Waterhouse Report
Neil Waterhouse offers the Waterhouse Report, a report designed to give you information that's necessary to start your home business successfully and with no money. Neil claims that the Waterhouse Report will eventually help you earn a monthly income of more than $5,000 while working for just 1 hour a day. Neil Waterhouse claims that for the last five years he has been interviewing many successful home based business entrepreneurs. He has personally examined and tested 384 work at home businesses, and provides you with the 'supreme list' of the ones that actually work. I paid $27.00 for the Waterhouse Report and was very excited to get started. Once I had a few minutes to look ever the contents that I had just paid for, however, my excitement quickly subsided. The Waterhouse Report contains what I like to call a 'master plan' for becoming wealthy. The whole thing was quite convoluted and as far as I could tell it was actually 2 plans in one. The first plan was basically a 'write your own e-book and sales letter' to put on your website and sell it to your visitors. The Waterhouse Report offers you very general (and very useless) tips on how to do both of these things. For example, for creating your own sales letter I was told to just pick 5 other sales letters that I liked and copy and paste from them until I had my own. For writing my own e-book I was advised, by the report, to write about something that I know or copy someone else's e-book and improve on it, or even pay a writer to rewrite someone else's e-book and then sell it as my own. Other tips included double spacing the text in my e-book and making the font large so that it can be as short as possible without my customers complaining too much. If you buy the Waterhouse Report you will see that Neil takes these tips to heart! The other master plan included in the Waterhouse Report takes you from where you have zero dollars to where you will be buying $200,000 real-estate properties. You will start making your fortune by selling things on e-bay and eventually move on to bigger and better. The report tells you to go around to garage sales and buy up items that are worth more than they can be sold for. If you have no money then you're told to sell your own things or, if you have no things, borrow items that your friends no longer want and sell their things on eBay! Once you make a little money then the Waterhouse Report tells you to spend it on various products that will help you make more money. Of course all these products are ones that Neil Waterhouse is reselling for a profit. Sometimes I felt that he was even giving me misleading information just to sell me a product. I found it very irritating that Neil Waterhouse misguides you in the fact that you would still have to purchase the other programs he mentions to be able to do anything. He makes it seems as if once you bought his report you would have all that you need to start making money immediately. For example, even though you are supposedly starting with nothing you are told to find a niche market by using a service called WordTracker to find what people are searching for on the internet. This service charges a monthly fee of which Neil will get a piece, and because of this he fails to tell you that there is actually a free service (though not necessarily as detailed but good nonetheless) called GoodKeywords that does a similar thing for free. Doesn't seem to me like he was really trying to help me out. As far as I can see, Neil Waterhouse basically makes you pay for a list of programs which he is reselling. Once you purchase one of the programs from his list he again makes money while you are left with very little. If you're curious about the way I make my money from home then I'll tell you and you won't even have to pay me $27 for it ;). Just let me know where to send the info. Click Here for the Info Update Neil Waterhouse has threatened to sue me unless I take down this article. He has put up a false advertisement saying that he has begun to take legal action against me but as of now that is untrue. I have asked Neil to list the things about this article that he believes are false regarding his product but he has chosen not to do so (possibly because it's all true). I will keep you guys updated. Couple Websites to Look Out For: Largestdownload.com - Fake blog posts created by Waterhouse Company or one of their affiliates. To reaffirm this just post anything remotely negative regarding the Waterhouse Report and it will be deleted with 24hrs. One-Review.com - Fake review site created by the Waterhouse Company recommending themselves. Warmly, 
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