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Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Marketers Ball is back for Ad Tech – Pharcyde performing – RSVP

Posted: 20 Mar 2013 11:58 AM PDT

I just got word there is going to be a Marketers Ball at AdTech.  If you are going to AdTech you are not going to miss it.

Here is the information.  Make sure you RSVP before it fills up.

The biggest, baddest party returns to Ad Tech in San Francisco on March 28th at 1015 Folsom. This party averages over 1500 to 2000 invited guests and always rocks the crowd with legendary talent performing. This time around they will have The Pharcyde to take the main stage. Pharcyde is known for their alternative hip hop sound similar in nature to Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul. Hit’s include, "Running’", "Passin’ Me By", "Otha Fish", "Drop" and more. More surprises are sure to happen as they always do at these events. You don’t want to miss it.

You can RSVP at http://marketersball.com/

Sponsors include: InfiniteTraffic, FriendFinder, EvoLeads & KSIX.

If you’re interesting in an amazing way to get seen, hit up Darren for a sponsorship at darren@marketersball.com

Trying to increase your Google rank that is like no other?

Why All Thin Affiliates are Gonna a Slow Death

Posted: 20 Mar 2013 05:00 AM PDT

Yes, the end is here.

Gloom and doom.

Death and destruction.

Utter and complete end.

… the middle-man leech who doesn’t add much value but wants to get paid (i.e. “thin” affiliate)

Yes ladies and gentleman, if you’re an affiliate marketer who’s in it for the quick buck, your career has either ended, is about to end, or will end near future.

If you haven’t noticed, a lot of affiliates and affiliate networks are going belly up.

And for a good reason too.. they don’t add much value to anyone’s life.

Fundamental truth in life and in business: if you don’t add much value, you are bound to get washed up.

This ain’t nothing new.. but for some reason, people keep forgetting.

People pay for value.. not for leads, not for clicks, not for banner ad spaces.. people pay for value.

If you don’t deliver value, guess what.. you’re no longer needed.

If your ad space, clicks, or leads don’t end up as $$$, shazam.. you are kaput.

As affiliates, you guys are basically salesmen. You bring in a sale and you get paid commission. No rocket science there.

Now, there are lots of shady crap you can do to make the sale.. or bring in a sales lead.. or what not.

When I was with one of the largest CPA networks (won’t say who), the affiliate manager even encouraged me to do whatever it takes to bring in the sale. Of course, they’d send out their legally obligatory email saying “we won’t tolerate XYZ” but behind the curtains, these mofos were telling their top affiliates to do WHATEVER it takes.. PPC cloakers, flogs, non compliant advertorials, spam (email, SEO).. whatever.

They would say “I don’t want to know.”

Why? Cuz they’ll make their cut and if they get into trouble and get subpoena’d by the FTC, guess what.. they’re gonna hand over you affiliate ID/information to them on a silver platter and say “Nope, he/she was a rogue affiliate. We didn’t know. Here, sue his ass.”

I’m not saying that all affiliate networks are bad (ok, a BIG chunk of them are).. and i am not saying affiliate marketing is bad..

But shady/lazy affiliates and those willing to work with them are giving it a bad name.

Guess what boys and girls.

The entire internet is waging war on you people.

SEO? Just read SEO blogs and see who got slaughtered on the last Google update. SEO is “dying” for highly commercial & competitive keywords.

Email? If you haven’t noticed, spam guards actually work pretty good these days (sometimes too well) and email service providers are cracking down on you affiliates left and right.

PPC? Ugh.. do i even need to go here? Adwords bitch slap is painful

Ok.. media buys / RTB / secondary ad networks? Ok.. i ‘ll give you that. But they have some insanely ridiculous rules on what you can advertise (don’t believe me? read the advertising guidelines on Facebook or plenty of fish ad platform).

The net is maturing.. and so should the affiliates.

It’s only a matter of time the entire net (thanks to social media and death of anonymity on the web) is pretty much making shitty content useless.

On a side note about web & anonmity…

Seriously, why the major “F” are there Facebook like buttons on porn sites?

I don’t want to say they’re idiots.. but WHAT idiots actually click on that?

 

So what’s a small time, one man shop affiliate to do?

Do what MOST super affiliates are doing.. actually go out and create a product or service that solves a problem.

Stop hiding behind the screen and actually show your face. Tell people who you are and show what you can do for them. Now, that’s what people used to do in the old days but for you tech savvy internet marketers, that might be innovation.

As for me (just like most of you reading this post), I am good with performance marketing and lead generation.

So I started a solar lead generation company, helping solar companies generate (duh) solar sales leads.

No brainer there: taking your existing skillset and applying it to an industry where what you provide might be a voodoo black magic.

And guess what? They love me (ok, not me.. but the fact that I am bringing them customers from “thin air”.)

If you add value and actually help someone (i.e. make his/her pain go away, or help a company make more money), you will make money.

And if you STILL wanna be an affiliate, the only way you’re going to make a big chunk of change is if you either have your own original content (content is king) or your own traffic source (Groupon / Mint / Pinterst).

Bottom line: stop being an ass and start being awesome (and actually create some real useful shit).

Looking for an SEO service that won’t get you banned?

Learn How Computers Work with This Book - DailyBlogTips

Learn How Computers Work with This Book - DailyBlogTips


Learn How Computers Work with This Book

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 07:58 AM PDT

Only once after finishing a book I took the time to email the author to thank him for the masterpiece he had created, and it was after reading this one. The book is called CODE, The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software.

Despite the title, the book is not geared exclusively toward technical people. In fact I would recommend it for anyone who wants to learn how computers work, and how they were born in the first place. If you ever wondered how on earth you can press a couple of buttons on a calculator and instantly get the result of a complex multiplication, then this book is for you.

Not only the technical aspects are explained very clearly and with simple words, but the author also creates a very fun narrative to follow along. Here’s a quote from the back cover:

“What do flashlights, the British invasion, black cats, and seesaws have to do with computers? In CODE, they show us the ingenious ways we manipulate language and invent new means of communicating with each other. And through CODE, we see how this ingenuity and our very human compulsion to communicate have driven the technological innovations of the past two centuries.”

4-bit-adder

I was so pumped while reading the book that I decided to build my own 4-bit adder out of nothing more than wires, relays, switches and light bulbs. It’s basically a very rustic calculator that only performs addition, and only with numbers up to 4 bits (i.e., numbers can’t be larger than 15). Above you can see a picture of the adder.

The beauty of building a binary adder is that it allows you to understand how everything works at the lowest levels, and once you grasp that you realize how you can evolve the circuitry to arrive at a more complex calculator or even at a generic computer like the one you are using right now.

I spent around $100 to get the electronic components needed and one week planning the logic gates on paper and then soldering everything together. It was a blast though, and one of these days I am planning to take it a step further: building a calculator that can perform both addition and subtraction of multiple numbers (this makes the project more interesting because you need to build memory chips using flip-flops).

Anyway here’s a video I recorded demonstrating how the 4-bit adder works:

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Original Post: Learn How Computers Work with This Book