Archive for March, 2007

Why Investing In Cheap Domains & Blogs Is Better Than The Stock Market

Sometime last month (or this month, who knows) the market when on a bit of a tanking spree. Investors started going nuts, and everyone putting their cash into stocks started to get a little rowdy, as they always do when these things happen. I can’t blame them either, because for a long long time when people thought of the word “investing” it was always synanomous with the stock market. I am not a stock market investor. Nor am I a fan of it really. I think it’s a cool gambling technique if that’s what you want to do, but the returns are shit unless you invest A LOT and actually know what you’re doing, or have a broker who knows what he’s doing. Sure there are tons of different aspects of it like options, forex, mutual funds, and all of that garbage, but when it comes down to it, can you really take $2k-$3k and turn it into $50k in a year or less? Very doubtful.

Many people seem to be under the impression that investing in high priced domain names is a wise investment. I’m not saying it isn’t, but it takes someone with a lot of brass balls to really dump a large amount of cash on something they think may resell for lots more over time, or may be that next big thing site. (Read the article)

Why 1% Is Bigger Than 99% - A Message To Ad Networks & Self-Proclaiming Super Affiliates

Over the last few days I have been getting pounded by IM’s and emails from AM’s (affiliate managers) and brass from networks, most of whom I’ve never even heard of. Why? God only knows. I think someone dropped my name and email info in an atricle or post somewhere, but I have yet to find it and have them remove it. The reason they are after me? Not because of my forum or blog, but because I am labeled as a super affiliate. But what is a super affiliate really? And why is this label being thrown around more and more than ever before? Because it’s the spot that every affiliate wants to be in, and that every ad network wants to attract into it’s network.

Let’s just go over really quickly what used to make someone a super affiliate marketer, and what currently makes someone a super affiliate marketer. Years ago, super affiliates were the guys who never posted on forums, never sold any ebooks or products, never really spoke to anyone outside of their inner circles, never had a blog, never let anyone know who they were either. Suddenly, in the last year or less, there are like a million of them popping out and coming out of the woodwork claiming to be a super affiliate, or selling some piece of crap ebook to gullible webmasters on how to learn how to be one for $97, or just bragging about giant checks. Where the hell did these people come from, and since when are they really super affiliates?!

I’ll let you in on a little secret. You cannot LEARN how to be a super affiliate from an ebook or a forum or even a blog. It’s not something you can read in a book or learn from by watching TV or even attending an expensive seminar. It’s something that you can only become by doing a shitload of trial and error, over and over and over again. It’s like comparing this to being a hedge fund manager or some hot shot lawyer. Do you think they learned it from a few sources? Nope! They may have learned some stuff, but the reason they are at the level they are at right now is because it came from this one magical word, with no shortcuts or quick secret routes to, called…. EXPERIENCE. It’s not something you can learn in school, seminars, books, videos, or from friends. You can only gain it by actually trying it, and being successful, but also failing and learning from your mistakes! So why the hell are people still buying these scam artist ebooks?! I guess the greed, naive, and just plain lazy factors are things that they can’t get over.

Anyhow, back to the topic…

So a year ago, there were a very few bunch of people that were called super affiliates. But now there are tons of them. My theory behind this is pretty simple. Times change. That’s all there is to it. A year ago, is about the time when the ringtone boom started. So now you have alllllll of these guys spamming the crap out of social networks, using PPC, SEO, adware, whatever they can to make bank. And by the old and outdated standards, yes, they are considered super affiliates. The old standard was if you make at least $25k a month in affiliate revenues, then you’re considered a super affiliate. I don’t think that’s true at all anymore. Because we are an internet industry, things change and move pretty damn fast, and so should the minimum requirements or earning platforms for affiliates.

What do Darren Rowse (problogger.net), John Chow (johnchow.com), Lee Dodd (leedodd.com), Aaron Wall (seobook.com), Rosalind Gardner (superaffiliatehandjob.com), Joel Comm (whocares.com), or any of those losers giving the $10k seminars and selling those $97 “tell all” piece of crap ebooks have in common?

THEY ARE NOT SUPER AFFILIATES!!

They may all do well in their own right, not bashing most of them, but they are by no means super affiliates. I consider myself friends with some of them, and I’m not trying to be a prick here, and certainly not discrediting some of them (although some of the others should be), all I’m saying and pointing out is that their monthly and annual income levels are nowhere near what super affiliates are doing, not to mention very few of them actually do any real affiliate marketing. I’m sure I can make the list larger, but I just wanted to point out a few of the more popular ones that people always make references to.

A super affiliate 2.0 should be the following:

  • Part of the 1% of all legitimate affiliate marketers (ebooks don’t count!)
  • Monthly affiliate marketing revenues should be no less than $250k a month (revenue, not profit)
  • Annual profits should be no less than $1 million based on your total affiliate marketing revenues
  • You must be hitting the minimums for at least 1.5 years consecutively (to make sure it isn’t a fluke)

With those rules in place, that should cut down all of these bullshit claims by people dubbing themselves as super affiliates. Hell, with my retirement from affiliate marketing, I don’t even meet those standards anymore! But luckily I did, twice, once in adult, and another for 3 years (2003-2006). /end self plug.

So to all of you network reps, AM’s, and fake super affiliates, time to work harder, because finding people that hit the above criteria are pretty tough to find. There are under 1,000 of them in the world. You won’t find them actively posting on forums or blogs (because they have work to do!), you won’t be able to bribe them with higher payouts (they probably get that anyhow), and IM’ing and emailing them because you heard their name mentioned is a really dumb way to present yourself. Treat these people like they are CEO’s of major companies. Would you IM Bill Gates and say “hey, I heard your name from so and so, and they told me you are BIG!”.. only if you want to be blocked or laughed at. No, you approach them with respect, and don’t try to lie to them or give them the run of the mill ad network sales pitch of “well, we have the highest payouts and best converting offers” because EVERY network advertises that, and I for one am sick of seeing and hearing it. Generic pitches don’t work! Just be respectful, and honest, because by earning their respect for you, just getting 2 or 3 of these guys on board your network will make you more than all of your other affiliates combined on average!

To all of you self proclaimed super affiliates… Grow up. Stop lying to yourself, and get busy, instead of trying to trick everyone into liking you because of how much or how little you earn. Flaunting and bragging can get you only so far with the type of people you probably don’t want or need to impress. Want to impress someone and keep them reading your blog? Stop pretending to know what you’re talking about, trying to sell them shit, and start doing it on your own and reach that super affiliate status! It’s not THAT hard. Yeah, it takes work, but hell, everything does! And you also have to play the volume game and scale the hell out of your operations. Not to mention you can’t just depend on one single market or niche or even traffic source. Diversifying is your friend!

/end rant

So the moral of the story really is that ANYONE really can become a super affiliate. Sure it can be intimidating, but then again, what isn’t when it deals with being successful. I’ve said this loads of times.. if you find something that works really well, keep it to yourself or inner circle of friends, and play the volume game by scaling the crap out of it! You’ll never be BIG if you don’t take chances or gamble a bit. Make sure you do all of your trial and error, and your market research with things on a small or medium level too. You don’t want to screw something up by growing too quickly either. This whole thing takes time, and don’t be a lazy idiot and say you don’t have time or patience, because there are people sitting on death row right now with more time and patience and some optimism of being free than most affiliates have with making lots of money some day. Also, please stop buying these stupid ebooks on how to be the next millionaire on your block. They are a waste of money, and I promise you they won’t teach you anything that you can’t learn for free on a forum.

That’s it from me. Another long whinded post. But seriously. Instead of saying you agree or disagree, DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! Nothing will work out itself. So set your goals to a normal level, read, practice, read, practice, read, practice.. and when you’ve worked out YOUR own strategy, write it down, keep it to yourself, and add some volume and take some chances with it. If you fail, so what, we all do, just try again and this time you’ll have learned from your mistakes. Trust me, I make a ton of mistakes, sometimes pretty costly, but that only makes me want to try harder to get it right, and it should too for you!

It Aint Easy Being A Rockstar

Just like the topic says, it’s really not easy to be a famous person in the industry. While I do like it at times, most other times I just like to be left alone and do what I need to do. I’m not complaining though, after spending approximately 13 years in the internet marketing industry, you really do see, hear, and experience just about everything, but at the end of the day, you are still a newbie at some things, and I think people just don’t get that about us, or me.

This life is definitely not a super hard one, but at the same time not an easy one either. I think most affiliates and webmasters get the impression that once you make your first million bucks, you’re going to live a lax and easy going life and not have many problems. Wrong. I think the bigger you get, and the more you make, the bigger your problems and responsibilities are, depending on your projects that is. I’ve seen so many guys make it big and just grow faster than they can handle, and I think I’m at that point right about now.

Here I am, supposed to be on vacation, cancelled my weeklong trip to Miami for next week, as I sit here writing out this post, I haven’t slept in over 24 hrs, and if it weren’t for the steady flow of my Adderall, I’d be asleep at the wheel. The stress is DEFINITELY starting to take it’s toll, although I did get plenty of rest over the last few days.

With that said, I’d like to formally come out and say yes, the rumors are true. We are shopping around WickedFire’s parent company, Coastal Synergy. But we aren’t selling it, more or less looking to merge with another company to build the brand of the forum out, and also to join forces with the mounds of unfinished projects we have, and best of all, assist in the highly anticipated affiliate program we’ve been talking so much about. In the end, I’m just tired of being the CEO, and it’s taken a lot of thinking and self realization that it’s not the position I want to hold anymore either. Many of you may not know this, but for years I was doing my own thing as a one person gig, and just outsourced any type of work I didn’t feel like doing. Yeah, it was a bit costly, but it took away all of my headaches and allowed me to deal with the stuff I liked doing. So when we do find a company to merge with (we are already in talks with one), I will not be at the helm anymore, by choice. I like the title “managing partner”, but I want to take the role I’ve been yearning for, for many years now. Just being the idea guy, and networking guy. I like those things, because it allows me to be very creative, and I don’t have to worry about the day to day operations. I have a whole arsenal of great project ideas, and the more responsibilities that are expected of me to take on, the less I really get to do what I want. And isn’t that the whole point of this industry? To do what you love and get rich doing it?

I’ll be a whole 26 this month, and I think it’s time for a change in my career. So I will still be at the helm on WickedFire and most of the other projects, but I won’t be in charge of day to day operations (thank god!). I’ll also be able to focus on my creative side. Because let’s face it, if you’re a member of WickedFire, you should know by now that my ideas are good, but my follow through absolutely blows! It’s not easy or fun and games owning and operating a forum, especially when it requires a lot of dedication and attention at almost all times.

I’ve got loads of innovative ideas and plans that I want to give to this great industry, and hopefully now I’ll be able to do it, instead of just talk about it. That’s something that took a while for me to understand about myself unfortunately, but hey, better late than never right? I’ll make the final announcement about the merger when the ink dries. Until then, I’ll try and keep adding better posts here to keep you 2k+ readers busy.

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