We have been running the HCPG newsletter now since 2006.   We are 
very happy with what we have created over the years and believe that 
many of the lessons we have learned in running HCPG also can apply to 
other businesses.   So here’s our case study.
1. Don’t claim anything.    The quality of your product is the only 
thing that matters.     We could be three punks trading from a double 
wide in some trailer park,  or we could be three very well-off 
successful traders.  We’ve never claimed one or the other.  Does it 
matter?   No, not at all.   All that matters is whether the information 
we provide can make you more profit than you would have without the 
newsletter.  Stay with what is relevant.   We stay under the HCPG 
moniker without providing personal information because frankly, our 
personal life is no one’s business.   All we do is provide potential 
set-ups for any one who pays $44.76/month.   You’ll find out very soon 
(including a 10 day free trial) whether it’s all nonsense or whether it 
can add to your bottom line.
2. Unless you intend to provide an audited PnL record that you will 
provide to your subscribers every week never talk about dollars or brag 
about how much money you’re minting.   You will never hear us talk about
 money, be it on stocktwits, twitter, or in the newsletter.   You will 
never hear us say Big Kaching!!   If we’re happy with a trade we’ll say 
it was a good trade; whether we had 100 shares or 100,000 shares should 
have no effect on your trading.  Keep your ego out of your business.
3. Be nice and always look at the big picture.  If you’re in it for 
the long-term as we are (HCPG 5 year anniversary in a few months) then 
try to build solid relationships with your readers.  Don’t nickel and 
dime people.  If a subscriber forgets to cancel a trial and gets billed 
on the 10th day  and emails us that they don’t want to stay on, we 
refund the money.    We believe that readers should consider us a lucky 
find — rather than trying to trap people for an extra month because they
 forgot to cancel in time.   We want readers to stay with us because 
they want to stay with us.   This is also the reason we do monthly 
payments.  No contracts, no specials.
4.  Be the best in what you do.    Easier said than done but what 
will propel you on this path is to specialize.   Find your niche and 
then be the best.     We only trade high-beta very liquid US equities, 
mostly in the commodity and tech space.  We’re not interested in trading
 small-caps, Chinese time-bombs, biotech-time bombs, and while we like 
to watch currencies and hear about options, they’re not our 
specialization and you won’t find them in our newsletter.  We want to 
only talk about things we know very well and frankly, options and forex 
do not fit into that category.
5.  Teach people.   Subscribers who have been with us  for a good 
chunk of time  know our strategies as well as we do.   Create a 
community and  build bonds and you will see the benefits of organic 
growth.
6.  Keep your cool.   When you are writing the newsletter or posting 
on twitter/stocktwits you are representing your company.  Don’t get 
emotional, or get into cat fights with other traders.    If you are 
dying to rant then open up a personal twitter account and go nuts.   But
 everything that comes under your company name should reflect 
professionalism and integrity.   Don’t get us wrong, we love to joke 
around, and believe that’s an important part of relieving stress in a 
very stressful job.   But you won’t find HCPG losing it in a temper 
tantrum.
7.  Don’t fret about the competition.     We often retweet posts from
 our competitors, and consider many of them as online friends.   Don’t 
be afraid.   There’s always room for a quality product in the market.
(originally published April 09, 2011) 
 
