Archive for November, 2008

I Will Probably Never Get Into PPC

Scared money doesn’t make money! Words to live by if you run a business. I don’t mind spending money to make money. Recently Alan (a fellow, local affiliate marketer) generated a little over $10,000 in gross revenue in about 10 weeks, it was all done via NeverblueAds with the assistance of Coach from PPC Coach. As Alan stated this is gross, not net, his net profit was somewhere around 50%, he spent $5,000 to make $5,000. Not bad, but I just can’t stomach giving Google or Yahoo! that much money. I hear stories like this all the time, via Twitter or on other affiliates blogs. “Just lost $500 testing this new offer, but it looks like it might do well”, when I hear things like that it makes my stomach turn.

Now I said “probably”. I know enough about PPC from soaking up knowledge over the years, I’ve just never taken the “dive”. At some point I might join PPC Coach, the guy has created a lane for himself and has helped a lot of people, he is probably one of the few people in this industry that sleeps really well at night, knowing that he is truly “laying his treasures in heaven”, not just making a lot of money and keeping it [and the knowledge] to himself. I respect that.

The future for me is local. I’ve already got a great system in place with no concerns of Quality Score or Split Testing. For now though, I’ll stick to SEO, Media Buying, email drops, and my many other methods, be they white or black, they have served me well, and if it ain’t broke, well, leave that MOTHA alone!

Myspace and Facebook App Developers Are Slow

Social Network Applications (Apps) are all the rage these days. It started with a Poke and now everybody wants to be a Mobster. MMORPG’s have seen a resurgence in popularity thanks to developers like Zynga and The Godfather adapting the dying gameplay style to today’s hottest Social Networks. Currently Mobsters, the top Myspace Application, boasts 12,834,528 users. Myspace Applications were a long time coming. The Myspace Developer Platform (based on the OpenSocial API) went live February of this year (2008), putting it over a year behind the launch of Facebook’s massive list of Applications.

But Myspace as a whole are not the only ones that are slow in terms of expanding upon their developer community. Myspace Application Developers themselves are leaving lots of money on the table. While perusing the Facebook Application inventory I noticed that some of the biggest Facebook Applications have yet to be ported over to Myspace, and vice-versa. What a shame! These “professional” developers are dropping the ball all over the place.

It’s like buying a .com and not protecting your brand by purchasing the .net and the .org, at the very least. I’ve seen this done as well. It’s sloppy, but it opens the window of opportunity for smaller web developers like myself.  Opportunities like this are always presenting themselves, and while developing a Application for Myspace or Facebook may require a little more money and knowledge than other methods of making money online, situations like this teach us to always keep our eyes open, because you never know when that window will open again.