Author Archives: Andrew Wee

About Andrew Wee

My name is Andrew Wee. I'm 32 years old, live in Singapore and am happily married with a 2 month old daughter. I've gone through a list of various occupations including: * journalist (for a business newspaper) * Internet content developer (for one of Asia's largest media group's Singapore Press Holdings) * trainer in entrepreneurship, business building, life skills * photographer/photojournalist * real estate agent * consultant * entrepreneur (I think that's enough for now...more later!) This is a personal space to express my goals, dreams and aspirations.

Is MyInternetBusiness A Scam?

Embedded in the emails sent to this blog was an offer to “find out more” about MyInternetBusiness, a business opportunity targeted at the “Recessionaire” (someone who accumulates wealth during a recession), but is it really all its cracked up to be?

myinternetbusiness scam

First some warning signs – emails came in with a suggestion to visit an affiliate link.

Next the opt-in page lists promises of:

  • “$30k in 30 days”
  • Do Nothing Make Money
  • We do it all for you
  • Passive Income

While I’m not one to pass on a free handout, especially if some other poor sap hardworking guy is out there working his butt off to earn me $30k a month, I just have to wonder Continue reading

Friday Podcast: Offline Promotion Strategies With AffiliateFamous’ Josh Smith

josh smithInternet marketer Josh Smith who blogs at AffiliateFamous.com, has a unique background, having operated an online retail operation while he was still in school, before dabbling in affiliate marketing in 2006.

In 2007, he divested his retail businesses, taking the plunge into affiliate marketing.

Along with his experience in operating a business, he’s also skilled at copywriting and has done a number of offline promotion campaigns to generate leads for his affiliate marketing efforts.

I invited Josh on the Friday Podcast to talk about his strategies in building up his retail business which sold products on eBay, Liquidation.com, Overstock, Amazon, and even flea markets.

Having to deal with physical inventory has taught him the importance of managing his cashflow and he shares a number of these techinques during the podcast.

He also talks about the business management aspects of starting and growing your online business, together with the related topics of his copywriting influences and various offline promotion campaigns he’s worked on (which he affectionately calls “Chaos Marketing”).

Check out the Friday Podcast:

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Affiliate Networks Explained

Over the course of a week, I receive emails with the same questions multiple times, regarding getting started with affiliate marketing.

While promoting ebooks or digital products is one of the first options that new marketers will choose to follow, especially if they’ve bought the same ebook themselves, it can be a fairly difficult tasks to compete against other new and experienced marketers who have the same idea.

Focusing on lead generation or CPA affiliate marketing (cost per action) can be an alternative to entering pay-per-sale affiliate marketing.

I’ve compiled a list of the CPA networks I’ve worked with in a new section “Affiliate Marketing Review” which I’ll be updating when necessary.

If you’ve other questions regarding CPA marketing, or affiliate marketing, you can post them in the comments below.

Check out: Affiliate Network Review

Friday Podcast: Affiliate Marketing Success Strategies with Smaxor

SmaxorJason Akatiff, most well-known by his online moniker Smaxor, is a former blackhat SEO affiliate turned CPA network owner. With his experience as an affiliate and owning and operating the Ads4Dough CPA network, Jason has a wealth of experience in helping new and experienced affiliates succeed.

As a self-taught programmer, Jason had one of his first websites hacked into and as he studied what had happened, he picked up blackhat SEO skills, which eventually led him to learn to dominate search engine results for various keywords, using techniques like cloaking and auto-generated pages.

About a year ago, he bought struggling affiliate network Ads4Dough off the Sitepoint forum and has grown the network successfully within a year.

I invited Jason on the Friday Podcast to share some of his experience as an affiliate and creating a successful network run by affiliate managers who are in most cases, successful affiliates themselves.

We talked about:

  • Why affiliates should learn a programming language and resources they should check out
  • Why and how he’s switched his business model from building sites to buying traffic for his websites
  • How affiliates can use his “project partners” strategy to grow and scale their business
  • Why money management is an important issue and how to better manage it
  • Understand how and why CPA offers are cross-publishing and syndicated across multiple networks
  • What is a CPA “exclusive offer” and the type of development that goes into it
  • Ads4Dough’s focus on affiliate development and an update on their earlier announcement to look at a 1-week training workshop in San Diego
  • Should you be concerned about affiliate managers looking at and copying your affiliate campaign?
  • Ads4Dough’s shift to a demographic-targeted marketing approach

Check out the Friday Podcast below:

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Can Professional and Personal Boundaries Be Easily Defined in Social Media?

Here’s an issue that experienced and aspiring social marketers will face: How to effectively balance publishing content related to your business, and your personal life on the social web. While personal content can help create a connection and rapport with your audience, it can sometimes be a double-edge sword.

In an episode of TheSpew, a business-related podcast on the GeekCast content network, I had the opportunity to discuss this issue with Missy Ward, Lisa Picarille, Connie Berg and Karen White.

While Missy and Shawn Collins are able to effectively inject personal opinions, together with the business content in their twitter streams and blog posts, some of us who’re focused towards corporate clients who are less familiar with the social media environment and operate on a more “rules-based” corporate culture, seeing someone tweet about how great “Lost” was last night or “Free Cone Day” at Ben and Jerry’s might be perplexed, confused and even get riled up because they can’t figure it out.

If you’re a consultant/trainer, there’s a split between presenting a professional image because that’s what’s expected, compared to having the free rein to say what you really think.

It was insightful hearing Lisa, Karen, Connie and Missy who are all engaged with consulting, share their experience in managing these expectations. And any social marketer can get some food for thought in handling this personal vs professional dichotomy on the social networks.

Check out TheSpew Episode #8 on GeekCast.

How Much Money Do You Need To Get Started In Affiliate Marketing?

In these uncertain economic times, figuring out how much you need to get started as an affiliate marketer is a concern, especially if you’re holding down a 9-to-5 job. But there’s more than just the cash at stake.

The one key issue to realize is that whatever you do, it’s a toss up between time and money.

If you are short on money, you will need to invest the time to do everything yourself.

If you’ve got the money, you can hire an employee, outsource a task, or otherwise pay someone to do your work for you.

time is money

Realistically, you can’t expect to do everything yourself, so you will still need to budget funds for a designer or a programmer, or a writer if any of those are your weak areas.

Going long-term, you need to Continue reading