Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Project Payday Review Exposed


By Robert Strong


Well here's the lowdown on Project Payday:

This is how it works. You join receive a sample of something ; let's imagine it's an acne cure. This product has a retail price of $50, but all you have to pay is 5 dollars shipping and handling. What you do is send your bill in, and you allegedly get paid $20 for your time and effort, because you've got to take some time to cancel the automatic monthly cargo of acne cure which you won't have realized is going to be charged to your Visa card monthly.

Sounds cool does it not? You only need to pay five bucks and receive a check for $25, which is an automated $20 profit for 5 minutes work. The affiliate that referred you receives a bigger check than you do. Whatever, everyone is just as happy as a lark, nobody loses right? Someone does lose and that is the company.

But Is This Ethical?

Project Payday is a system that is intended to teach people the easiest way to earn commissions promoting "cost per action" offers, but sadly these techniques are highly debatable, like the example above.

Not everyone is acquainted with cost per action marketing. This involves free or very low-priced trial offers which is a marketing technique engineered to get products into the hands of new clients, wishing that the company will gain sales afterward.

You've likely seen them those flashing banners all over the Internet that say get an iPod for free just pay postage and packing, or get a free laptop simply by completing our survey. These are known in the business as incentivized freebie websites, and they are modeled on the same idea as Project Payday is.

After finishing the survey or checking a considerable number of boxes full of affiliate offers, you really will receive your free present. In return you have given up something valuable, that being your private information, and fairly often you will only qualify to receive their "valuable free gift" after completing several sign-up forms for other trial offers ; some even offer inducements for inducting buddies and family to also do the same.

Of course, if you actually are interested in the service or product - then that's a different situation altogether. But if an affiliate marketer comes in and essentially bribes you to finish the offer and then advises you to right away cancel any further commitment, the company gets cheated.

The referring affiliate and you both make money you're both happyso what's wrong with that? What's wrong is that the company is losing money because they're paying commissions to what amounts to fake patrons who never had a real interest in their product. So is project payday moral, we'll leave you to decide that for yourself. I guess it depends completely on your private morals and ethics and fundamentally boils down to what you suspect is right and what's wrong.

Amazingly, there are folk out there who do make six figure incomes only working part-time promoting these incentivized CPA offers. The difference being the way in which they promote those offers, with their promoting abilities they can attract people that are really curious about a product or service. This model works very well when it is done in a moral fashion by mixing both the science and art of marketing and without cheating any person.




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