Affiliate Marketing Mrspennington

Just about affiliate marketing reviews

Month: August 2024

Graham Gibson, Of Central Coast Nutraceuticals Speaks Out On Ftc Charges

This past Friday, I had the opportunity to speak to Graham Gibson, of Central Coast Nutraceuticals , who is the target of a FTC investigation charging, among other things, with deceptive advertising and consumer fraud. He had reached out to me that day, wanting to make sure that his side of the story was told. I have to admit that at the time I wasnt sure I wanted to call him before the FTC revealed its case against him. Weve seen the press releases every time some peddler is charged with a crime, they all say the same thing they didnt do this, they didnt commit these crimes, they didnt defraud consumers, the FTC has it all wrong. So, while I was going to call him eventually to get his side of the story, I wasnt in any hurry. Im glad I called because Mr. Gibson has a real story to tell, and strange enough doesnt completely deny the charges against him and his company.

Central Coast (BBB “F” Rating Here) sells Nutraceuticals which is a made up word for diet and supplement related products that fall under a wide-berth of products from stuff to flush out your rear-end to berries that make you constantly erect supposedly. They are not to be confused with Neuticals, which are a brand of testicle replacement for Dogs. The comapny should also not be confused with Central Coast Pharma which Gus from Psych works for. For while they employed over 150 people in Phoenix Arizona and were one of the top suppliers of Acai related diet products. The model at one time was pretty simple people would sign up to get a free trial, paying only a small fee for shipping and handling. After they received the product, a large percentage wouldnt return it or cancel the subscription and thus be charged on a monthly basis for the product to be sent to their home, regardless if they actually took the product, or wanted it. Ive covered this model, often called continuity marketing or negative option marketing.

Gibson told me that on Tuesday, August 10th, he was raided by the FTC along with a group of Federal Marshals, local police and attorneys following a two year investigation of the company that included numerous interviews with his employees, customers and advertising partners. He was presented with a very large packet of materials that detailed the accusations and accused him and his company of a variety of things from consumer fraud to deceptive marketing to being the guy on the grassy knoll. Lets put it this way: on Tuesday you would rather be the subject of a pigmy porn film than be in Mr. Grahams shoes. Despite this, Mr. Gibson on the phone was very contrite, honest and REALLY wanted to share his side of the story.

According to Gibson, he had already taken steps to change his business and was on the front line of making changes to the industry. He had already settled with the Arizona State Attorney General a year earlier and for almost two years had changed his business model, had taken steps to be fully compliant and even hired FTC experts to advise him on what was legal, legit and compliant. The charges the FTC were accusing him were from over two years earlier, and many of those issues had already been fully resolved and that some of the specific complaints were from customers that had already been refunded. I run one of the most honest businesses in the industry, claimed Gibson and have even been working the last year on an organization that would help other companies in the industry compliant. The FTC is trying to make an example out of us, because we were one of the leading companies in this part of the industry. There are ads all over the place that are much worse.

Mr. Gibson then made it clear that he felt the industry was rife with fraud and deception. He pointed out that currently there are tons of ads on mainstream sites like MSNBC through ad networks such as Pulse360 that make obviously misleading claims. He pointed out that if you go to those sites, you will get tons of links to fake blogs or flogs, a practice that according to him, he did not allow. It was very clear that while he accepts some of the responsibility, he changed his practices 18 months ago but even then many of the issues came from his advertising partners. Mr. Gibson even went as far to call himself a victim of the scummy practices of affiliate marketing companies and their partners. He points out that you can go to many major properties right now and see really deceptive advertising that is promoting both direct response companies and sometimes major brands without the explicit consent of the advertiser. He is very honest about his complaint: that no matter what he did, display and affiliate networks would consistently violate his instructions over and over again.

Whether or not you believe Mr. Gibsons story, he brings to light the issue that we have all talked about. In our industry, who is responsible for the actions of publishers, affiliates, websites, ad-networks? Every time the New York State, California or Florida Attorney General goes after the dozen or so Scam Kings we hear the same thing coming out of their mouths: we werent responsible, it was rogue partners Its the same type of deniability we hear in organized crime trials. Perhaps there are some companies that genuinely are not responsible, but at what point when month after month, year after year when your partners are committing fraudulent practices, can you continue to pretend to know nothing? If someone is generating millions of dollars in revenue, are we really to believe that you are clueless how? Those in the industry who have been around as long as I have all know that this deniability is often nothing but complete nonsense. Do I honestly believe that Mr. Gibson never knew that his affiliates and ad networks were doing questionable things? Probably not. However, I do believe that at one point he made it clear after being sued by the AZ Attorney General that these practices should stop and found that many of his partners just kept on promoting his product anyway they pleased not caring if they burned him.

For those that dont know, this week is the Affiliate Summit in New York, gathering of all sorts of performance based marketers. Affiliate Marketing, while at one time was the realm of Amazon readers recommending to friends what books to buy and getting a commission from this, has turned into something else. The idea that the industry is hundreds of thousands of affiliates making money for companies is incorrect. Anyone who is in this industry knows that often even on the CPA/Affiliate networks it is just a few people, often less than 1% of the applicants who actually make the money for the network. Yes, there are great opportunities for anyone who wants to be innovative and in long hours to make a great living in this industry and a large part of Affiliate Summit and the affiliate industry is based on that, providing real services. Still, there is a huge part of the industry that is only about making the quick buck, screwing the consumer, hurting the client, and then moving on. How many times do we need the same scummy players in our industry brought into court for participating in the same scummy acts?

Here is what is going to happen, if we dont make the changes industry wide and refuse to work with these companies. The FTC and various Attorney Generals will rightly continue to go after anyone involved with these schemes, scams and devious practices. Unfortunately in these suits, sometimes innocent people, such as affiliates who may not know better will be hurt. Advertising networks that just take the advertisements and pretend not to know what is happening on the back end will be named in these suits (as they have already). Great companies will be harmed because they are part of the same industry, because they have a similar product, no matter how legit they might be. As is already happening, companies like Facebook will continue basically ban affiliate networks, ban performance based marketing. If you didnt know, Facebook over a year ago banned display ad networks on their site, after testing them, and finding an overwhelming amount of complaints based on viruses, popups and other issues. Now not a single display network can be involved with Facebook because of the actions of a few ad networks. More and more companies in the future are going to follow Facebook. With news coming out in the media of reputable marketers hacking Google and major dating sites spamming Craigslist, it is no wonder that more and more companies are banning outside advertising.

What needs to be done to wake us up enough that we pay attention to the immense fraud in our industry? Do we need to wait until the FTC requires all marketers to have licenses and pass ethics exams? Do we need background checks? If we do not wake up now, the FTC, the government will take action and force us to make changes. Until then, expect me doing more and more interviews with marketers who businesses have been shut down by the government.

Cyberlocker And File Hosting Sites – Get Paid To Upload

So file hosting sites are basically that-a hosting site for your files. Simple enough. There are a few different types of file hosting sites, and hundreds of different services all with different features. Of course some are better than others. Most file hosting sites are basically run of the mill sites, nothing special about them.

Be warned! At the time of this writing there are a bunch, and I mean a bunch of file hosting sites that will claim to pay you for sharing your files, when they are in fact a scam. Some of these scam file hosting sites are new file hosting services that started up but just couldn’t get off the ground, so they cut corners where they have to and usually end up closing down or scamming their uploaders.

Okay so let’s go over some different types of file hosting services.

File Hosting – Non paying
These file hosting sites are just plain file hosting / file storage sites with no rewards or affiliate programs for their users. They sometimes offer premium accounts with better speeds. Usually these sites offer more quality service to the downloader, because they arn’t paying the uploader for the traffic.

File Hosting Sites – Paying
These are file hosting sites that offer their members rewards-usually in the form of money or points that they recieve for sharing a certain number of files. There is generally two types of affilate programs, Pay Per Download, and Pay Per Sale. Often times these sites offer a mix or hybrid type that’s 50% downloads and 50% sales. Pay per downloads usually in the form of $ per 1000 downloads. This value can range from anywhere from a dollar to thirty dollars. Usually different countries are worth more than others. For example downloads from the US / Uk are worth more than some downloads from certain parts of Asia, ect. The amount can also vary per file size, usually the bigger the file the more the download is worth. Companies advertise their high numbers like $35 per 1000 downloads. For smaller files to certain countries may only in fact be worth $3 per 1000.

The pay per sale option is usually a percent of the premium sale (when a downloader buys a premium account) and sometimes includes rebills (when a customer renews a premium account). Some file hosts also offer a referral bonus, usually through a referal link or they can add their website url so any accounts signed up directly trough their site will earn say 20% of their earnings. This is a good way to make money because if you get a few good referals then the process is kinda automated.

Another type of file hosting site is a cloud storage, or online file storage. These sites we won’t talk too much about because these sites are usually not for sharing files-these sites are more used for making backups or personal storage not to be mass shared.

Another type of file hosting site is one that offers streaming video, some of these sites also offer downloads too. Some of these file hosts offer pay per view of your file, and some may not pay at all. These streaming video sites are used to embed videos into your website so viewers can watch your video instead of download the file to their computer.

Like streaming video sites, there are also mp3 file hosting sites as well. A few of these sites offer to pay uploaders, but some of them are just free services with no uploader rewards. Usually these sites offer streaming audio or playlists you can make and embed your songs onto your webpage. Some even offer “hotlinking” which is a direct download link that you can share and visitors can download the song / file without ever leaving your site.

Survey to download sites are another type of file hosting site. These offer to pay more per download, often $.50-$1.00 or more for a single download. The only catch is the user must fill out and complete a survey before downloading. You can earn money with these but most visitors will simply just click out of the window because the surveys are long and troublesome to complete, often wanting your address, phone number, and other things like that.

File sharing has gained great popularity the last few years, and now there are even sites that are like multiple file hosts in one. Sometimes using a rapidleech script you can download from one of many file hosting sites. Just input your link and it starts to transload. From there you can download the file at premium speed, without having to buy seperate premium accounts for every file host. These have become very popular lately. Another variation of this is whats known as a “premium link generator”. Basically several premium accounts bundled into one paid service. You enter the link from any file hosting site, and it will give you a different link and you can directly download without waiting and at premium speeds.

That basically covers the main types of file hosting sites and how they operate. There are hundreds of sites and some of them are kinda neat with different features. If you are new to file hosting or file sharing I hope that after reading this article you have a greater understanding of how file hosting works. Have fun and good luck!

The anatomy of an affiliate marketing sale

The anatomy of a sale has not changed over the hundreds of years that we as humans have been selling to one another. First there is the offer, and then there is the counter offer, the exchange of money and the delivery of the product or service, affectionately known as “the close.”

If only it was that simple, right? The problem is that normally a person will never take the first offer and as such most sales people give up and don’t know the anatomy of a sale. When each step in the sales process is handled correctly, the close is the natural conclusion to a successfully followed sales process. If research tells us anything it is that: “You Can Not Take “NO” For an Answer!”

In the anatomy of a sale, most internet marketers or sales people have the following disposition;

* 48% of them will quit after the 1st contact where the buyer says NO.

* 73% will quit after the 2nd contact.

* 85% will quit after the 3rd contact.

* 90% will quit after the 4th contact.

Because of these startling numbers is it no wonder why over 80% of the sales will go to only 10% of the marketers who refuse to take No for an answer. Now obviously in today’s internet marketing world it would be impossible for you to maintain contact with so many people over such a long period of time. That is the reason that we discussed the power of auto responders in our prior newsletter. The auto responder will handle this process for you almost guaranteeing that you will have a sale in the future.

So when you are setting up your email campaign, you want to automatically plan to send out no less than 3 emails where you do nothing but provide the reader with good, valuable, and viable information. By looking at the chart above, you will note that you have already bypassed over 85% of your competition. If you remember correctly we made a recommendation that you do not make a product recommendation except for every 3 to 6 months, now you know why; it puts you ahead of the power curve.

Remember ultimately that your objective is to get people to click through your affiliate link to get them to buy a product or service. How you go about doing that is totally up to you. I would recommend that you do some further research into the art of the sale and how to do the soft sell. The most powerful tool in your tool box is the auto responder. Make sure that you use it.

An interesting corollary statistic that coincides with the above chart is that:

* Only 2% to 3% of the people will buy at the first to second sales contact.

* Only 3% to 5% of the people will buy at the third to fourth sales contact.

* Only 6% to 8% of the people will buy at the fifth to sixth sales contact.

* Only 8% to 10% of the people will buy at the seventh sales contact.

* Over 80% of the people buy when at or over the 8th sales contact.

So again, maintaining a good relationship with your readers is critical. Also critical is that when you do make a product offer you should plan on making that offer no less that eight times. How you do that is totally up to you. I would recommend that you push the soft sale with your post script for the first four to six contacts. Then really make an offer/product recommendation for the seventh, eighth, and ninth contacts and then a final email for that particular campaign thanking all recipient’s that decided to buy with some testimonials thrown into the mix on how much success they are having and a sorry you missed the opportunity to those that decided not to buy. That way the next time you make a product offer those that waited the last time might be more prone to act the second time around.

To your success in all you do

E. Alan Cowgill

PS. Go online and research some of those mini-sites that we talked about that are referred to as “long sales copy” so that you can get some ideas about the proper flow of a sales offer and get some ideas you can implement into your sales process.

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