Integrity Marketing – Lies Everywhere

Stop signUpdate: There have been lots of comments on Keith Purkiss’ blog about the giveaway event described below. It seems that much of the fuss is about a miscommunication — see the update in that section for more info…

The more I try to learn about integrity marketing, especially with respect to online marketing, the more discouraged I get. It seems that integrity and morals are a thing of the past. The world seems to be full of lies. Deceit is the order of the day.

Here are a few recent examples.

Dishonest Giveaway

I received a couple emails promoting a new giveaway, the Everyone Wins event. It looked pretty interesting when I saw the list of names that were involved. It seemed that either this giveaway was standing out somehow, or giveaways in general must be making a comeback. There were a couple big names on the list that I don’t recall ever seeing in a giveaway before.

But there was a problem. The mechanism that the event was using is one I’d seen before. It was a violation of Aweber’s terms of use since the members would sign up for the event, but they wouldn’t sign up for each individual list — the event software takes care of that. Aweber doesn’t like that since it breaks the chain of events and they can’t fight a spam complaint.

So I mentioned it to Keith Purkiss, who is one of the guys who emailed me about the event. And guess what he found out? He contacted one of his buddies that was listed as being part of the event. He didn’t have a clue what Keith was talking about! Keith wrote about it in his article Is 2011 Really The Year Of Ethical Marketers? Great question Keith.

Now that I’ve had some time to reflect on it, I never got an email about this event from the big names I recognized. Do you think they’d sign up for an event and not mail their lists? Pretty sad.

Anyway, I’m glad that Keith had the guts to email his list afterwards to warn them and write that post.

Update – November 2, 2011: There have been a lot of comments on Keith’s blog about this event by the organizers and some of the big names that were listed there. A couple of things that have come to light:

  1. One of the marketers listed was not supposed to be there — it was a miscommunication over similar sounding names.
  2. Keith has taken a lot of flak over his post although he was pointing out his concerns to his list and they were not addressed in a timely fashion by the organizers.
  3. The big names shown on the sign up page are not necessarily joining the event as JV partners (some are, some aren’t). Rather, they have contributed prizes for the contest portion of the event. This was not clearly outlined and has probably led to much of the confusion. It’s probable that this was not intended to deceive people.
  4. There is still the issue that one of the people on the list was contacted directly by Keith and said that they didn’t know about the event (he doesn’t name that person).

Comment Spam Reversal?

Then there is the WSO I was emailed about the other day. This was for a WordPress plugin that was designed to increase your blogs attractiveness to Google and the other search engines.

Sounds great, until you read what it is doing. The premise is that Google loves to see comment activity on a blog. Makes sense. So you want to increase the interaction, right?

But how can a plugin do that? It’s simple. It creates fake comments. You read that right — fake comments.

In other words, you end up spamming your own blog with fake comments by fake user names with links to your own properties and/or affiliate links.

You have the option of adding your own comments or just reusing the spam that naturally comes into your blog.

Super honest technique (that is sarcasm for anyone who missed it). But people love it. There were tons of comments on the thread from people gushing with praise and others complaining that the server went down and they couldn’t get their copy quick enough.

Reviews

Another article that popped up in the past few days that caught my attention was Fake Online Hotel Reviews and Other Demons by Rodney Perez. He outlines some of the fiascoes in the hotel review industry, like employees writing fake reviews of their own hotel (positive ones of course) as well as fake reviews of their competitors (negative reviews known as negging).

He also talks about Craigslist ads for positive reviews. I’ve seen similar things on Fiverr.

The same kind of stuff happens on Amazon and other sites that allow users to review a product.

Lies, Lies and More Lies

It is pretty sad that many of the techniques that we use to get traffic and promote our products are based on lies.

I’ve seen advice that tells you to create multiple accounts at social media and bookmarking sites to promote your posts. Others that tell you to hand craft testimonials (note that this is different than encouraging testimonials from actual customers). Fake earnings “screenshots”. Fake comments (automated or not). Spamming blogs and forums. Deceptive email headlines. The list of deceptive techniques seems to grow daily.

So how do we deal with it? The sad fact is that it often works — at least short term. But it leaves a bad taste in people’s mouths. And that colours all of us. One bad apple does spoil the whole bunch, no matter what Michael said.

I have a site that has some quality articles about a topic that I know about first hand. But HubPages won’t let me link to that site. I have a link in the sidebar that links to eBooks being sold on Clickbank. Also, it is in a subdomain and the main domain has an eStore that sells eBooks.

Fear of Panda has HubPages rejecting my well written articles because of one or the other of these reasons (they still haven’t clarified which — it could be both).

Let’s have some ideas. How can we do better? How can we stand up against the bad apples and show the world that there really is integrity left online?

Your Strengths And How To Apply Them To Your Internet Business

Find your strengths to build your internet businessI’ve been doing some reading. Sometimes I think I do too much reading and not enough acting on what I read. And I’m probably right about that — but that is another discussion.

One of the books I’ve been reading for the second time is Rich Schefren’s Internet Business Manifesto (plus the Missing Chapter). I’ll be reading them again soon — they are full of rich (pardon the pun) information. If you haven’t got a copy yet, do it now! If you have, read it now!

The first time through I was looking at the systems vs. opportunities teaching he has in there. It is something that really resonated with me at the time and it is still something I need to work on more.

But this time through his section on strengths caught my attention — focusing on your strengths and getting help for the rest. And it got me to thinking about what my strengths are and how I can better focus on them.

My Strengths

I’ve determined that I have strengths in a few areas that I want to focus on. The first is writing. I’m a pretty decent writer (no Stephen King though) and I love to do it. But I don’t write as much as I’d like to.

Another strength I have is the ability to research and understand things. I am able to discern the way that things work and extrapolate from there.

The third strength that I feel I have is technical. The first time I sat down in front of a Commodore PET and typed in a BASIC program I was hooked. I graduated from university with a degree in Computer Science. I worked as a consultant for decades, writing programs in various languages and operating system environments, using different database tools, etc.

Along the way I had opportunities to teach — 1 to 5 day  courses on UNIX, C Programming, WordPerfect, Empress SQL, etc. I also learned to write training material. I’ve even written and performed training for truck drivers to help them understand how various regulations affect them for my wife’s business.

I found that training combined all 3 of my strengths in a way that I really enjoyed. But it does take a fair amount of energy, so I only pursued it as a side business.

My Direction

So here I am at a crossroads in my life. I don’t want to be on the road all the time while my kids are growing up. And consulting and training tend to take you away from home unless you live in a big city — not for me. So I’ve been trying to carve out an internet business that allows me to work from home as much as possible.

After looking at my strengths I’m starting to see the direction that I should be going (and I have actually been heading this way to some extent already). Online training is the business that I should be focusing on.

So you can expect to see some training coming your way at LoneWolf’s Internet Marketing Adventure. The first course offering that is coming should be ready by the end of October. I’ve also picked up the rights to some other training that I’ll be putting up either in the members’ areas or as standalone courses. Some is written and some is video.

I’ll also be doing more training at my niche sites and putting together a webinar and DVD version of the truck driver training that I’ve done.

Your Turn

Well, so far this article has been pretty much about me (I mentioned Rich Schefren and Stephen King though 8=). Now it’s time to talk about you.

Have you taken the time to determine what your strengths are? Have you spent some effort into looking at how you can build your internet business system around those strengths?

If you haven’t, take some time to do that. And read (or reread) Rich’s manifesto. It is one of the few ebooks that I have felt worth while to actually print out. It really is worth the paper that it’s printed on!

Hit the comments below and share what you’ve learned about your strengths and how you plan to focus on them in your business.

How To Get An Instant Traffic Surge To Your Site

Targetted TrafficBy Jimmy D. Brown of Traffic F.U.E.L.

There’s no question that building an affiliate program is THE best way to get a lot of free traffic to your web site.

And, if you spend any amount of time at all reading through the materials here, you’ll find a lot of useful ideas for finding affiliates to grow your program.

But, here is an affiliate idea that will absolutely take your traffic and sales to the next level.

Let me give it to you in it’s abbreviated form first, and then I’ll explain everything you need to know to quickly get it implemented.

You ready for this?

Here goes…

“Find a motivated ‘affiliate manager’ and pay them 50% of all your profits”

Now, I know what you’re thinking – why in the world would I pay someone HALF of all of my profit?

I’m about to explain it to you. And believe me, this is worth the read, so pay careful attention to what I’m about to explain to you.

This is good.

It works like this…

1. Setup a separate website to process orders.

To begin with, you’ll need to setup a separate website to process all of the orders that your “affiliate manager” brings in (along with all sales generated by the affiliates he recruits for you)

In other words, you register a new domain that is similar to the title of your existing domain, and you host that site for processing all of the orders and managing your new affiliate program that your “manager” will be overseeing.

This is a completely separate account from your existing one. All orders generated through this account will be completely brought in by your affiliate manager and affiliates / partners he recruits.

Now, obviously, your affiliate manager will want to monitor sales stats to see how much profit is being generated to this Clickbank account. You’ve got two options for how you allow your affiliate manager access…

Get full access to the control panel. Your first option is to allow your affiliate manager complete access to the control panel at Clickbank in order to monitor stats. I highly recommend that you ONLY do this if your affiliate manager is someone you know well and find completely trustworthy. Once someone has access to your Clickbank account, they can, in effect, take control of the account. Use this option with extreme caution.

Give email access and screenshots. The other option is to setup a forwarding email address that sends the sales notifications from Clickbank to both of your email accounts. This will allow your affiliate manager to get notified when any sale is generated so they can verify sales and profits. Additionally, at the end of each pay period, you could take screenshots of the Clickbank control panel or scan the check you receive from Clickbank when sending your affiliate manager’s half of the profits received on to your affiliate manager to use with the affiliates he has recruited for the separate program.

Hint: Encourage him to create his own unique materials, incentives, and contests for his own affiliates as well!

What an incredible traffic-generation idea!

You get…

* 50% of all profits from this separate site!

* A growing database of affiliates!

* A growing opt-in list!

All in all, this is one of THE best ways to grow your business … without lifting a finger!

—————–
Jimmy D. Brown is the publisher of Traffic Jam newsletter and the owner of Traffic F.U.E.L. membership site.  Drop by today to learn how to get completely free traffic to any website.  Get your free traffic newsletter at http://lonewolfmuskoka.ca/recommends/JimmyDBrownFUEL