Ben Settle Email Players 1 15 New Official

Not “open to all.” Not “waitlist.” Just 15 slots.

The "Email Players 1-15 New" guide is a compilation of Ben Settle's insights and strategies on email marketing, specifically designed for new players in the industry. The guide covers the essential concepts, tactics, and strategies that new email marketers need to know to succeed in the industry.

The exact moment the story transitions into a business lesson. This is the hardest part of copywriting to master, and a major focus of advanced Email Players issues.

When someone subscribes, what happens?

Understanding the fundamental strategies found in the early legacy issues is essential for any modern copywriter looking to implement Settle's methodologies today. The Genesis of Email Players (Issues 1–15)

Accessing the first 15 issues can be a treasure hunt. Here’s how the process typically works:

Early content covers "siphoning" leads from platforms like Facebook and Google without paid ads and using privacy policies to increase opt-ins. ben settle email players 1 15 new

The earliest installments of the newsletter broke away from standard corporate communication, establishing what Settle famously coined . Instead of relying on hyper-segmented funnels or aggressive value-bombing, these 15 issues laid down a specific, contrarian blueprint.

: Special pricing on other "high-priced" products like his List Swell book or Elbenbo Press resources.

If you want, I can: draft subject lines for these 15 emails, write the full copy for a 15-email launch sequence for a specific product, or turn this blueprint into a one-page checklist you can print and use. Which would you like? Not “open to all

Ben Settle’s approach to email is often called "Infotainment"—a blend of information and entertainment that makes subscribers want to open every message.

“Players 1–15 are already in. They’ve got the blueprint. The rest of you? You can either watch them win, or you can email me why you should be Player 1 in the NEXT round. Spoiler: Most of you won’t. And that’s fine. More for them.”

: Never compromise your brand voice or change your formatting to appease a vocal minority of complainers. The exact moment the story transitions into a