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Success
in any venture, whether online or offline, big or small, can
almost be 100% assured, given enough time, drive and capital.
But we live in an impatient society - people to meet, places
to go, things to do. This Internet venture is just one of
many things that you want to do.
You just want to "get it done", or succeed, and
move on.
So, what is the quickest and best way for you to do it?
The first step would be to
study those who have come before you, and failed. Failure,
in itself, is not bad. There are many successful persons who
have said that it is failure that have brought them to where
they are now.
But failure is a waste of time. |
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So, take some time to look through
the following examples of how people have failed. Study them and
make sure you understand why they failed. You will save a lot of
time and money, by not making the same mistakes.
MLM Programs
You may be lured by MLM programs promising easy money. The advertisements
will typically have words like "prelaunch", "forced
matrix", "spillover", "explode" and "get
in early".
The advertisements will generally give the impression that the programs
are new, and that if you get in now, you can sit back while somebody
else builds your downline, or does the work, for you.
I suppose there may have been some rare cases where you reap the
rewards while somebody else does the work, but most of the time,
those expecting easy money will be disappointed.
Unless you have some insider information, by the time you find out
about a (launched just minutes ago) program, many thousands before
you would have found out about the same program...and they will
be sitting in the choice spots that you thought was yours. :(
There is good money to be made in legitimate MLM programs, but
it still boils down to pure hard work.
Shopping Malls
Some have built shopping
malls with a wide assortment of products. They have stocked the
malls with everything from pencils and rulers to the kitchen sink,
and more. The rationale is that with a wide selection, there will
be something for everybody.
They will proceed to promote their malls in free classifieds, ffa
links and banner exchanges. Some may even pay for advertising.
They will get a trickle of traffic from their advertising, but
many of them will not even sell a single item!
Web surfers are generally more interested in looking for specific
information rather than shopping. If you were to offer them what
they need first, and then attempt the sale, you would probably do
very much better.
That means building a site or mall with a narrow focus, catering
to a specific audience.
Paid to Surf the Web
There are many sites
that will pay you for practically anything that you do online, including
reading email, visiting sites, searching, chatting, playing games
and even listening to the radio.
I guess you can make a couple of bucks from such programs but I
don't think anybody has managed to make serious income from such
programs.
Automated Marketing Systems
And then there are those
marketing automated systems. Invariably they will start with what
you already know - that internet marketing is hard work, that it
isn't easy to succeed, and that it takes a lot of perseverance.
And they will tell you that most will eventually fail.
They will continue by claiming that after years of experimenting,
they have come up with an automated system that does the recruiting,
selling, marketing or whatever else needed. A system that guarantees
your success.
All you have to do is to follow their system to the letter, and
you are on your way to riches.
There are many variations on the above theme, too many to go into
here. Generally, you will be asked to pay a one-time fee, or a monthly
fee, or do some grunt work and you will get a reward that is ridiculously
disproportionate to the work, or intelligence, or money that you
put in.
If you are tempted, as I have been, ask yourself this question:
"If I did develop such a system, would I sell it at
such a low price?" or
"If I did develop such a system, would I be selling it at all???"
I built a great site
but nobody came
There will be some that
have done their homework.
They will have decided on the theme for their site, registered their
domain and built their site. They optimized their pages for the
search engines and submitted them. They approached webmasters of
similar sites and exchanged links. Some may even have started a
newsletter.
And then they waited for the masses to come.
Three months passed and a trickle of traffic started to come into
the site.
Another three months but the expected torrent of traffic just refused
to materialize. And they gave up in disgust.
Actually, this group of people had it right. But they were too impatient.
The process of getting decent traffic to a site is like falling
dominoes - the first falling domino will hit the second one, which
will hit a third, which will hit a fourth, and so on. The dominos
fall one at a time, not all at the same time.
Similarly, it takes time for you to promote your site and get it
listed in the search engines. This will bring in some traffic resulting
in more people knowing about your site and more links to
your site. Which leads to a better ranking in the engines and more
traffic. Which leads to even more links leading back to your site
and an even better ranking in the search engines. Leading to even
more traffic and.... I think you get the picture. Yes you are right
"more genuine traffic more income".
But all this takes time. It probably may take up to a year before
you can get any sort of decent traffic to a new site.
I'm sure that you can think of lots more ways that a person can
fail on the Internet. On the whole, I think you will agree
that failures can probably be traced back to one or more of the
following factors:
* a lack of understanding of the Internet and Internet marketing
* a lack of drive
* a lack of patience
* greed
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