Free · No opt-in · No catch

The $124 Blueprint

The exact thing that took me from two years at £0 to paid inside 24 hours.

This is short on purpose. You don't need another course. You need one working method and an afternoon.

The whole model in four steps

1 → Smallest possible front-end (3 pages, nothing more)

2 → Someone else's offer at the end (already built, already converting)

3 → Send traffic at it

4 → Verdict in days — strangers pay, or they don't

That's it. No product. No brand. No funnel software. You're not building a business yet — you're testing whether one exists. Build comes later, if ever, and only around something already proven to sell.

Why 3 pages — not a one-page bridge

Most affiliates use a single “bridge page.” One scroll. One glance. One decision asked of a complete stranger.

That's the problem: a one-page bridge is skippable. Cold traffic doesn't read it — it bounces off it. You're asking for trust before you've earned attention.

Three short pages fix this, for three reasons:

  1. Each click is a small yes. Someone who clicks “Part 2” has just told themselves they're interested. By Part 3 they've invested — and people protect their investments by continuing.
  2. Each page does exactly one job. A page that tries to hook, convince, and sell at once does none of them. Split the jobs and every page gets easier to write and harder to skip.
  3. No buy button until the end. For two pages, nothing is for sale — so their guard never goes up. The reader arrives at the offer having talked themselves into it. A conclusion people reach on their own beats any claim you make to them.

Here's the spine of the three pages:

PAGE 1 — THE HOOK. Name a problem they live inside but have never seen written down. Filter hard: right person leans in, wrong person leaves. No product. Ends with one link: continue.

PAGE 2 — THE STORY. Your real story — you were them. Name the pattern they're stuck in. Make it not their fault. Still no product. Continue.

PAGE 3 — THE REVEAL. The way out, then the offer as the obvious next step. One honest warning about what it isn't. One link out — your affiliate link.

One rule that beats all others: write it in their words, about their life. The reader is the hero. The offer is just where the story ends.

And yes — before you say it.

You're inside one of these right now.

The series that brought you here is this exact structure. You arrived cold, you've read two pages voluntarily, and you're holding the free gift. That's not a gotcha — that's the demonstration. You've just watched the method work on the hardest possible audience: someone who's seen every trick in this industry. You.

I'm showing you the cups and the balls and doing the trick anyway. It still works. That's why it's worth having.

Why you don't need GoHighLevel

Funnel software starts at $97/month — before you know whether anyone will buy anything. That's a build-phase expense, and the build phase is where you die.

Here's the stack instead:

Total: $20/month. Live in an afternoon. If the offer doesn't sell, you've lost a few hours — not a quarter of your life and a software subscription.

One warning: don't host this on Vercel's free plan. Their terms explicitly ban affiliate sites on the free tier — it's listed by name. Netlify or Cloudflare Pages, both free, both fine.

The build, step by step

  1. Pick an affiliate offer that's already converting — proof of sales, low refunds, real guarantee. Never be an offer's first test.
  2. Open Claude. Paste the prompt below.
  3. Answer its questions honestly. The uglier your answers, the better your pages. Polished answers make forgettable copy.
  4. Let it write the 3 pages, then ask for the web files.
  5. Drag them into Netlify Drop. You're live.
  6. Put the link where your people already are — your content, your bio, your posts.
  7. Watch what happens. Clicks but no sales after a few hundred visitors? Change the offer or the hook. Sales? You've found something real. Now you're allowed to build.

The Interview Prompt

Copy everything in the dark box. Paste it into Claude. It does the rest — including asking you the questions.

Copy from hereYou are a direct-response copywriter who specialises in 3-page presell sites for affiliate offers. Your job: interview me, then write my presell. STEP 1 — INTERVIEW ME. Ask me these questions ONE AT A TIME. Wait for my answer before asking the next. Push back if my answer is vague or polished — you want the raw version. 1. What's the affiliate offer you're promoting? (Link or description, price, what the buyer gets, any proof it converts.) 2. Who buys this? Describe the person — not age and location, but what their week looks like and what they're frustrated by. 3. What have those people already tried that didn't work? 4. Now you. How long have you been trying to make money online (or in this niche), and what have you built or bought along the way? 5. What's the most embarrassingly specific moment of wasted effort you remember? (The smaller and more specific, the better.) 6. What did all that effort earn you, honestly? 7. What was the moment you realised the way you were doing it was broken? What did you say to yourself? 8. What changed — what are you doing differently now? 9. What's the first small win you got doing it the new way? (A number, however small. Small numbers are more believable than big ones.) 10. What should someone NOT expect from this offer? What's the honest warning? STEP 2 — WRITE THE 3 PAGES. Using my answers, in MY voice and MY words: PAGE 1 — THE HOOK. Open with a short real scene from my life. Name the problem my reader lives inside but has never seen written down. Lead with what this is NOT (no hype, no loophole). End by telling the wrong reader to leave and the right reader to continue. NO mention of any product. Ends with a single "Continue to Part 2" link. PAGE 2 — THE STORY. My story from the interview: what I tried, what it cost, the specific embarrassing moment, what it earned me, the realisation. Then describe the pattern my reader is stuck in, in forensic detail, and give the pattern a simple name. Make clear the pattern is not their fault — explain who profits from them staying stuck. End with a hint that there's another way, and a "Continue to Part 3" link. Still NO product. PAGE 3 — THE REVEAL. The new way of operating, my first small win, and then — only now — the offer, introduced as the obvious next step rather than a pitch. Include my honest warning about what it isn't. One call to action: my affiliate link. Include a small affiliate disclosure line at the bottom. WRITING RULES: - Short lines. One thought per line. A real paragraph only when it earns its place. - No hype words, no exclamation marks, no "imagine waking up to..." - The reader is the hero. The system they were sold is the villain. Never blame the reader. - Each page has ONE job. No buy buttons or product mentions before Page 3. STEP 3 — BUILD IT. When I approve the copy, output three complete standalone HTML files (page1, page2, page3), simple clean readable styling, linked together in sequence, ready to drag into Netlify Drop. Start with question 1.Copy to here

Three ways people ruin this

  1. Polishing before publishing. A week on fonts and colours before a single visitor. Send it ugly. Strangers vote on the words, not the kerning.
  2. Writing about the offer instead of about them. Nobody clicks through three pages of product features. They click through three pages of their own life.
  3. Turning it back into a build phase. Logo, brand name, domain portfolio, content calendar — before the first sale. The verdict comes first. The infrastructure comes after. That order is the entire method.

You're ten honest answers and one afternoon away from your own $124.

It won't change your bank account. It'll change your head.

That's worth more.

Now — back to the story you were reading. There's a pattern I still need to name, and it's the part nobody says out loud.

Continue where you left off