Can You Really Make Big Money with Project Payday?

By Duncan R. Cumming


This is how Project Payday works in a nutshell.

Let's cut a deal. You go sign on to receive a free bottle of the most recent miracle drug. It is a $49.95 value but you'll only need to pay a $4.95 delivery fee. Then send me your receipt and I could pay you $20 for your effort and time along with a reminder you should go up and instantly cancel the automatic monthly shipment you may or may not have realized you were signing up for.

Not a bad deal, right? You pay $5 and earn a $15 profit. And the referring affiliate also earns an acceptable return because the miracle drug company paid them a solid $40 commission to obtain a new sale. Just about a win win situation. Or is it?

Is Project Payday Moral?

Project Payday is an online course designed to teach you how to make a percentage promoting various CPA or "cost per action" offers employing a highly debatable incentivized approach like the deal just suggested.

Not acquainted with CPA offers? These are often free or terribly low-cost trial offers engineered to get a company's product, service or business ventures into the hand of a new customer in the expectation of gaining further a sales later on.

Have you seen any advertising banners that offer you iPods, Cash, or Laptops simply to finish a survey? Those are called "Incentivized Freebie Websites" or IFWs and are the guts of Project Payday trick model.

These firms actually will give you the freebie after completing a survey or a specific number of affiliate offers, there is, however, a catch. Before you qualify to get the item in question you must either give up your private info, complete a minimum number of trial offers, agree to a once a month vehicle shipment, or even hire a half-dozen of your relatives and buddies to complete the same offer.

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

This might be a win for you and the referring affiliate , but the company loses enormously because they paid a commission for what really amounts to a fake customer who actually had no interest in the product or service being offered. So the answer to the question : "Is project pay-day ethical?" is pretty clear. It depends entirely on which side of the fence you sit and your own sense of wrong and right.

That having been said, there a large amount of folk making six-figure even seven-figure incomes working part-time from home promoting CPA offers. The difference is they recommend the offers in such a manner as to attraction people that are sincerely interested in at least trying the product. It is a proven model and it works really well once you master the art and science of marketing.




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