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Affiliate Marketing Tips - Starting The Right Way
Filed Under (Affiliate Revenue) by peter on 30-12-2009
The first thing you should do if you want to start affiliate marketing the right way is buy the product for yourself. If you have been drawn to affiliate marketing by reading that it is possible to make money without spending any cash of your own, it will seem like a backward step to suggest that you start by spending money, but there is a good reason why you should seriously consider taking this advice.
What do you know about the product you will be promoting? If you haven’t tried the product, all you will know is what other people have told you and the “other people” are probably the owner of the product and his/her marketing team. Don’t you think they might be just a little bit biased? The truth is that even if the product was a complete turkey, they’d still be telling you it’s an eagle. The only way you will really know what a product does, is to buy it and test it out yourself.
It is only when you have purchased and used the product that you will be in a position to promote it effectively because you will then know exactly what it can do as opposed to what the owner would like you to believe it can do. You will find there can be a huge difference between the sales pitch dreamed up by copywriters and the actual performance of a product. Being an actual user of the product means you will be in a position to write genuine reviews on the product instead of regurgitating the advertising blurb.
One of the first things to strike me was that the book contained many typographical errors and obvious spelling mistakes. Call me picky but a person asks me to pay for a book, I don't think I'm being unreasonable in expecting it to be free from typos and spelling errors. It got worse: I didn't have to read far before I noticed some passages that made no sense; it was obvious that something had gone wrong during a cutting and pasting operation, and this had not been detected during final proof-reading. In fact, I doubted that anyone had bothered to proof-read the book before publishing.
The content turned out to be just a rehash of old ideas plus some out of date references. One of the author’s recommendations was to produce articles to be passed off as your own work by pasting together paragraphs lifted from articles by other authors. From the overall style of the book, I could tell that much of the writing had been created by using that very technique (hence the number of cut and paste errors). That, despite the so-called author’s protestations to the contrary, is plagiarism and plagiarism is pure theft.
The author is an Auckland plumber who is ethusiast about plumbing and promote roofing.





















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