Posts Tagged ‘ethics’

That darn Travis Sago

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

When I signed up for Wealthy Affiliate ages ago, I didn’t know just who the hell Travis was. All these noobs were extolling the virtues of this so-called “Bum Marketer”. I wonder what this Travis was like…

He’s one of those rare kinds who possessed the grit, determination and natural talent to start off with to be a marketer. You know, someone who is good at connecting with people. I just looked up “Bum Marketing” on Google… like, 5400 hits/month! How’s that for a heap of awesome affiliate sales for Kyle & Carson?

Anywho…

I just got one of his emails. Yeah, I’m subscribed to his list. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m sure the guy’s alright. But I’m sure it’s not just me who gets tired of his constantly happy tone in his emails. I don’t know… how many people actually feel appreciated when he finishes off his emails with, “Hope you know how much you mean to me!”

Yeah, that’s what they teach to you to be a better list marketer, but I’m not biting, you know what I’m sayin’? Sorry, I just watched “Take The Lead” with Antonio Banderas. =p

I’m not a fan of gurus. Not saying that Travis is one but yeah. Anywho, back to the email. How many people just received one called, “YOU may be in VIOLATION…” I’m sure a fair few number of you. He talks about three things in there.

Well let me backtrack a bit first. He says this:

Here’s 3 simple rules that
I want ANY of my landing pages, sales pages
or articles to accomplish.
When I violate any one of these 3 ‘rules’
my conversions suffer…but I also suffer
in more horrible ways too…
Let me explain…
And then he goes into his 3 rules. In my own words they are…
  1. I want the audience to say to themselves, “this is exactly what I’m looking for” or, even better, “it’s like he read my mind”.
  2. Add value!
  3. Let them leave the site, feeling positive.
I’m going to explain each one in detail now.
  1. This is what you want your audience to say to themselves because once they FEEL this, they are going to read on. If within the first 8 seconds you don’t have their attention, you’ve just lost money. A point I like about what Travis says is that it’s much more effective writing something that saves them time vs writing something hyped up. Noob affiliate marketers are prone to choosing the latter, which unfortunately is driving visitors away from their site. His example is having a title like “Reviews of sausage makers under $100″, as opposed to “the bestest sausage maker in the world!!!!! OK, maybe not those exact words, but yeah. This sort of leads to something else I read from StomperNet which I subscribed to earlier and that was to write for people and not search engines. Both agreed!
  2. This leads on from 1. Your title should ideally imply that what they’re going to read is going to add value. That’s the only way you’re going to draw them in. Again, I like what Travis has to say here. You don’t have to buy the product itself to be able to offer the people value. You just have to be able to save them something. Time or money or both ideally.
  3. This is important and shows that me and him are in the same boat. He wants to make the world a better place. I want to make the world a better place. He’s an ethical marketer, as am I. Even though he doesn’t seem it. Maybe because of his country accent. I am being too harsh on him, aren’t I?

So in the end, the people are coming in cautiously, having a change of attitude in the first 8 seconds and clicking out of the page out of hope and a positive attitude. That’s what you want! If I were you, I’d just subscribe to this list, because chances are, you won’ t be able to understand much of this blog post. I’ve got a lot to learn about how to write cleanly.

EzineArticles.com woot

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Today I checked the Google Analytics for one of the other websites I own in the fitness niche. I worked really hardcore on it for I think about a month, just churning out article after article until I hit a relapse and had to take a break from Affiliate Marketing altogether.

It’s going well. I mean, the blog isn’t that lovely (I am not a web designer), but despite haven’t not touched it for a couple months, it’s still averaging around 10 visitors a day. I plan to do something with this traffic in July. Hey, it might only be a trickle, but trickle’s are consistent and if you tap away at the right place, you might just crack behind the place where the trickle’s coming from and BAM you got yourself a gush. =p

I checked my traffic sources. I was pleasantly surprised to see that individual pages of mine had been ranked here and there in Google, with a few first pages without even trying. Mind you, they were pages that got like 1 hit a month, but even then, visitors are visitors, no?

This is what got me. When I was doing my crazy article marketing thing for this blog, I’m pretty sure I submitted articles to EzineArticles.com of course, but the smaller article directories like GoArticles.com, ArticleDashboard.com and AssociatedContent.com. However, on the traffic page of Analytics, The only referal websites I could see visitors coming from were Yahoo! Answers and EzineArticles.com.

Hmm…

This is indisputably proof about something. EzineArticles.com is THE place where your articles have the greatest stickage; I hadn’t written an article and pointed it to my blog in like 2 months. The fact that people are still going to my blog is amazing.

So, this increases my understanding about Article Marketing and probably changes my strategy towards it:

  1. The articles that go to EzineArticles.com are thereĀ  for the long run. It is important that I have links in the bio box; they will give me link juice to my blog.
  2. I don’t think I’ve ever seen articles in the organic entries from GoArticles.com. ArticleDashboard.com, a few.
  3. My PURPOSE of Article Marketing is dual pronged:
  • Unique content on my blog so that more pages can get indexed by the search engines, and also so my blog is not just purely promotional.
  • NOT SEO. The articles should be aimed to evoke emotions that help drive sales. I’m relying on the internal searching from the EzineArticles.com directory itself to bring targeted visitors to my website/blog, NOT FROM THE SEARCH ENGINES. For SEO, I’m going to rely on Video Marketing and the 10000 Backlinks Method.

It should be OK if I submit my articles to my blog and just EzineArticles.com. It’s like I’m a “fan” and just publishing something which I find is informative. Hopefully the article itself is good enough for other publishers to do the same and publish it on their own websites.

I’m happy that I’ve realised this. This further strengthens my resolve to be an ethical Affiliate Marketer, someone who doesn’t contaminate the World Wide Web, yet who is able to produce more sales than the “hardcore marketers” who would indulge in this sort of “marketing”.

=)

Aussie Peter Drew’s Brute Force SEO… hmm…

Friday, May 1st, 2009

I was working out a bit earlier today when I got home. Afterwards, I checked my Windows Live Mail. 20 in the inbox. Pretty standard. A few twitter adds, GoDaddy promos. Some stuff from Australian Peter Drew.

Now, I’m always for supporting locals. More so if the person is from Victoria. But after my rant earlier about SENuke, I’ve got to say that Brute Force SEO is something that I don’t personally endorse. Hey actually you know what? I haven’t ranted on about SENuke yet. I must’ve just done it on my Notepad. Well, here it goes…

If you go onto Google and look up “SENuke”, a few entries down on the first page, there should be a website: SENukeSux.com. Basically, a guy who didn’t like it bought the domain, then someone who did like it bought it off him. There are a HEAP of comments there; the split good/bad is about 50/50, but there’s one in particular that’s interesting. You people should be looking for this in a review.

It’s from someone who works with computers and knows their stuff about programming. Basically, SENuke does work, but this person argued that the way that they built backlinks was through “cookie stuffing”. Now, I’m not sure if this is technically black hat, but the way that the SENuke software works is that it’s an automated system that builds a zillion backlinks and shoots them to a website to get it ranked.

For a better definition check it up on Wikipedia (OK, not THAT much better =p).

I’m not comfortable with that. I want to be an ethical affiliate marketer. I AM an ethical affiliate marketer and I’m only ever going to go into grey hat, never black hat. If you get a chance to check out SENuke, I’d recommend reading the comments at the aforementioned website.

Now, Brute Force SEO, is, to what I believe, virtually the same (pun unintended). By paying $147/month, you’ll get sites and blogs and accounts made for you (by people I believe), and pretty much, the backlinks are guaranteed. Drew claims you can own the first 30 pages of Google for a given keyword.

I could’ve sworn I ranted about this on this blog, it sounds so familiar… oh well, I’ll paraphrase it again:

WHO NEEDS TO OWN THE FIRST 30 PAGES OF GOOGLE?????

Notice the Italicised “NEEDS”. See, the way I see it, you’ve got your backlinks alright, but you’re not increasing the overall value of the Internet. See, at least with something like JetSpinner, You have control over what people see online; I thought about it today, and it’s just about increasing the spread of an article you have. You want people to read your article because it will be genuinely helpful, but in order to maximise its exposure, you spin multiple copies of it (which you can control) and submit it manually or with a service.

Assuming the article(s) you wrote are good quality, you will be increasing the overall value of the World Wide Web. Call me a prude, but I’d like to see myself with integrity. Personally, I don’t mind a bit of struggle; I don’t like doing things the easy way because you don’t learn as much out of it than if you struggle then succeed.

So Mr. Peter Drew, good on ya for being Aussie, but I’m not going to be investing in Brute Force SEO anytime soon.

How’s this for incredibly depressing…

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

I’m on PayDotCom.com, Mike Filsaime’s own affiliate network. I don’t want to mention anything much more about him, I just don’t like him that much.

Anywho, I’ve been fighting some internal battles for a while about the ethics of Affiliate Marketing. I found this software that just makes me depressed, if it’s legit and actually works, that is.

It’s called Instant Article Wizard Pro by Jonathan Leger and is basically an algorithm that goes through the Internet, finds content based on keywords you put into it, tears it apart and throws it back altogether in a rictus of an article.

And apparently, it’s pretty good at it.

Forget article spinning, this thing WRITES UNIQUE ARTICLES FOR YOU.

And that’s what disgusts me about it.

I don’t know what it is in me, but I have some sense of moral about Affiliate Marketing. If I want something, I will earn it. I don’t want to easy way out. I want to struggle. I want to feel pain. Because once I do get it, nothing beats that feeling.

But then, I mean, it’s unique content… people reading it are going to benefit from it. If anything, it’s more white hat and legal than article spinners.

Aha. I just thought of a downfall of it.

If you’re an affiliate marketer and writing review articles, there is no way this Instant Article Wizard Pro thing will work. I mean, half the reviews for any given product are all taken from each other anyway. It’s like some sort of incestuous orgy where everyone’s trying to get some. Don’t worry if you didn’t get that last simile. I just wanted to make it sound bad. =p

What does it mean to be white hat? I don’t think I’ll go into it now, but I got some thinking to do…

I should also just mention that by looking at the first page, it seems like you do have to do some altering to the articles. But they are pretty damn perfect. =(

I’m not promoting it. I don’t feel good about it. I’ll leave it there for now.

Oh wait. It doesn’t write them for you… it just helps you research it…

Hm…

I guess in terms of ethics, I draw from a few people:

Michelle Macphearson and brand building

Frank Kern and using yourself as a brand

Travis Sago and focusing on relevance and not traffic

DoshDosh.com and their focus on all good things