Wednesday, 10 December 2014

If Geno Prussakov Influenced Your Small Business, Vote Here

The Small Business Influencer Awards honor companies, organizations, vendors,
apps and people who have made a significant impact on the
North American small business market. [more here]


I was already nominated for a similar award a couple of times. In 2012, and in 2011 when my work/contribution got a nod via an “honorable mention.”


Apparently, I was nominated for the 2014 Small Business Influencer Awards as well. This is humbling and altogether exciting. Having authored nearly 1,500 articles and blog posts, four books and a video course, having founded the world’s only affiliate management conference, and having contributed to the success of over 100 affiliate marketing programs… I am still very much humbled to be among the nominees.


If at any point of time I influenced your business, I would highly appreciate your support by casting your vote here (or upon clicking the image below). This won’t take you longer than one second/click.


The voting ends on September 15, 2014, at 2:59 pm Eastern. Many thanks in advance for your support!


CEO & Founder of AM Navigator – an award-winning OPM agency. Founder & Chair of Affiliate Management Days conference. Author of bestselling "A Practical Guide to Affiliate Marketing" (2007) and "Affiliate Program Management: An Hour a Day" (2011), speaker, consultant, and affiliate marketing evangelist.


Tags: award, awards, small business, small business awards, small business influencer, small business trends


Merry Christmas All...


Regards


MichaelT


View the original article here

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

An Affiliate Marketing Action Plan: The 5 Cs Approach

Note from Geno Prussakov: I am excited to welcome our newest guest blogger, UK-based Simon Swan. Enjoy his first AM Navigator post below.


As affiliate marketing continues to mature as a key digital channel to support an organisations acquisition strategy, it is important to have an actionable plan in place to support your program and having set objectives in place to help drive the campaign in order to meet key business goals.


For any campaign there are three key features you should look to set the foundations for a successful affiliate strategy: Research the Market, Knowing your Audience & Identify your USP – i.e. how will your affiliate campaign stand out from your competitors?


With this in mind, I have put together an affiliate marketing 5 Cs campaign to follow to ensure you’re campaign can deliver the results


Key actions:

Listen to your market – Set up and monitor your competitors and associated keywords through free tools such as Google Keyword planner and Google Alerts.  Monitor review websites, affiliate forums and use Social Media tools to listen to the market, views and opinions of customers and affiliates of your competitor programs.Have a performance benchmark? – Key indicators to consider when completing your competitor analysis include: commission tiers, size of their affiliate base, are there any corporate publications that provide a breakdown in how much revenue their affiliate channels generate?Exploit Gaps/Opportunities – From the SWOT analysis, a number of gaps & opportunities should now be identified and should provide you with a strategy. Defining a Gaps and Opportunity analysis  can be very effective if you’re operating in a crowded market place and are looking for a way to stand out to recruit affiliates to your program.Points of Differentiation – Look for the opportunities, what are your competitors not offering the market that you could exploit and take advantage of to boost the appeal of your affiliate program?Surveys – Set up online surveys to send to potential affiliates who sign up to your program and also ask the 3rd party affiliate program to see if they could communicate this to their wider pool of affiliates. Be prepared to offer an incentive or competition prize as a means to drive users to complete the survey – this acts as an effective tool understand the potential, opportunities and to create new incentives

Key actions:

Override fee –The majority of affiliate networks charge a 30% override which is based on the commission you are prepared to pay your affiliate base.Tiered Commission Levels – As your program matures, you should be looking to segment your affiliates by revenue (or what the objective of your program is) so to clearly incentivise the affiliates or to easily identify clusters of affiliates that may need more time and support on understanding how to best optimise their performance. As much as it is with the lead affiliates, it is also important to incentivise the “long tail” of your affiliates.Bonus - Introduce “Bonus level” commission tiers to help sell through end of line products or If you’re a retailer that produces “own brand” products, you may well have more margin to play with by offering a higher commission level.

Key actions:

Know your affiliate community – According to Econsultancy 55% of affiliates consider text to be the most effective linking method with banners (36%) and datafeeds (25%) also voted the most popular form of promotionBanner sizes – Ensure you’re providing a rich mix of banner inventory for affiliates to use on their sites – these can be generic based or targeted around key products/services as well as promotions being run through your seasonal campaigns.Keep it fresh – Make sure you’re keeping your creatives fresh and updated – there is nothing worse in seeing banners promoting out of stock products or Christmas promotional creatives being run in July!

Key actions:

Open to questions – Get into the habit of communicating with your affiliates as well as the  affiliate network  and better still, face to face so you can build up a good working rapport.Extended Workforce – Your affiliate base should be regarded as an extended work-force of your organisation, they should be supporting you to deliver on the objectives you’ve set and thus should be treated as an internal member of staff.Introduce an Open Day – Launch an annual open day at your offices – Invite your affiliates to come and visit you and the team, introduce them to your product lines, future plans and product promotions you have planned for the year. The key here is to really get their buy-in and that they feel part of your business.Keep the buzz alive – Never let your program become boring and out-dated! – keep up interest levels by running competitions and interesting, topical information on your organisation and the sector you operate. Easy to do plans such as an events or editorial calendar should help to stimulate your team to continue to keep communication going through-out the year with your pool of affiliates.

Key actions:


Below is a list of KPIs that should be considered to assess the effectiveness of your campaign with the objective to generate sales:


Active affiliates – those driving key objectives of the campaign e.g. sales, leads, visitsInactive affiliates – those no longer promoting the campaign, left the programPotential affiliates – those no longer driving positive performances based on their historical sales or leadsCTR (Click-through Rate) – the total number of ad clicks divided by the total number of ad impressionsImpressions – the total number of times your ad is shown. This is a good metric to understand the effectiveness of a banner creativeConversion – the total number of visits divided by total number of sales


 


generatedAverage Order value – of sales through the program


Simon Swan is a digital marketing & business development professional who has led and built commercial digital marketing strategies for start-ups and large organisations working in the entrepreneurial private & public sector. You can read more from Simon at his blog http://www.swan-e.co.uk


Tags: affiliate communication, competitive intelligence, creatives, KPI


Merry Christmas All...


Regards


MichaelT


View the original article here

Monday, 8 December 2014

Are You Losing Active Affiliates Over Non-Converting Clicks?

Affiliate managers focus on affiliate recruitment, and then sweat over affiliate activation; but do you realize that when you, finally, get affiliates to put up your links on their website(s) your conversion is then under scrutiny — their extremely critical scrutiny?


There are very few affiliate programs that I promote on my blog, and when one is yielding a higher-than-average click-through rate it quickly stands out. Then, however, if it yields low or (worse yet) no conversions, it stand out even more! Such has been the case in the situation exemplified by the below-shown donut chart:


Yes, 2,427 clicks (or 91 percent of all clicks sent to the merchants on this network) were generated since getting active with the program, and… zero of them converted.


I took their links down replacing them with another merchant; yet couldn’t help but wonder how patient affiliates normally are with their non-converting merchants. So, I put together a poll asking affiliates how many no-conversion clicks makes them give up on a merchant.


It turns out that very few affiliates will patiently wait on merchants to straighten out their conversion rate issues. Seven out of ten won’t refer more than 500 clicks, and three out ten will give up on a merchant (taking down or swapping their links) within the 100-300 clicks range.


Sobering? It should be.


It is also 100% natural. After all, the rule of this affiliate game is “get paid for each conversion.” Affiliates are rarely being compensated for traffic, “eyeballs,” branding, or anything that cannot be directly expressed in a conversion (most frequently a sale, or a lead). And they will take your links down if you don’t convert. Some earlier, other later… So if, as an affiliate manager, you see clicks but no conversions (or conversion rates substantially lower than the averages), look for an internal problem, and fix it before your affiliates give up on you.


CEO & Founder of AM Navigator – an award-winning OPM agency. Founder & Chair of Affiliate Management Days conference. Author of bestselling "A Practical Guide to Affiliate Marketing" (2007) and "Affiliate Program Management: An Hour a Day" (2011), speaker, consultant, and affiliate marketing evangelist.


Tags: affiliate program conversion, conversion rate optimization, website conversion


Merry Christmas All...


MichaelT


View the original article here

Sunday, 7 December 2014

How to Leverage Affiliate Relationships to Create Content

Register

Note from Geno Prussakov: I am excited to welcome our newest guest blogger, UK-based Pete Campbell. Enjoy his first AM Navigator post below.


Very few things in life are black and white (zebras and pianos are notable exceptions) and, more often than not, things fall into that difficult and morally ambiguous “grey area”. This is just as true for affiliate and SEO marketers as it is for everyone else.


If you’ve come across the terms black hat and white hat in an online marketing context before, you’ll know precisely what I’m talking about. In highly competitive niches such as gambling (bingo and poker), law (personal injury claims) and finance (payday loans), it can be difficult to choose between doing your online marketing the “right” way (according to Google), and doing things the “wrong” way in order to gain the upper hand.


The problem is, no matter how tough Google is getting with black hatted online marketers who engage in spammy techniques, doing the dirty is still paying off. You only need to type a highly competitive gambling search term such as “bingo sites” (which has 18,000 monthly searches in UK) into Google and although it might not be obvious, most of the websites on Page 1 engage in spammy black hat techniques. The use of paid link networks and link farms is still rife and still generating search result rewards – for now.


Yet, by all accounts, the days of paid link building are over. Google may not have managed to banish every trace of SEO spam from the SERPs, but the search engine certainly means business. While black hat techniques may inflate your rank over the short term, if you have long term ambitions online, they’re not likely to go the distance.


You only need to look at Google’s clamp down on payday loan search terms to see this in action. In tandem with Panda 2.0 (which was updated to get even tougher with low-quality sites with crummy duplicate content and spammy back links), Google released a Payday Loan Algorithm update in May 2014. Designed to target “very spammy queries”, particularly in those competitive niches I listed earlier, the update was launched to start getting rid of the spammiest offenders who target these competitive terms.


While the Payday Loan Algorithm update will affect a small 0.2% of English search queries, it’s a clear signal of intent from Google. The search engine have also claimed that they plan to start proactively penalising and even banning affiliate sites which fail to add value for visitors.


And if you think Google are calling spammy webmasters’ bluffs, think again. Back in January 2014, gambling giant William Hill was hammered with a serious penalty thanks to its spammy backlink practices. The penalties sent the gambling site hurtling down the SERPs costing them what must have been hundreds of thousands of pounds in revenue.


If you’re keen to avoid a future without penalties and want to do things right, it might feel like you’re fighting a losing battle against your less scrupulous contemporaries right now. But the truth is, you don’t have to play dirty to win big. Google may be slowly starting to punish black hat behaviour, but they’re also in the habit of rewarding websites which play by the rules. Increasingly, websites who focus on producing awesome, hyper-relevant content, great user experience and high-quality editorially earned links are starting to win on page one.


I’ve been running content strategy over at Two Little Fleas (a UK based bingo portal) throughout this period and, thanks to some concerted effort and creativity, great content has helped Two Little Fleas make page one for highly competitive terms including the aforementioned “bingo sites”, 100% paid link free.


But cracking content only is not the be all and end all to page one rankings. One of our most successful strategies has been reaching out to affiliate partners to collaborate on and distribute content has been a big contributing factor. We’ve explored ways to work with affiliates, leveraging these relationships to build great, relevant links and some pretty cool stuff.


Everyone’s a little bit susceptible to flattery and, if asked, we’re all pretty keen to share our wisdom and opinions a lot of the time. It’s normal. But it’s also very helpful if you want to generate content that’s interesting to your readers and highly sharable within your niche. Take some time to build relationships, reach out and ask industry experts and influencers about a topic you’re writing about. When you come to set keyboard to paper, make sure you reference them by name, then let them know once your content is live.


Example:  For Two Little Fleas, we’re currently running a series of interviews with organisations like The UK Bingo Association & Marie Curie Cancer Care who run Tickety Boo Games on their thoughts about the decline & comeback of the Bingo industry.


Just as we all like flattery, we all like to compete and win. Look into setting up your own awards for your affiliates, rewarding them for providing great user experience for their (and your!) players. This will win you plenty of social media attention and will generate links from all sorts of sources within your niche.


Example:  WhichBingo run an annual awards ceremony for their affiliates – well worth checking out for some inspiration. Their awards event has won them tons of great quality links from affiliates including Gala Bingo.


Build an “operator” review section into your website and hire a journalist quality writer to independently and transparently review site operators. Make sure you also include key facts about each site, alone with the pros and cons to ensure your readers find the reviews really, really helpful. Then take things a step further by encouraging users to add their own reviews and comments into the mix.


Once you’ve collected all of your reviews, you could even consider designing an “Approved by *YOUR NAME*” badge which you can then offer to operators. In many cases these badges will give their brand extra credibility and boost their conversion rate. That makes them even more likely to  display your badge along with a link back to – you guessed it – you!


Example: Two Little Fleas has placed badges on numerous operator sites, as an example though you can take a look at the one on the bottom of http://www.paddybingo.com/. (This site is owned by the same group company as Two Little Fleas)


Have you tried leveraging affiliate relationships to create amazing content and win powerful, natural links? What has worked for you? Where do you stand on the black hat/white hat divide? Share your views, tips and experiences below.


Pete is the lead Content Strategist for Two Little Fleas. Originally hailing from the UK, he lives and breathes all things seo, content marketing and of course - Bingo.


Tags: content marketing, content strategy, organic seo, seo


Merry Christmas All...


MichaelT


View the original article here

Saturday, 6 December 2014

Google, Affiliates, and Two Facets of Value

Google has had a love–hate relationship with affiliates since the dawn of affiliate marketing [some of which is reflected in/on this SEObook's infographic on how Google views affiliate marketers].


Just a few months ago (on January 27, 2014 to be exact) that they put something in “web ink” too — by publishing a blog post on their Webmaster Central in which they clarified that affiliates whose websites do not add value may be deemed violators of Google’s quality guidelines and, as a result, they may “suffer in Google’s search rankings.” You may find the full post here, but here is an excerpt from it:



Our Webmaster Guidelines advise you to create websites with original content that adds value for users. This is particularly important for sites that participate in affiliate programs… Google believes that pure, or “thin,” affiliate websites do not provide additional value for web users… Not every site that participates in an affiliate program is a thin affiliate. Good affiliates add value, for example by offering original product reviews, ratings, and product comparisons.


So once again the subject of added value or lack thereof was brought up and underscored as the centerpiece of Google’s approach to indexing affiliate websites. I fully agree with the ungergirding principle of such approach.


Furthermore, I believe that there are two facets of value that should be taken into an account here:


1. Value to web user – Be it original content (textual or visual) or a comparison shopping functionality of the affiliate website, or anything else that enriches the end users’ experience saving them time, money, or adding value in some other way — all of these would “provide additional value for web users” that Google encourages affiliates to contribute through their sites.


2. Value to advertiser – Whether any search engine cares about this or not, merchants who run affiliate programs should look at affiliates through the prism of value too. Is it going to be beneficial to the advertiser’s brand and constructive to the pre-sale process (involving their product or service) to be promoted on this or that online affiliate property? These are important questions to ask.


I elaborated on both of these facets in more detail in my recently-released Lynda.com course on “Affiliate Marketing Fundamentals” and the video on “adding value” is one of very few that is available free of charge. You may view it below:


As always, your comments are warmly welcome. That’s what the “Comments” area below is for. So if you have thoughts to add, I encourage you to use it.


CEO & Founder of AM Navigator – an award-winning OPM agency. Founder & Chair of Affiliate Management Days conference. Author of bestselling "A Practical Guide to Affiliate Marketing" (2007) and "Affiliate Program Management: An Hour a Day" (2011), speaker, consultant, and affiliate marketing evangelist.


Tags: Google and affiliates, Google penalty, Lynda video, thin affiliates, value-added service


Merry Christmas All...


Regards


MichaelT


View the original article here

Friday, 5 December 2014

Brands Need to Use Their Pool of Affiliates for Collaboration

Hey!!...ever wanted to fire your boss and earn more money than you are NOW?

In the affiliate marketing landscape where organisations continue to wrestle with their digital brand identity, they shouldn’t panic! Brands should make more use of the affiliate pool working in synergy to help the brand provide something that’s truly remarkable and authentic.

time for brands to consider their affiliate pool as an extended workforce who can provide a rich insight into the views of your brand, the strengths and weaknesses – it’s time to consider your affiliates as part of your team. Brands need to focus on what their unique selling points are to not only attract customers to purchase but what also attracts affiliates to join and sign up to their affiliate program, and it’s not all about offering the highest commission rates!

Brands should focus on building a platform of trust and loyalty by sharing branded messaging and content with their affiliates who in turn should use this to drive a relationship with the customer in order to help fuel sales and build an ongoing stream of content to support the affiliate program.

Reasons to work with your affiliates to accelerate your digital brand voice

It is the brands that drive the trust and authority that search engines rely on to drive the right answers for searches. Brands should focus on creating content that users want to find to drive acquisition or lead generation for example. To do this brands need to consider getting out behind their desks and reaching out to their affiliate base and get their views on the reputation of the brand, what could be done better. By crafting branded content that brands are happy for affiliates to use to drive the program.

Affiliate Elite: New Affiliate Marketing Software

Many brands fail to realise that the branding opportunity is to tell a great brand narrative to engage with existing users and new prospects and to fine tune and optimise branded content through the various different digital channels. Rather than brands implementing this themselves, consider engaging with your affiliates who specialise in specific digital channels e.g. PPC affiliates, SEO affiliates or email marketing specialists. Reach out to your affiliates and ask what sort of authoritative content could be utilised to assist with the objectives of their affiliate campaign?

What is it that helps to differentiate your proposition? What is the reason why your organisation exists and what is it you offer that no one else can?  These are the types of questions that need to be answered to help safeguard the future of your brand as well as ensuring you are offering something unique to your affiliate base that is different to your competitor programs

Consider spending time researching your market sector and the affiliate programs and begin to understand points of difference as well as opportunities for your brand offering to create a new, uncontested market place.

Brands should not assume “bringing to life your brand through the art of storytelling” should be done in house, consideration should be given to your pool of affiliates – the eyes and ears of your brand who work on the front line in generating lead or sales for you and have plenty of quantitative and qualitative evidence to share with you to aid the brand proposition – use your affiliates as an extended workforce, they are there to help you!

I am campaigning that brands need to consider forming long terms relationships with their pool of affiliates to not only assist them to drive a healthy affiliate channel but also to consider using their pool of affiliates to help drive exactly how and what they should position their digital brand.

The opportunity therefore to build a credible online voice of authority lies with brands who are prepared to join in on the conversation and build authority in the content deployed across the multitude of different digital channels, in this case the affiliate vertical by sharing their digital voice with their affiliates to help drive sales.
Simon Swan is a digital marketing & business development professional who has led and built commercial digital marketing strategies for start-ups and large organisations working in the entrepreneurial private & public sector. You can read more from Simon at his blog http://www.swan-e.co.uk

Say Goodbye To That Dreary Day Job And That Overbearing Boss!!!
To Get Your Free Affiliate Training

Merry Christmas All...

Regards

MichaelT

Tuesday, 11 November 2014

SwagBucks Review – Can You Make Money With It?


So...still working that dreary 9 to 5 are ya?...find out how to escape it

Swagbucks is an online rewards platform that pays out a virtual currency to users who complete certain tasks (online searches, surveys, watching videos, etc). Getting paid for browsing the web sounds pretty amazing but does it actually work?

I’ve heard about Swagbucks over the years but I’ve never actually tried it (until recently). I had to see what it really was for the sake of this review. So here it goes.

SwagBucks pays out its virtual currency (the swag bucks, duh) when you complete certain tasks. Each swag buck equals to about $0.01 (a penny). Now you aren’t actually getting paid in cash but rather in gift cards (amazon, PayPal, etc). $5 Amazon gift card is the smallest payout you can claim and it costs 450 Swag bucks.

Earning 450 Swag Bucks could actually take some time. When you first sign up to SwagBucks and fill out your profile you will be awarded 30 swag bucks. Filling out the profile takes a few minutes (adding your name, uploading a photo and a few other things). These are probably the easiest swag bucks you would ever earn, then it gets more tricky.

For instance you can earn for filling out surveys. I filled out a 10 minute survey and got 10 swag bucks for it. If you are paid 1 swag buck for 1 minute of work, you’re earning about 1 penny per minute or $0.6 per hour… talk about low wage job. There were some other surveys that promised 50-70 swag bucks but I was not qualified for any of them. 

I read quite a few testimonials from other members and it seems like no one is ever “qualified” for these surveys. You also need to spend a few minutes answering some “pre-survey” questions in order to see if you are qualified. Although after wasting 10-20 minutes on pre-qualification questions you may be rewarded 1 Swag Buck…  More time wasted.
Impossible to qualify for paid surveys on SwagBucks

Some people also talk about spending their time filling out this surveys in full only to see their reward rejected because “their answers didn’t register” or because they didn’t qualify for the survey AFTER filling it out. Something’s shady here.

Next task I did was watching some yoga videos. 10 videos later (about 2 minutes each) I earned a whopping 3 swag bucks… yep, 3 pennies for 20 minutes of my time. You can earn some swag bucks watching videos if you have a smartphone though. Simply install the SwagBucks app and let the videos run on your phone. 

The payout is about 2 SB per 15 videos watched and most videos are 1-3 minutes long. The good thing is that you don’t actually have to watch them. As far as I understand there is limit of 36 Swag Bucks per day that could be earned through videos. So just let your smartphone run the videos while you reach the daily limit. Please note that it’ll probably take 10 hours to reach the 36 credits limit (your bandwidth is probably more expensive than that).

Join the learner-earners at clickbank university

You can also gamble away your swagbucks by participating in SwagStakes. You can buy one or more entries to diferent sweepstakes for a chance to win 25-50-500 or more swag bucks. You can also buy a chance of winning gift cards ($10, $25 and even $100). Most entries cost from 2 to 25 swagbucks. Some people win, some don’t so you can’t really count on this. I spent 10 swag bucks on some of these giveaways and I didn’t win anything so it feels like a total waste to me.

This is another low payout feature but it doesn’t actually require any extra time. If you set up SwagBucks search as your default search engine (instead of Google, Bing, etc) you can earn some swag bucks by simply performing your regular online searches. There is no algorithm to this so you can’t earn more by searching more (or searching for something specific). 

SwagBucks allows you to “win” credits while you are searching the web. In 2 days I got 5 payouts of 8 swag bucks each (and I do a lot of searches on daily basis). So I’d say you can win the credits for searching about 3 times a day. At 8 credits each you can earn 24 SBs (or $0.24) per day.

This can work for most people who don’t really care which search engine they use. This feature can earn you an average of $7-$8 per month. Hey, you’re searching the web ever single day anyway, why not get paid for it?

You can play basic video games (really simple and basic games) on Swagbucks and you will earn 2 swag bucks per 2 plays. Another very low payout and I wouldn’t recommend playing these games in order to earn money. Go ahead and play them if you have time to kill (read: office job). You will also have to watch an ad before every game which is annoying and wastes even more time. You can also simply launch games and not play them – you’d still be awarded two swag bucks for every two plays.

There are lots of offers and trials available which will also reward you with swag bucks. Most of these offers are cheap but you will have to pay for them ($1, $2, $4+ trials and subscriptions). You can get a magazine subscription for $15 which will award you with 1,500 swag bucks (that’s $15) so you aren’t actually earning anything. 

You can apply for a credit card and if you are approved you will get awarded 5,000 swag bucks ($50) – that could be interesting for someone who needs a credit card. I looked at these offers but didn’t try any of them because I don’t want to spend money on these offers or even give out too much personal information.

SwagBucks offers an affiliate (referral) program which allows you to earn a commission from your friends’ earnings. For example, you refer a friend to SwagBucks, that friends performs some tasks and earns 100 swag bucks. 

You will get a commission of 10 swag bucks in this case. Some time ago the commission was available ONLY for search, it was 100% but it was limited to 1,000 swag bucks. The new commission structures applies to most tasks (not only search) and has no cap. 

So if you refer 100 friends who’ll manage to earn 100 swag bucks per day, you could be making 1,000 daily credits or $10 per day! That sounds great but I think it’s be really really hard to convince most of your friends to use swag bucks (even though it’s 100% free).  Feel free to use my Swag Bucks Referral link ;)

This program is legit and certainly not a scam. However, the payout are very low. I am sure you can earn $10-$20 per month with it without doing much work however if you wish to earn more you’d have to waste a lot of time. 

If we look at videos, surveys and other tasks you would be earning $1 per hour (or less). I’d recommend using the search functions since we all search the web anyways. By simply using SwagBucks search instead of Google you can probably earn $100 worth of git certificates within a year, it isn’t much but it can offer some cool gifts from Amazon, right before Christmas time.

Filling out surveys for $1 per hour (or less) is totally uncool. You can spend that time building an online business that has a potential of supplementing your income or even becoming your main income source. 

I’ve been earning an “extra paycheck” online since 2007, that’s when I first joined Wealthy Affiliate training. Just like SwagBucks, Wealthy Affiliate is free to join! If you’re wiling to learn I highly suggest this program (pretty much the ONLY program I recommend).

Come On And Learn like crazy how to earn with Clickbank

MichaelT