which is a poorly written, rudimentary and dumbed-down. The main part of the program is nothing more than a cheap 500 page loose-leaf notebook with a lot of blank parts for you to do your &quot;exercises&quot;. The first 150 pages or so include very little learning and a lot of hype about what you&#039;re &quot;going to learn.&quot; And they use a large font with really wide margins to fill up the pages. It&#039;s looks like something a third grader would use.
 
10 In many ways, the course itself is a continuation of the promotions used to sell it. It is designed to get you all worked up for additional purchases. You think you are getting an all inclusive course, but then they say you need to know more... at a price.
 
11 After you buy, AWAI will badger you to death trying to get you to spend more money on their &quot;master&#039;s&quot; program, bootcamps, CD&#039;s, DVD&#039;s, teleconferences, etc. They are quite aggressive about it because they have to squeeze you for all it&#039;s worth early, before you figure them out.
 
12 There is little evidence that the supposedly gifted Michael Masterson can actually write decent copy. Like many of these self-appointed copywriting gurus, he seldom (if ever) seems to actually be practicing his so-called profession. You would think there would be a lot more money in selling &quot;billions&quot; in products and services than in suckering people into a silly, get rich quick copywriting course. And for some strange reason, you never actually get to see any copy that was written by the guy.
 
13 If AWAI was really cranking out the next generation of big money-making copywriters, and if the program really worked, wouldn&#039;t they have trouble retaining their own employees? Wouldn&#039;t their employees use the course and be constantly leaving for greener, more profitable six-figure copywriting pastures? Either the AWAI staff is made up of stupid or lazy fools, or they don&#039;t believe the pile of baloney they are selling.
 
14 When trying to secure a job as a copywriter, saying you completed the Michael Masterson&#039;s Accelerated Six Figure Copywriting Program will only get you laughed at. The real world is looking for real, professional, creative, talented, educated, experienced, proven copywriters who know how to drive sales, not correspondence course graduates.
 
15 The truth is, AWAI is simply telling you what you want to hear. They say it&#039;s fast, it&#039;s fun, it&#039;s easy, anybody can do it, there&#039;s big money in it, you&#039;ll get famous, people will envy your new life, you can live and work anywhere, you don&#039;t need writing skills, etc. They even call it retirement. None of this is true. They would probably tell you it cures cancer if they thought they could get away with it.
 
16 But the scam is so good that some poor souls are into the course for a few years before they realize they&#039;ve been constantly shelling out money and their careers are still stuck at the starting gate. 
 
17 When negative comments start popping up on the Internet, AWAI has employees, friends and family start posting phony testimonials to offset the bad press.
 
18 You can buy a $20 book at your local bookstore and get better copywriting instruction than AWAI&#039;s $500 program. 
 
19 Michael Masterson uses the same approach with his ezine Early To Rise (ETR). He is constantly selling himself as an expert on everything in an effort to set his readers up for all sorts of &quot;get rich quick&quot;, &quot;pie in the sky&quot; products.
 
20 And AWAI likes to scam you into working for free. They will entice you to write a promotion &quot;on spec&quot; with the promise that if they like it, you&#039;ll be rewarded in some fashion. Don&#039;t fall for it. It&#039;s just designed to keep you on the hook for as long as possible. Working for free is not the same thing as a six-figure income. 
 
21 If you&#039;ve already purchased the copywriting program, don&#039;t feel bad. You&#039;re not alone. Like I said, it&#039;s an effective scam.
 
22 The guy&#039;s real name is Mark Ford. There is no such person as Michael Masterson. And his brother Justin Ford, who is used for testimonials regularly, seems to have an identity crisis. Recently his name has begun appearing as Jason Ford. A sister, Denise Ford, is also a player in all this (I guess it&#039;s a family scam), as is a John Forde who is supposedly no relations. 
 
23 Michael Masterson uses ghost writers to write his books. He assigns different writers to different topics or chapters. More smoke and mirrors.
 
24 And of course I could go on and on. I could tell you of the tremendous effort put forth by AWAI to try to create the illusion that it&#039;s all legitimate, to perpetuate the myth. The endless, ongoing work designed to make the whole sham appear honest, honorable and trustworthy.
 
25 I could tell you how the people who fall for this scam are generally unsavvy individuals when it comes to sales and marketing, hence their vulnerability. 
 
26 I could mention a little matter of mail fraud, complete with arrest and mug shots. But I think you probably get the idea by now.
 
27 And of course AWAI&#039;s other courses are just as hyped, whether it&#039;s their resume writing course, their travel writing course or their graphic design course. All too good to be true.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Great article. Great to hear there are people still concerned about honesty in business.</p>
<p>Just as an example of what we&#8217;re talking about here, Joe above mentioned Michael Masterson. Be careful with this guy.</p>
<p>Here are 27 things you need to know about AWAI and Michael Masterson&#8217;s Accelerated Six Figure Copywriting Program. It&#8217;s hard to decide which word best describes this whole scheme. But words that come to mind are fraud, scam, rip off, con, fake or hoax. In fact sleeze might be a good one to throw in to.</p>
<p>1 For starters, AWAI is not a school. In fact, they recently got into some legal difficulties with the State of Florida for pretending to be a school. That&#8217;s why they had to change their name from &#8220;institute&#8221; to INC.</p>
<p>2 The program is nothing more than a cheap correspondence/home study course. There are no graduates, no diplomas. And after completion, you&#8217;ve gained no credentials or credibility.</p>
<p>3 The critiques they offer to do on your assignments are done by copywriter wannabes, not real, talented, professional, accomplished copywriters. They pay these wannabes a lousy $10 for each critique.</p>
<p>4 The company operates out of a dingy little building on a dumpy side street in Delray Beach, Florida. If you ever visited the place, you wouldn&#8217;t buy anything from them.</p>
<p>5 Most (if not all) of the so-called copywriting experts who answer student&#8217;s questions are not even copywriters.</p>
<p>6 The promotions they use to sell the course is absolutely bloated with careful omissions, half-truths, lies, distortions, deceptions, selective memories, phony testimonials, exaggerated claims, over-simplifications, forced conclusions, unsubstantiated â€œfactsâ€, hype, fluff and good old fashioned trickery. It really is a remarkably involved and finely crafted charade that convinces people they can truly earn over $100,000 a year after taking some poorly written, lame correspondence course or attending a silly 3-day rah-rah â€œbootcampâ€â€¦ for a hefty price. </p>
<p>7 The testimonials they use a worthless, many written by people who are paid to speak at AWAI seminars and who have other business dealings with the company. Michael Masterson often uses testimonials from family members (his brother&#8217;s name recently changed from Justin to Jason, a most curious thing). Many are written by copywriter wannabes who are trying to boost their careers. These are people who have failed as copywriters but are trying to project the image of a winners in the hopes of gaining some recognition. Their claims are completely unsubstantiated and fall in the category of wishful thinking. </p>
<p>8 At AWAI &#8220;bootcamps&#8221;, the so-called job fair is nothing more than a bunch of Michael Masterson&#8217;s cronies setting up booths and pretending to be interested in AWAI students.</p>
<p>9 The program is so lame that they have to throw in a bunch of &#8220;valuable&#8221; booklets with revealing &#8220;secrets&#8221; in an effort to entice you to buy. None of this extra stuff is any better than the course itself which is a poorly written, rudimentary and dumbed-down. The main part of the program is nothing more than a cheap 500 page loose-leaf notebook with a lot of blank parts for you to do your &#8220;exercises&#8221;. The first 150 pages or so include very little learning and a lot of hype about what you&#8217;re &#8220;going to learn.&#8221; And they use a large font with really wide margins to fill up the pages. It&#8217;s looks like something a third grader would use.</p>
<p>10 In many ways, the course itself is a continuation of the promotions used to sell it. It is designed to get you all worked up for additional purchases. You think you are getting an all inclusive course, but then they say you need to know more&#8230; at a price.</p>
<p>11 After you buy, AWAI will badger you to death trying to get you to spend more money on their &#8220;master&#8217;s&#8221; program, bootcamps, CD&#8217;s, DVD&#8217;s, teleconferences, etc. They are quite aggressive about it because they have to squeeze you for all it&#8217;s worth early, before you figure them out.</p>
<p>12 There is little evidence that the supposedly gifted Michael Masterson can actually write decent copy. Like many of these self-appointed copywriting gurus, he seldom (if ever) seems to actually be practicing his so-called profession. You would think there would be a lot more money in selling &#8220;billions&#8221; in products and services than in suckering people into a silly, get rich quick copywriting course. And for some strange reason, you never actually get to see any copy that was written by the guy.</p>
<p>13 If AWAI was really cranking out the next generation of big money-making copywriters, and if the program really worked, wouldn&#8217;t they have trouble retaining their own employees? Wouldn&#8217;t their employees use the course and be constantly leaving for greener, more profitable six-figure copywriting pastures? Either the AWAI staff is made up of stupid or lazy fools, or they don&#8217;t believe the pile of baloney they are selling.</p>
<p>14 When trying to secure a job as a copywriter, saying you completed the Michael Masterson&#8217;s Accelerated Six Figure Copywriting Program will only get you laughed at. The real world is looking for real, professional, creative, talented, educated, experienced, proven copywriters who know how to drive sales, not correspondence course graduates.</p>
<p>15 The truth is, AWAI is simply telling you what you want to hear. They say it&#8217;s fast, it&#8217;s fun, it&#8217;s easy, anybody can do it, there&#8217;s big money in it, you&#8217;ll get famous, people will envy your new life, you can live and work anywhere, you don&#8217;t need writing skills, etc. They even call it retirement. None of this is true. They would probably tell you it cures cancer if they thought they could get away with it.</p>
<p>16 But the scam is so good that some poor souls are into the course for a few years before they realize they&#8217;ve been constantly shelling out money and their careers are still stuck at the starting gate. </p>
<p>17 When negative comments start popping up on the Internet, AWAI has employees, friends and family start posting phony testimonials to offset the bad press.</p>
<p>18 You can buy a $20 book at your local bookstore and get better copywriting instruction than AWAI&#8217;s $500 program. </p>
<p>19 Michael Masterson uses the same approach with his ezine Early To Rise (ETR). He is constantly selling himself as an expert on everything in an effort to set his readers up for all sorts of &#8220;get rich quick&#8221;, &#8220;pie in the sky&#8221; products.</p>
<p>20 And AWAI likes to scam you into working for free. They will entice you to write a promotion &#8220;on spec&#8221; with the promise that if they like it, you&#8217;ll be rewarded in some fashion. Don&#8217;t fall for it. It&#8217;s just designed to keep you on the hook for as long as possible. Working for free is not the same thing as a six-figure income. </p>
<p>21 If you&#8217;ve already purchased the copywriting program, don&#8217;t feel bad. You&#8217;re not alone. Like I said, it&#8217;s an effective scam.</p>
<p>22 The guy&#8217;s real name is Mark Ford. There is no such person as Michael Masterson. And his brother Justin Ford, who is used for testimonials regularly, seems to have an identity crisis. Recently his name has begun appearing as Jason Ford. A sister, Denise Ford, is also a player in all this (I guess it&#8217;s a family scam), as is a John Forde who is supposedly no relations. </p>
<p>23 Michael Masterson uses ghost writers to write his books. He assigns different writers to different topics or chapters. More smoke and mirrors.</p>
<p>24 And of course I could go on and on. I could tell you of the tremendous effort put forth by AWAI to try to create the illusion that it&#8217;s all legitimate, to perpetuate the myth. The endless, ongoing work designed to make the whole sham appear honest, honorable and trustworthy.</p>
<p>25 I could tell you how the people who fall for this scam are generally unsavvy individuals when it comes to sales and marketing, hence their vulnerability. </p>
<p>26 I could mention a little matter of mail fraud, complete with arrest and mug shots. But I think you probably get the idea by now.</p>
<p>27 And of course AWAI&#8217;s other courses are just as hyped, whether it&#8217;s their resume writing course, their travel writing course or their graphic design course. All too good to be true.</p>
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		<title>By: Mike Moore</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-122</link>
		<dc:creator>Mike Moore</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Jun 2006 15:34:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-122</guid>
		<description>One root of this issue is the gap between good copywriting and the quality of the product the copy describes.  The marginally scrupulous can write copy that bears little resemblence to the quality and subtsance of the actual product, i.e. &quot;hype.&quot;  This mismatch between copy and substance is particularly prevalent in the Internet Marketing genre because, by definition, they pass through the &quot;ah ha&quot; moment of understanding the power of effective copy.  

As with all things in life, &quot;power&quot; is always associated with &quot;responsibility.&quot;  Balancing the power of copy with the associated responsibility to use it ethically is the definition of integrity and maturity.  

The appeal of the System Seminar is the role you play in assuring the faculty&#039;s commitment to maintaining this balance.   
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One root of this issue is the gap between good copywriting and the quality of the product the copy describes.  The marginally scrupulous can write copy that bears little resemblence to the quality and subtsance of the actual product, i.e. &#8220;hype.&#8221;  This mismatch between copy and substance is particularly prevalent in the Internet Marketing genre because, by definition, they pass through the &#8220;ah ha&#8221; moment of understanding the power of effective copy.  </p>
<p>As with all things in life, &#8220;power&#8221; is always associated with &#8220;responsibility.&#8221;  Balancing the power of copy with the associated responsibility to use it ethically is the definition of integrity and maturity.  </p>
<p>The appeal of the System Seminar is the role you play in assuring the faculty&#8217;s commitment to maintaining this balance.</p>
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		<title>By: Glenn Sheiner</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-121</link>
		<dc:creator>Glenn Sheiner</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Jun 2006 05:01:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-121</guid>
		<description>Ken,

I think that it&#039;s easier psychologically to BS somebody online than in person. 

Unfortunately, as society gets increasingly digitalized and depersonalized there is less social cost to BS. If you tried to BS someone in your neighborhood, chances are your reputation would get ruined very quickly via cocktail party chatter.

So, there&#039;s more at stake with personal interactions.

Anyway, it&#039;s good to know that there&#039;s a collection of ethical marketers/publishers in the System Club.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ken,</p>
<p>I think that it&#8217;s easier psychologically to BS somebody online than in person. </p>
<p>Unfortunately, as society gets increasingly digitalized and depersonalized there is less social cost to BS. If you tried to BS someone in your neighborhood, chances are your reputation would get ruined very quickly via cocktail party chatter.</p>
<p>So, there&#8217;s more at stake with personal interactions.</p>
<p>Anyway, it&#8217;s good to know that there&#8217;s a collection of ethical marketers/publishers in the System Club.</p>
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		<title>By: Stephen Lahey</title>
		<link>http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/2006/06/02/things-have-got-to-change/comment-page-1/#comment-120</link>
		<dc:creator>Stephen Lahey</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Jun 2006 17:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://kenmccarthy.com/blog/?p=48#comment-120</guid>
		<description>Speaking as a small business owner who is new to Internet marketing and copywriting, I have to say something: I got burned a number of times, and until I discovered The System Seminar I wondered whether anyone in this space could be trusted. Thank goodness for Ken McCarthy.

Ultimately, I think that the real key to changing the ethical landscape is oversite and education. What about establishing a consumer watchdog group that has no vested interests and can publish objective reports on the products and services available?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Speaking as a small business owner who is new to Internet marketing and copywriting, I have to say something: I got burned a number of times, and until I discovered The System Seminar I wondered whether anyone in this space could be trusted. Thank goodness for Ken McCarthy.</p>
<p>Ultimately, I think that the real key to changing the ethical landscape is oversite and education. What about establishing a consumer watchdog group that has no vested interests and can publish objective reports on the products and services available?</p>
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