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How To Rake In Cash At
Poker was created because I was sick and tired of
seeing new, aspiring (often naive) players getting fleeced at
the casino tables for their hard earned money by professional
players acting like they're rank amateurs.
After researching online, we found all sorts
of courses and ebooks targeted at players with plenty of
experience looking to take their game to the next level.
Although this course includes a lot of advanced strategies, it
is steered to the players who are at the beginning stages of
their game. These are the players that need the most help
against the ravenous professional players that circle the casino
tables like a flock of vultures.
We
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| SUBJECT: Try this next time you
play When entering a Poker
Room, Game and Seat Selection should be forefront in your
mind. In selecting a game, you want to go where you have a
handicap. In other words, if you are rated number 8 on the
world's list of best Poker players, sitting at a table
with the top 7 Poker players will put you at the bottom of
ladder; as you will undoubtedly be the worst poker player
on that table. If its money you want to win, play at a
table that you know you can beat.
Once
you have chosen your game and table, you must select a
seat where you will get the most value for your money.
How? Poker is played in a clockwise direction, and the
money will flow likewise. Therefore, try to identify the
big Bankroll players with loose attitudes. Very important,
always ensure that they are seated to your immediate
right. This way, all the betting and raising will be
completed by the time the action reaches you.
This is only a tiny sample of the kind
of powerful strategies and tactics that are included a
course that I've recently found. The site is called
How to Rake In Cash At Poker and covers everything
from introductory level playing right through to some
really cool, advanced ground-breaking strategies.
Read through this stuff and your opponents won't even see
you coming! You can get it at http://XXXXX.htricap.hop.clickbank.net.
Good luck at the tables!
YOUR NAME HERE |
| SUBJECT: Psychology and bluffing
It either comes naturally to you, or
you have to work really, REALLY hard to understand it and
use it...I'm talking about poker psychology. Poker
psychology is a matter of special aptitude.
You have it or you don't. If you have it, nobody
needs to teach it to you. If you don't have it, it
takes a lot of work and practice to really figure it out.
Fortunately, it is possible to be a
consistent winner in a poker game even if one or two other
players surpass you in intuition, that skill that gives
one player ascendancy over another. If you have
better technique (knowledge of the game and application of
that knowledge) and if you are more conservative (which
means playing only when it is mathematically sound to do
so), you can still beat the intuitive player who tosses
his chips away in curiosity or over optimism.
If the majority of players in the
game are equal or superior to you in technique and can
also outguess you, that simply is no game for you to be
in.
Part of what I said about
psychology can be applied also to the art of bluffing.
Bluffing is an art, never think it isn't; but bluffing
does lend itself to a considerable amount of advice and
standard rules, which I can't discuss here because there
isn't enough time.
Understand however, first, and most
important, you have to bluff sometimes. I know that
some players are temperamentally unsuited to bluffing and
find it repugnant, but it is a necessary part of the game.
If you never bluff, that fact soon becomes noticed and you
do not get called on your good hands. If you never
get called on your good hands, you are unlikely to win.
If you are interested in this
aspect of the game, a website that I highly recommend you
checking out is How To Rake In Cash At Poker at http://XXXXX.htricap.hop.clickbank.net.
Not only is psychology and bluffing covered in great
detail, but so are all of the other aspects of the game.
If you want to be a consistent winner, you need to educate
yourself and get good at ALL aspects of the game.
You need to come to the table with a strong understanding
of the game, and an arsenal of strategies and tactics.
Without that, you're going to blow your money, guaranteed!
Go and check out the website.
It's at http://XXXXX.htricap.hop.clickbank.net.
Good luck at the tables!
YOUR NAME HERE |
Blog Posts:
| TOPIC: Money Management
Seasoned poker players will usually
assure you that money management is at least as important
as any other factor in skillful play. Many of them
say that it is the most important single factor. I
have a few general, but absolutely essential statements,
to express on this particular topic.
First, the factor of courage.
Here I will quote a book from a celebrated expert, John
Crawford, because he says it better than I ever can:
"A winning poker player must
have a combination of two qualities. They are
knowledge and courage. The knowledge part is what
you can read about in books. The factor of courage
cannot be taught; but you can't win without it. When
you get into a poker game, you aren't there to keep from
losing. You're there to win. And to do that
you must back your good hands to the limit, and risk your
money when you think you're right. This lack of
courage is the reason so many poker players are at a
disadvantage once they start losing. Every time
another payer bets aggressively, their first reaction is
one of fear. They check when they should bet, and
drop when they should call, thus winning too little on
their good hands and losing on too many of their fair
hands. I have known men who were formerly good poker
players but who lost their courage, either through a
reduced financial position, or family responsibilities, or
even a seemingly interminable losing streak. They
promptly changed from good players to poor ones. If
they amount of money at stake is frightening to you, I can
only recommend that you appropriate a certain amount of
money that you are able to lose and play that money as
though it were an unlimited supply. If you lose it
all, quit the game. While you're playing you'll have
a chance to win."
That quote brings up the factor of
capital. Proprietors of gambling houses used to say
that their principal advantage came from the fact that "a
sucker will sit and lose more than he will sit and win."
It is necessary to limit your losses. When you are
losing you are probably an inferior player anyway; your
standards are distorted in your anxiety to get even.
The most widespread mistakes in money management is to
quit a game when ahead and sit out long hours of a futile
losers' game when behind.
Figure what your capital is.
In any one game, you should not lose more than 5 percent
or at the very most 10 percent of that capital. The
game selected should be one in which you will get a fair
early play for your maximum appropriation, perhaps one or
one and one-half or two stacks, but when you have lost
that amount you should leave the game. When you are
winning, you should stay as long as you want to or as long
as you can keep on winning.
Suppose your capital is $500; you
should play in a game in which you can probably play an
hour or so on $20 to $30, even if you are holding nothing.
In no case should you let yourself lose more than that.
If you get well ahead, you should
put away the capital you began with and play from that
point forward on other players' money. At the
very least, it is psychologically disturbing to wind up a
loser after having been well ahead; and any psychological
hazard reduces your effectiveness.
Good luck at the tables!
USE ONE OF THE FORUM SIGNATURES HERE |
Review:
| www.RakeInCashAtPoker.com
- My Personal Opinion The
author of this poker primer, Alex Mitchell, has been
playing and studying the game of poker for over 5 years.
Although that may not sound like a long period, it
accumulates to an absolute ton of education, practice and
time at the tables, considering this is all he dedicated
himself to doing every hour of every day outside of his
day job.
Alex writes books, creates software
products, educates, is a speaker and more for those
wanting to learn how to play poker, and to improve upon
skills and strategies that they currently possess so that
they are ultimately more profitable.
The course begins with a brief, yet
very interesting, opening on the origins of poker and the
gets right into the meat. Understanding the approach
of not wanting to leave anyone behind by beginning with
advanced strategies, the course progresses to a section on
Poker 101. In this section, those that aren't
familiar with how the game is played (i.e. the betting
structure, what cards are dealt and when etc.) are
educated so that they know how to actually play a game.
For those of you that already know
how to play and are looking for more advanced strategies
that you can sink your teeth into, know that this doesn't
last long. It's enough to bring the beginner players
up to speed. The course proceeds to analyze every
aspect of the game, including the 'theory of starting hand
value', the correct way to incorporate 'positioning' into
your strategies, the importance of 'implied odds' and how
to correctly and quickly calculate them, but more
importantly how to utilize them to their fullest
potential.
The course goes into great depths
and walk-throughs of The Flop, The Turn and the River, and
how to play each depending on the 'pace' of the game, and
the style of the opponents. Naturally, a poker course
wouldn't be all-encompassing without sections discussing
betting, betting patterns, table image, advanced
strategies and tactics, and the psychology around bluffing
and spotting tells, so that they can be used correctly.
The entire course is laid out in a
simple to follow, progression format making it easy for
novice or advanced players to accelerate their learning.
If you don't consider yourself an exceptionally better
player after completing the course, don't worry.
Alex has done that extra mile again and has put in writing
that if you aren't 100% happy with the course, he will
refund you every cent, no questions asked. Sounds
like a no-brainer to me...I'll let you decide.
Believe me when I say that the
information provided is a must have if you play any
style of poker, regardless of if you are a beginner,
intermediate or professional level player. The
course covers a ton of information for each level and
style of player. I strongly urge you to have a
look at "How to Rake In Cash At Poker" at
http://XXXXX.htricap.hop.clickbank.net
Good luck at the tables!
USE ONE OF THE FORUM SIGNATURES HERE |
Articles:
| TOPIC: The importance
of poker mathematics
You don't have to be a mathematician to be a good poker player. It
doesn't even help. True, poker offers some of the most fascinating of
mathematical problems and for that reason has engaged the attention
of he best mathematicians. Some of their researches invade
the highest levels of the higher mathematics. Their findings
are published in books. You can trust these books. I have read dozens
of poker books and as far as I know Oswald Jacoby's is
the only one written by a master mathematician, yet I
have never seen a poker book in which the quoted odds are wrong by more
than some insignificant fraction or percentage. But you do have to have a knowledge of simple arithmetic,
a memory for the simple odds that you read about in books, an understanding of what these odds mean, and a quick eye for appraising the size
of the pot. It is considered neither cricket nor poker to
stop and count the pot every time your turn comes and you have to make a
decision.
When you have the best hand around the table, and you know
or feel sure that you have the best hand, mathematics doesn't enter into it at all.
You simply shove your money into the pot. You may
take some comfort from the figures, elaborately prepared
by mathematicians, proving that the best hand going in
is usually the best hand coming out; but what would it matter? Who ever heard of
dropping the best hand?
So the only mathematical questions arise when you may not have the best hand going in. In any such case, you must
improve to win. You must then ask yourself three questions: 1, What are the odds against my
improving? 2, What are the odds offered me by the pot? 3, What is the chance that I will win if I do?
The first question is answered by tables of odds that you
can quickly and easily commit to memory; nearly every case
that may confront you is treated in the closing pages of
this book. The second question - the odds offered by the pot - is a
matter of an eyecheck of the pot or knowledge of how much is
already in it and how much you have to put in. The third question -
your chance of winning if you do improve is answered
partly by the tables of probabilities and partly by your
knowledge of the game.
Good luck at the tables!
USE ONE OF THE FORUM SIGNATURES HERE |
| TOPIC:
How to fool or outguess your opponents
This is as far as you can go in poker skill. It is the highest
expert or super-expert level of skill, and it probably
cannot be taught, cannot be measured, cannot even be denned. Anyone
who has the knack or ability to outguess his opponents
probably has such an aptitude for poker that he doesn't need a book
to help him win. Furthermore, he probably knows quite well
that need a book, or my advice, and no doubt if he and I
could beat me.
Yet the finest poker player or any player can profit from
read books on poker. When he reads such a book, he is reading
about what other good poker players have done and the
methods they have found effective. I have never seen a bad
poker book.
Many of them are badly organized, yes; usually they are
incomplete; analyze them as a whole and they consist mostly of tips
that apply to specific situations and not to the game as a
whole. Nevertheless they are all worthy publications,
praiseworthy, helpful, admirable. If you tried to write everything that is known
about poker in all its forms, you would fill a twenty-five
volume encyclopedia as big as the Britannica. Many of the finest
poker exploits are inspirational and intuitional. They won't necessarily
occur even to the most expert player at the strategic moment when they will be most
helpful. But if that player has heard about them, through
reading books that give the experiences of other
players, he doesn't need inspiration or intuition or even
practical experience in a game. They become part of his experience.
A course that I highly recommend you check out covers the
entire gamut of the game of poker; from basics to advanced
strategies, ethics and etiquette, table image, bluffing,
positioning, reading and spotting tells, poker math (odds
& implied odds), bankroll management, and even in-depth
psychological aspects of the game. The course is
called How To Rake In Cash At Poker and you can
check it out at http://XXXXX.htricap.hop.clickbank.net.
Good luck at the tables!
USE ONE OF THE FORUM SIGNATURES HERE |
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Tips for Affiliate
Success:
I want you to be as
successful as possible and earn commissions from the sale of
my course. The more you make, the more I make, and we're
both happy. There are many affiliates, but only a few make a
significant number of sales. Here are a few simple suggestions
to increase your sales.
Tip No. 1
Write a short endorsement testimonial about the course. If you
are regularly contacting your list or client base and
delivering great content, then you will have built up a level
of trust with them. Your recommendation of this course will
result in extra sales.
Tip No. 2
If you have a database of email addresses, send a personal
email recommending they purchase this course. Someone said,
"The money is in your list" and that is definitely true. Give
them great content over time, and every now and then,
recommend a product to buy. Watch your sales soar.
Tip No. 3
Use the graphics above to promote the course. Do you have an
area on your website where you recommend products/services? By
changing this regularly it will give you a reason to send an
email to your list on a regular basis, informing them of the
change. Your sales will increase if you contact them regularly
and follow up on recommendations. Give them a reason to buy,
follow up and watch your sales increase.
Tip No. 4
For best results when sending an email, a short personal
recommendation with your unique affiliate link is often
enough. Once they get to the site, a high percentage of people
will buy because you've already established a good
relationship with your list.
Tip No. 5
Use the Forum Signatures and post articles to public articling
sites, or create a blog and post content into the blog.
I have provided you with some article and blog content that
you can use to get you started.
Tip No. 6
Use the free reports as a giveaway on an opt-in form in order
to build your email list. Build a relationship with that
list and email them the emails that I wrote for you above.
Keep building your list!
Tip No. 7
Create Google AdWords, Yahoo! Sponsored Search and Microsoft
AdCenter pay-per-click campaigns to drive traffic to the sales
page (with your affiliate link) or your opt-in giveaway page.
Tip No. 8
In order to write an effective recommendation, you really need
to go through the course. My recommendation is to buy it from
yourself from your own site and get 60% off. After reading
through the material, you will be much better at telling your
clients how good it really is.
You can contact me pretty much whenever
you want - don't be a stranger. You can e-mail my affiliate
support team at affiliate (@) RakeInCashAtPoker (.) com.
We'll respond as quickly as we can.
What to do next...
1) Review
the sales copy and get your promotional material here.
2) Promote using your chosen
sales copy.
3) Become a member
of
AffiliateBootcampDotCom.com and get more
training to help you make more money as an affiliate marketer.
Plus you'll get a ton of great promotional copy and stuff you
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That's it. I'll do my job right, so you get paid, and your
readers, members, and/or subscribers come away happy. I will
keep you posted of any developments, and want you to do as
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high quality low price product to your people.

Good luck at the tables!

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