Affiliate Program Looking For More Webmasters!

Discussion in 'ClickBank' started by TheRichSchoolboy, Dec 9, 2007.

  1. #1
    Hi all.

    For every 100 visitors you send to TheRichSchoolboy.com you should make approximately $125.00

    Let´s me make you rich! Start promoting The Rich Schoolboy today and earn a fortune from our affiliate program.

    Our site is now converting 1:20.

    [​IMG]


    I will pay you 75% per sale!

    Singup here = GET RICH NOW

    Contact me if you have any questions
     
    TheRichSchoolboy, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  2. cyber-world

    cyber-world Well-Known Member

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    #2
    Really

    If i send You 100 Visitors You wil pay me $125.00 ??

    Is It For Sure
     
    cyber-world, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  3. cyber-world

    cyber-world Well-Known Member

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    #3
    It is real Guyz

    Please Tell me

    Thank you
     
    cyber-world, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  4. TheRichSchoolboy

    TheRichSchoolboy Well-Known Member

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    #4
    Cyber-world I have webmaster there make much more than $125.00 per 100 hits!
    If you know what you do, this will never be a problem for you to make $125.00 per 100 hits!
     
    TheRichSchoolboy, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  5. Sven-van-Gink

    Sven-van-Gink Peon

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    #5
    Ok a small question,

    How much do you earn with TheRichSchoolboy per month as a publisher? If you dont want to answer this i understand it :)
     
    Sven-van-Gink, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  6. Swerd

    Swerd Active Member

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    #6
    the screen shot isnt just the stats for your product tho. its the screen shot from an affiliate that promotes a number of products. show the publisher stats so we can see your 1:20
     
    Swerd, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  7. www.infoebookstore.co.uk

    www.infoebookstore.co.uk Peon

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    #7
    I'm a bit confused about the idea of richschoolboy.com

    If a 25 year old is still in school, is that a good thing?

    In the UK we normally finish School at maximum 18 and if you want to call University a school then we wouldn't expect to be there much after our 22/23 birthday!
     
  8. xmcp123

    xmcp123 Peon

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    #8
    In the states people are typically an under 22 for undergrad, but after that can have many more years depending on what degree they want.
     
    xmcp123, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  9. Masterful

    Masterful Well-Known Member

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    #9
    Masterful, Dec 9, 2007 IP
  10. exolis

    exolis Well-Known Member

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    #10
    Based on my experience, I think the site is a little hyped up.

    You might want to consider:

    1) Toning it down a bit in the sales letter
    2) Lose the audio
    3) Pictures of cars, yachts look too "fake" (I'm reminded of Ultimate Wealth Package at this point, I swear that lime green lambo looks so familiar!)

    Just my $0.02... :)
     
    exolis, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  11. dropship

    dropship Active Member

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    #11
    I'd like to see the publisher stats as well....
     
    dropship, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  12. SolarCat

    SolarCat Active Member

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    #12
    IMHO, your sales letter is a perfect demonstration of how not to promote what I expect is simply yet another how-to guide for ClickBank affiliate marketers. It emphasizes getting rich and says nearly nothing about what's actually in the product you're selling. That approach really insults the intelligence of your prospective customers.

    Plus, if your business is based in the U.S., that sales letter is totally against the law. You could find yourself in really serious trouble if just a couple of customers complain to the FTC, or if they happen to find your site on one of their "Business Opportunity Surf Days."

    Here's an excerpt from some FTC material about deceptive bizopp advertising:
    Just a word to the wise. Believe me, you don't want to find out what happens when the FTC gets you in its sights. They have lots of lawyers, and they don't stop until they've ruined you.

    Your product may be great. I don't mean to trash it at all. But why not try selling it on its merits instead of over-hyping the benefits of being wealthy.

    My two cents.
     
    SolarCat, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  13. rolf

    rolf Active Member

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    #13
    the car looks fake, but if it sells and the refund rate is low, who cares :D
     
    rolf, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  14. Masterful

    Masterful Well-Known Member

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    #14
    TheRichSchoolboy's landing page:

    "If You Can Click Your Mouse, Then I Guarantee You'll Make At Least $100 In As Little As 24 Hours Starting From Scratch."

    :rolleyes:

    I can't stand nonesense like this. Why lie to people? Affiliate marketing is difficult. Most people give up after a few months of losing money.

    TheRichSchoolboy's affiliate page:

    "For every 100 visitors you send to The Rich Schoolboy website you should make approximately $225.00"

    :mad:

    TheRichSchoolboy, be a bit more realistic, man. Withhold the lies and try to be a little honest. In fact, I would like to see a screenshot of your recent sales. If I find it impressive, I will buy your product.
     
    Masterful, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  15. xmcp123

    xmcp123 Peon

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    #15
    Don't even then. The 1 Page "Sales Letters" software/eboks ARE scams, almost 100% of the time.
    I knew a guy who ran an affiliate program for one of those. On his affiliate sign-up page, the "earnings" pages are always toyed with, just inside the bounds of legality. He used 2 different screenshotss (not meshing them together, but the user would assumethey were the same). One showed clicks:buys ratio... That was gotten via subaccount, that had only ONE click source: people directly searching google for his product name, and him using adsense on that. So the purchase rate was incredible. Then came the earnings screenshot. That was the earnings for the WHOLE EBOOK. So ALL affiliates totalled up in it. And it was true, it is what "he" earned "from this ebook". Just happened to be via his affiliates.

    That kinda BS is not as uncommon as you would think. Actually, I'd be surprised if people didn't do that, or at the very least photoshop their earnings.
     
    xmcp123, Dec 10, 2007 IP
  16. affiliatesheree

    affiliatesheree Peon

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    #16
    It is absolutely nauseating to me when I see these promises of instant riches. Masterful said it plain and simple, affiliate marketing is hard. The only thing that happens because of this type of thing is that people who might have had a chance if they'd gone down the right path end up giving up instead.

    It's really a shame because you really can make good money as an affiliate and get rich quick promises do nothing but muddy up the business model.

    I just want to say to any affiliate marketer just getting started, do your due diligence and don't expect results without effort. Another thing, always remain teachable and open-minded.

    Sheree
     
    affiliatesheree, Dec 11, 2007 IP
  17. GeorgR.

    GeorgR. Peon

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    #17
    You guys totally contradict yourself - and i dont agree with some things you say!

    First you say and admit that "affiliate marketing is hard"....but then you complain about vendors having "flashy" sales pages.

    Since I.M *is* hard every vendor is pretty much under "stress" to convince a potential customer in a few seconds upon entering his page.

    You cant make a sale with a boring novel or unrelated blah blah on a sales-page. You NEED flashy words and come to the point QUICK. In IM people looking for products how to make money. This is why you list proof of earnings, and OF COURSE you try to put the product in question in a good light.

    Some vendors overdo it, some might even lie.

    But this is what's called MARKETING. You have a one page sales letter and the decision to buy or not might be made in 3-5 Seconds.

    the statement "all one page sales letters are all a scam" is just totally not true.

    Yes, there are many of those sales pages who make me laugh, especially the ones with the mansion, yacht and porsche pictures :) But then the art of marketing is VERY MUCH also to satisfy and deliver on an emotional level! Maybe those pics are rewashed and even in the old times RJ even used the same technique...but still it might make sense to emphasize on a potential customer's emotion and his dreams, and if the product is indeed related to "money making" nothing speaks against it to actually point out what it means "to be rich" :)
    Its all also a matter of keeping a balance and not overdo it.
     
    GeorgR., Dec 17, 2007 IP
  18. ryanman

    ryanman Active Member

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    #18
    If you were to question the kind of advertising and hype richschoolboy is using than you might as well question the existence of the whole clickbank database. This is what makes products sell and without such hype and a strong call to action products would never sell. But the fact here remains that most of you are internet marketers. Look at this thing from the point of view of an average or a below average internet user who comes online just to check his email and do random searches on google. To them it would be like pure gold.
     
    ryanman, Dec 17, 2007 IP
  19. SolarCat

    SolarCat Active Member

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    #19
    Sorry, but I disagree strongly.

    The biggest problem for me about richschoolboy's sales letter is that it tells the prospective customer virtually nothing about the product that he's selling. It's all about how nice it is to be rich.

    Plenty of CB products have sales letters that tell the customer exactly what they'll be buying, and they manage to sell very well indeed, thank you very much. Look at some of the top entries in the Health category or the Family category. There are plenty of examples.

    Granted, the "make money" categories are more likely to be over-hyped, but even there you can find products where the letter gives you an idea of what you're buying.
     
    SolarCat, Dec 17, 2007 IP
  20. ryanman

    ryanman Active Member

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    #20
    Show me a popular money making product which does not have the hype? It all started with the rich jerk and almost every other money making product on clickbank has bold letters and huge claims.

    See the point here is to make money. And as long as it makes money with low refunds it's fine. Additionally no money making product ever tells you exactly what you will get. They tell you that it's a new revolutionary system but it's always the old method put into new different words.
     
    ryanman, Dec 17, 2007 IP