It's of little value, agreed, and would be eliminated if they opt to not do it, which I would consider a good thing.
The deal is, I give you something you value, you give me something I value, a business relationship is struck and a small deal is made. Lying to me and taking my stuff is not the basis of a good relationship. Perhaps there is a better way of presenting this deal, without using the word "free"... My question is still about the best way to legitimize their email address... on 1/29/08 11:05 AM, Richard Gaskin wrote: > Jim Carwardine wrote: > >> ... And I'm asking for some contact information from the downloader (fair >> trade I feel). I'm getting a lot of garbage being offered by people who >> want a look but don't want to give their info. >> >> Screening for legitimate email addresses is done on many web sites... > > Of what value is contact info given reluctantly? Jim Carwardine, President & CEO OYF Consulting Ph. 902.823.2339 / 866.601.2339 Fx. 902.823-2139 <www.StrategicDoing.com> StrategicDoingÂ: Execution depends on employees. Strategic Partner with HiringSmart Canada Ltd. -- _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
