If you ran a launch recently and the results came in lower than expected, the first place most people look is the offer. They start questioning the price, wondering if the niche is too saturated, rewriting the sales page and trying again.
Your offer is probably not the problem, and I want that to land before you read anything else because I don’t want you to go make unnecessary changes to your product suite.
What's happening to a lot of entrepreneurs right now is something I call a system failure, not an offer failure. The market has changed, buyer behavior has shifted, and the tactics that worked 2 to 3 years ago are doing less and less with the same (or more) amount of effort.
In this week's Fail to Win podcast episode, I break down exactly why launches are underperforming in 2026 and what to do about it.
What Actually Changed in the Market
The first thing to understand is that engagement metrics are no longer the same as buying intent.
Your emails might be getting opened and people might be clicking through to your sales page. But they're probably browsing, not buying. The reason this is happening is that we're in what I call a ‘trust recession.’ AI has massively increased content output across every platform, there are more launches, more emails, more frameworks than ever before, and buyers have become a lot more skeptical as a result.
They've also gotten smarter about how launches work. They know countdown timers aren't always real, that pre-orders don't always sell out, and that they can email to ask for an exception after a close cart day. So they act a lot less impulsively, and that fast impulse is what a lot of launch systems were built on.
Add to that the fact that most people have bought at least one program in the past few years and never opened it. The result = they're more cautious now and need a lot more trust in you as a brand before they'll invest.
The 5 Structural Reasons Your Launch Is Doing Too Much Heavy Lifting
- Your audience was curious, not convinced. Clicks and views measure interest, not buying intent, and buying intent has to be built, not assumed.
- The market is noisier than ever. If your launch messaging looks and sounds like every other launch in your industry, your audience has already seen it. Generic launch content disappears now in a way it simply didn't 3 years ago.
- Buyers are more skeptical and trust-sensitive. They need certainty before they commit, which means knowing exactly what they're getting, seeing proof that it works, and believing that you specifically can help them.
- You're expecting your open cart to do all the work. Where in 2020 you could show up with a new offer and sell it immediately, today that same approach asks you to create trust, build demand, and convert all in the same 2 weeks. It's too much to ask of a small launch window.
- Promotion fatigue is real. People recognise the patterns, they know the system, and they wait it out rather than act on urgency that no longer feels real.
The 3 Beliefs Your Buyers Need Before They'll Click Checkout
When I look at my own launches and the patterns I've tracked across 5 years of launch debriefs, the buyers who convert are always the ones who already hold 3 specific beliefs.
The first is that the problem you solve is real and urgent for them right now. Not abstract, not “someday I'll deal with that.” Right now, today, this is a problem that's costing them something (ideally, sleep).
The second is that you are the right person to solve it for them, not just any coach or course creator, but you specifically, with your story, your results, and your way of doing things.
The third is that the investment makes sense given the transformation. This one has less to do with the price and everything to do with whether they believe the outcome is real and has a high ROI.
These 3 beliefs are not built inside your launch week. They're built in the 4 weeks before you ever mention a price and a discount.
The 4-Week Pre-Launch Framework That Builds Trust Before Cart Open
If you have a launch coming up, this is how to structure the 4 weeks before you open cart.
Week 1 is problem awareness. Talk about the symptom your client is experiencing. Not the solution, not the framework. The moment they look in the mirror and something feels wrong.
Week 2 is your authority on this topic: your journey, what you've learned, why you know what you know. It's not a humble brag, it's the evidence that earns permission to sell.
Week 3 is proof that the transformation is real. Client results, social proof, a story that isn't yours that shows this problem is solvable.
Week 4 is the transition into your offer.
If you need to compress this, you can do it in 4 days instead of 4 weeks. The structure is the same: symptom, authority, social proof, offer.
What I've Seen In My Own Data
Over 80% of the clients who pay me between €2,000 and €60,000 have listened to at least one of my podcasts before buying from me.
In a recent launch, 80% of buyers had also attended a live lead generation event we hosted beforehand.
Almost every single person who bought in one of my last launches had had some kind of personal interaction with me, whether that was a webinar, a reply to a voice note, or a direct question I answered.
This is what the data is telling me, and I don't think it's specific to my business. It's the reality of where the market is right now.
What to Do With All of This
Your offer is probably fine, but your launch probably needs a system that starts performing earlier.
Map the beliefs you want your audience to hold 4 to 6 weeks before your next cart open date, build content consistently around those beliefs, and show up in ways that feel personal rather than polished.
And if you want to build the kind of authority system that means your launch doesn't have to do all the heavy lifting, the Authority Accelerator is for you. Install my system to warm up leads on a daily basis, all year long. Registrations close this week at fastforwardamy.com/accelerator.
And if you want to hear the full conversation, listen to part 1 of the Online Business Reset series on the Fail to Win podcast where I’m sharing all about the New Rules of the Online Game this month!


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