Posts Tagged google adsense
CPA & affiliate networks
Posted by admin in Affiliates on June 11th, 2010
Step by Step affiliate, ppc, CPA affiliate marketing. - themagicbulletsystem.com
Posted by admin in Affiliates on January 6th, 2010
Step by Step affiliate, ppc, CPA affiliate marketing. The real deal!!!
As you can see, you can still use Google to make money with CPA.
How to STILL use Google to make money.
As you can see, you can still use Google to make money with CPA.
(Or any type of offer, really.)
The trick is in having a legitimate offer, using obvious keywords, and
most importantly – using “Google Friendly” landing pages like the ones
I show you to create in this video.
The REALLY cool part is this: Google is really just the “tip of the iceberg”
when it comes to making money in this type of business.
via How to STILL use Google to make money. - themagicbulletsystem.com.
Video 2
$20,416.00 in 27 days using little known traffic source!
Click here to retweet this message
I think the best part of this approach is that you don’t have to have your own website. With this method, it’s 100% cool if you want to send traffic directly to your affiliate link.
But be sure to pay attention to ALL of this video because it shows you the right way to approach a CPA business (or any other business for that matter!)
Remember, a REAL CPA business isn’t about “flash in the pan” gimmicks. It’s about planning, testing, and promoting multiple offers using multiple traffic sources.
This video shows you a great traffic source that’s making a profit right now!
Please leave your comments below ![]()
Amish
P.S. I guess I should eventually talk about our launch. Here’s the short version: We’ve created a six-week training course that shows you
EXACTLY how we’ve built a $5 Million dollar per year CPA business. (It nets around $2 million a year.)
This course is interactive and will be taught online by me and my partner, Jay Styles (who is really the “mad genius” behind the software in our company.)
Video 3
We Just DOUBLED Our Profits (And a dirty secret revealed)
As you can see, there’s plenty of money out there for CPA marketers …even if you tell 65,000 people about your campaigns!
The software I mention in this video is *included* in your CPA course that’s being launched on January 11th.
This is a LIVE and INTERACTIVE course we’re teaching online…and it’s very limited.
Click here to add yourself to the Early Notification list and jump ahead of the line.
Talk soon,
Amish
New Google AdSense terms and Conditions
Posted by admin in Affiliates on August 2nd, 2009
If you have a Google AdSense account, this past week you were prompted to agree to new terms and conditions regarding AdSense usage. While most people’s eyes become glazed over while reading legal information, not conforming to these new changes can
lead to an immediate account ban with no warning or explanation, and it’s happening in droves.
Over the past couple of days, many website owners have been devastated by the ominous and vague E-mails sent out announcing account terminations due to sites being “at risk” to advertisers. While there are always bad eggs trying to scam the system, most website owners are what Google would refer to as the little people - those with small websites or even blogs that don’t generate as much traffic or ad clicks as, say, Amazon.
Google’s E-mails are vague because they don’t want scammers to take advantage of any potential weak links or loopholes in their terms or payment formula. Unfortunately that strategy is leaving more and more legitimate account holders in the dark when it comes to banned members who want to do right by the company.
Google has always warned its AdSense users about invalid clicks, sites containing mature content, having too many ads on one page, altering the code used in the ad, or otherwise disguising their ads to look like something they’re not, but a couple new rules may have gone under the webmaster radar.
Privacy policies are now required on all websites using AdSense ads. Privacy policies let your website’s visitors know what personal tracking information, if any, will be used to collect traffic data, or for E-mail lists. Luckily, for those webmasters who don’t happen to have a law degree framed next to their MCSE certificate, privacy policy generators are available. One can be found at http://www.the-dma.org/privacy/creating.shtml.
According to the new terms and conditions, Google will also start banning accounts whose websites don’t generate enough clicks, and therefore revenue for their customers. The specific limit wasn’t mentioned:
Google Adsense and Attracting Advertisers to Your Website
Posted by admin in Affiliates on August 2nd, 2009
If you have a Google AdSense account, this past week you were prompted to agree to new terms and conditions regarding AdSense usage. While most people’s eyes become glazed over while reading legal information, not conforming to these new changes can
lead to an immediate account ban with no warning or explanation, and it’s happening in droves.
Over the past couple of days, many website owners have been devastated by the ominous and vague E-mails sent out announcing account terminations due to sites being “at risk” to advertisers. While there are always bad eggs trying to scam the system, most website owners are what Google would refer to as the little people - those with small websites or even blogs that don’t generate as much traffic or ad clicks as, say, Amazon.
Google’s E-mails are vague because they don’t want scammers to take advantage of any potential weak links or loopholes in their terms or payment formula. Unfortunately that strategy is leaving more and more legitimate account holders in the dark when it comes to banned members who want to do right by the company.
Google has always warned its AdSense users about invalid clicks, sites containing mature content, having too many ads on one page, altering the code used in the ad, or otherwise disguising their ads to look like something they’re not, but a couple new rules may have gone under the webmaster radar.
Privacy policies are now required on all websites using AdSense ads. Privacy policies let your website’s visitors know what personal tracking information, if any, will be used to collect traffic data, or for E-mail lists. Luckily, for those webmasters who don’t happen to have a law degree framed next to their MCSE certificate, privacy policy generators are available. One can be found at http://www.the-dma.org/privacy/creating.shtml.
According to the new terms and conditions, Google will also start banning accounts whose websites don’t generate enough clicks, and therefore revenue for their customers. The specific limit wasn’t mentioned:







