Features
- 1. There’s a reason this sales pitch is slick — they spend a lot of marketing money to get it to you. Who is paying for that? You are.
- 3. The authors are unknown. If the website fails to feature the credentials of the author and/or if a Google search turns up nothing about this person, you can bet this is a marketer-driven product. The fact that the alleged Dr. Forester has a well-trained announcer’s voice with almost perfect diction suggests that the so-called doctor is not what he seems. The absence of any qualifications for these “doctors” or any scientifically-supported analysis on the Web is a tell-tale sign of a marketing ruse.
- 4. Perhaps most importantly, there is an abundance of free or low-cost blood sugar essentials information on the Internet. Amazon offers a number of ebooks that cost nothing and provide the kinds of well-established diets that reduce blood sugar. The titles include: “The Daniel Sugar Diet”, “Diabetes Patients Capsule”, and Diabetes Diet Mastery….among many others. All of these are priced at under $1. Moreover, the Internet is chock full of very reliable and scientifically supported dietary solutions to high sugar levels. Among the most reputable is the Mayo Clinic web page. The price for this information? $0.
- 5. The testimonials offered in the video do not offer the full names or backgrounds of the individuals who are touting the product in very terse, well-crafted and well-lighted videos. And the 60-day guarantee accompanying the offer is part of the ClickBank program that has a lot of consumers complaining about run-arounds and unresponsiveness.
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Details were last updated on Oct 26, 2024 14:02 +08.