Do you ever wonder why you practice for hours and hours and yet you don’t seem to get any better?

This is not an uncommon problem, and it’s something I hear from guitar players all the time. The fact is, just practicing more is not going to make you a better player. Sometimes practicing can even make the problems worse! I know this is the case because I’ve had hundreds of guitar players come to me complaining that they’ve been trying to get better for years and have hit a wall.

The hard truth is that “practice makes perfect” is a flat out lie. It’s cute, but misleading. Practicing something wrong will not help your playing. What we should say is, “Effective practice makes perfect.”

Learning effective practice techniques is the best way to become the kind of player you want to be.

Merely repeating something 100,000 times does not lead to mastery. But, if you know how to repeat something in the most effective way possible, in a way that fixes the problem you have, you will inevitably become a better guitar player. That’s the secret to mastering guitar.

Becoming a good guitar player does not require natural talent, it requires time and effort.

This is the best news I can give you. Are some people more naturally gifted than others? Absolutely. Yet even the great guitarist Steve Vai has said guitar did not come naturally to him. The point is this: anyone who has the drive and puts in the effort can become a good guitar player, given enough time. But we can make the time needed much shorter if we practice in a way that really makes us better.

That’s why I’m giving away my eBook for free. Simply because I’ve made tons of mistakes in the 25 years I’ve been playing and I want to help you avoid (or fix) those mistakes.

Inside you’ll learn:

    • Small-Size-eCover-PNGHow to use isolation practice: If you don’t seem to be getting much better despite having played for a long time, isolation practice will help target what’s really holding you back
    • Why long practice session may not be as good as short ones: You’ve  crammed for a test, and you know what happens after the test is over: you forget everything. I’ll show you how to retain more of what you practice so you don’t “cram and forget” anymore
    • How to use the time you have, even if it isn’t much: Most of us are busy, busy, busy, so practice time is short, isn’t it? That’s why you need to improve your playing every time you practice, even if it’s only 10 minutes a day, and I’ll show you how.
    • What you need more than “natural talent”: At some point you’ve probably wondered if you’re not talented enough to be really good at guitar, but this is a misconception. Talent is not the primary ingredient needed to become a good player, and in the book I explain what is.
    • How to maximize your progress: Most guitar players waste a lot of time when they practice – they end up spending a lot of time doing things that don’t make them better. I’ll show you how to cut out the useless stuff and make the most of your practice time.
    • The right mindset needed for success: If you’ve ever gotten down on yourself for not being a better player, you know how frustrating and demoralizing it is. Having the right frame of mind is very important, and I explain why in the book.
    • How and why you need to track your progress: Becoming a good guitar player takes a long time, and often we don’t see the progress we make because it usually happens in little increments over days, weeks, months and years. This is why you should track your progress, and I show you how to do that so you see yourself improving all along the way.

Click the link below and you will immediately download the eBook, completely free. If you would like to purchase the book, you may do so at the bottom of the page.

 

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