Google

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Six Figure Yearly


Blah, another e-book explaining how to use ClickBank. Nothing interesting here, just more of the same. The product costs $69.97, marked down from $114.95, so you are really getting a bargain! It's endorsed by two affiliate sites, http://www.homebusinessfiles.com/article-sixfigureyearly.html and http://www.workathometop10.com/index.html. Interestingly, http://www.workathometop10.com/index.html gave Six Figure Yearly a "difficultly" rating of easy. I guess "difficultly" is similar to "difficulty" if you don't know the difference between an adverb and a noun.

The Better Business Bureau says the company is owned by Grant Stevens who also owns Data Entry, Inc. at http://www.data-entry-inc.com/. Data Entry, Inc. is also a ClickBank and Google AdWords product. Six Figure Yearly was developed by a single mom named Michelle Campbell. She had to work really hard to support her family! I couldn't find out what her relationship to Grant Stevens is, but my intuition tells me the sob story I read on Six Figure Yearly is a hoax to move products; Michelle Campbell is probably Grant's stage name at his drag shows. Grant has a number of complaints filed against him with the Better Business Bureau, none of them resolved due to inability to contact anyone at the company using the contact information given.

The most annoying thing about Six Figure Yearly is the marketing tactics on Google. There are dozens of pages with unique URLs returned on a query, but they all redirect through some affiliate program that just redirects me back to Six Figure Yearly's main site with affiliate cookies added. How are these affiliate sites, which are garbage, getting indexed?

You can get information on how to advertise ClickBank products using Google AdWords for free, so I wouldn't bother paying for this e-book. Try reading through the information here. If you still think you need an e-book to use this system successfully, go ahead and waste $69.97 on Six Figure Yearly.

0 comments: