Anyone Else Take Tons of Action & Still Little Return?

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Everyone talks about how taking action is the big difference that separates people who succeed and who don't. But I have taken tons and tons of action for quite a while - a while meaning years. I've had some little successes here and there. But nothing too much. A few bucks here and there.

Anyone else taking tons of action consistently and still not getting anywhere even in the neighborhood of serious returns? It's frustrating when you look back and realize even at minimum wage, the amount of hours you put in you'd have made a ton more money. Or that even charging a few bucks per article writing for other people you'd have probably made more than your own articles are bringing in for all those hours invested.
#search engine optimization #action #return #tons
  • Scattered focus gives scattered results?

    Not trying to be a smart ass here btw. Can you list the top 5 things (top = effort/time spent) that you've done towards making money online over those years?

    Identify problems, then solve them one at a time.
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    • I understand that every time this comes up the desire is to start from scratch, go over everything you've done and so on. But I don't want to rehash that in this thread. We go over the nuts and bolts in all the other threads. Suffice it to say I've studied a lot, I've not just been randomly doing things.

      What I want to know is if there are people who really are doing things the right way and not making much. People like to act as if just doing the work pays off. But perhaps no matter what you do, it only really pays off to any significant degree for a few. Perhaps that's just the statistics of it and 95% of people are never going to make a lot at this for whatever reason even if they put in the work and do it the "right way"?

      Or do you really believe that if you aren't making much you have to be doing something wrong and it can't just be that most people just don't make much at this and it will always be a longshot to really make serious money at this?
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    • You people keep looking under the same rocks.

      I can name the top things people concentrate on here that will indeed lead
      to squat. But the don't have the stomach for the real stuff, so they go
      for the mythical stuff that doesn't do shinola.

      Not in any particular order:

      EMD
      meta tags
      keyword density
      load time
      unique content
      linking to authority sites
      building a site around a keyword instead of a site on something they know
      blog commenting
      article submission

      ...the insanity just goes on..

      Paul
  • This is a very good thread...and I would imagine strikes a nerve with a lot of people for a variety of reasons.

    Hand on heart, have I made a good return on the amount of effort I've put in? NO WAY! Will I? Maybe.

    What I will say is that the amount of cr*p I get in my email inbox these days has gone off the scale and most of it is from so called Guru's telling me about the next way to get rich quick...It's gone into meltdown since Penguin.

    I do think some people make a lot of money probably through singing the praises of this Guru and that Guru and sending out to lists and getting mugs to buy into the latest fad. If they're lucky the person who bought it will have bought so much of it they'll forget to ask for a refund!

    I think that anyone can make money doing this properly, but it's a long road to walk.

    You have to sell good products to people who want that product.

    (and quite timely as I speak another Guru hits my inbox!)
  • You have to remember that IM (whatever strategy you espouse) is a business. Business is competitive, regardless of whether it's brick/mortar or online. It is certainly possible that you can be doing everything "right" and still be failing because the next guy may be doing it "more right" or "better" or "more efficiently".

    The trick is to compete in a space that you are good at and then be one of the best at it. If you can do that, you can succeed.

    I, personally, am very successful both as an Amazon affiliate and as an info product creator. With over 15 years of IM experience, I am able to very well for myself and I am also able to impart my knowledge to others.

    I'm successful as an Amazon affiliate because I do my own thing and stay away from what the crowds are doing.
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  • Just a few things and I'll leave you be.

    Note that none of this is aimed directly at you or anyone else on this forum.

    1. I believe that "doing everything right" includes being able to compete with others. If a competitor simply runs you over, you're doing it wrong. But maybe that's just me.

    2. ^^ the same applies everywhere else in life: corporate careers, university, etc.

    3. "Online business" in general is a super-growth industry right now. The opportunities are mind boggling. "Limited opportunity" is an easy excuse. Just like with everything else in life, some people love to blame "invisible forces" for their shortcomings.

    4. This is an important point. Some people are born slightly, well... not as smart as the rest, perhaps? YES, there are losers everywhere in life - look around you. Such people are ARE doing it wrong - they should have chosen a much simpler career path.

    In this sense, YES running a business is beyond the scope of most people, and this forum is no exception. Just like getting a degree in maths or passing ACCA exams - some people just don't have the...

    No such thing as limited opportunity - some people are simply "dreamers" who fail to properly evaluate their capabilities.

    Most of those who complain about trying and failing online don't even have a business plan. Blaming something/someone else for your own failures/shortcomings is a quick path to self destruction.
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  • traffic is the key to everything

    you can have the best site with the most unique content but wituout traffic your site is nothing. im using content which regularly fails copyscape but im still doing well. why? bec i spend more time getting traffic to my site than making it all unique and pretty.
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    • I don't just think you are right, I know you are!
  • just like me, have a lot of action intended for me but the web is less than expected
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    • I mean, I read about all these ppl spending hours writing unique articles whereas here I am auto-pulling stuff from websites (like product details, description, reviews, pics, etc.) using WPRobot and out of the 22 sites that I have, 13 are #1 in Google whereas the rest are ranked higher than my main competition---Amazon. As long as I am ranking higher than Amazon for a chosen keyword/niche, then I consider that a success. My 0-year old .info domain is outranking 10+year-old EMDs.

      How am I doing this? I'm using tools like ScrapeBox and SENukeX to submit to different platforms like article directories, Web 2.0s, forums, etc. and then I use other tools for Twitter/Facebook/Pinterest/YouTube and yet even more tools to post to Wikis/EDUs/GOVs.

      If I do happen to find a site that none of my tools can't post to (like a site from Angela's/Paul's Backlinks), I have Ubot to take care of that.

      Just to give you guys an idea how deep I go into this, here's a screenshot of my linkbuilding campaign - (see attachment instead as I can't post links)

      I spend 70-75% of my time learning about how to use these tools PROPERLY (that is the second biggest key---learning to use these tools CORRECTLY!!!) and link building than I do making my site look pretty and writing unique articles. Of course, my site still looks good and professional thanks to YooTheme and my content isn't unreadable and is actually broken down into different sections for different types of readers (like some ppl want to read everything about a product whereas others just want to look at a bullet point list or pros and cons) but my point is, I don't spend most of time doing these. I focus on the one that truly matters---traffic.
  • I understand where Builder154, and I don't think his concerns have been addressed properly. I know what it's like to look at your computer screen and want to break it ,out of sheer frustration, maybe you made a great site but some crappy site out ranks yours, or you paid some seo guy to help your site and nothing at all happen, or even worse you got penalized, these are the things the everyday marketer will go through.

    Bnetwork,Paulgl,Wolfmmiii, you guys are the exception, you probably went through all that yrs ago and came out of it with a wealth of knowledge on how to make a living online, but please remember their are those out there who are still at the beginning stage of the online career.

    Yes you can do everything right and see little to no results, and the worst part is it takes weeks ,months yrs to test and see what works and what doesn't .

    I have to admit that I never took IM all that seriously, until I started to make some real money online, that's when I decided to do everything I could to have a sustainable income using Im. Which meant doing some testing, making more sites, investing more money etc, and in the end it all got wiped away with unnatural links notice, which was my fault, not google.

    So just make sure you do things the right way from the start, give it time, do a lot of testing, make friends on wf and ask them questions, chances are they been where your at now.

    Exchange numbers with a few wf members, I had a 3hr long convo with a fellow marketer and it was fun, to actually talk to someone who knew what a h1 tag is or a backlink, whenever I try talking to friends and family they treat me like I'm a jehovah witness or something and want to leave the room asap lol, no offense to anyone religion btw.
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  • I answer dozens of questions daily. Some of those questions are 1000+ words long, lol. I'm sure that many others here do the same.

    Of course it can be frustrating, disheartening and confusing at times. Some of us have been there before, but people just don't/won't listen.

    What I'm getting at is this: do some work, test a few things then ask for help. If you ask for specific advice, there's almost a 100% chance that someone is going to give you a very detailed answer.

    Questions like "I've done everything right. There's just not enough opportunity in this, agree?" tick me off.
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    • I agree with everything you just said, and I'll come on the wf in a heartbeat to ask for help, without hesitation , and warriors like you and yukon,paulgl plus many others always give great advice, that I am always grateful for.
  • The Google landscape has changed rapidly. Opportunities still exist, but they're not as numerous as they were in the past.

    People are approaching the 'make money online' problem from the wrong perspective. If you want to make money you have to solve people's problems. How many new people who enter the world of IM can honestly say they're approaching things by attempting to solve people's problems. Not many would be my guess.

    Following templates that used to work for others is another surefire way to fail. You're better off trying your own thing and experimenting. You will find ABSOLUTELY ZERO actionable information on forums like this one. Come here to shoot the sh** but forget the idea you'll actually ever learn anything. There are lots of charlatans and wannabes here, and many of them view themselves as your competition. Take what they say with a grain of salt.
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    • You got that right, at one point I found myself on here more than working on my site, I was like wth am I doing lol.
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    • Mostly agree, but not quite 100%. :p

      I have made good money using advice/ideas I picked up on IM forums. Not by implementing them 1-1, but by properly integrating them into my existing businesses.
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    • Been there, done that.
      Now i can see the best plan is :

      1. Create VALUE
      2. Deliver VALUE
      3. Get payed

      Steve Pavlina has some great articles about that on his blog.
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  • Quality Service at Affordable Prices = No Competition

    Just like it's not hard to find a job if you have the skills and are a hard worker. Put yourself in the shoes of a consumer and ask yourself... "Would I buy this product or service?"

    Do not do what everyone else is doing because most everyone else is failing. You have to be innovative and solve problems for people.
  • Concentrate on a main project and become an expert. Don't spread yourself out too thin. If you do, you'll just be mediocre in many things and you'll never make a lot of money.

    Also, ensure that your actions are actually actions that make money. Just because you're taking action, doesn't necessarily mean you're taking the right actions. Some actions...ppl are just "doing busy work".

    Re-evaluate your goals and set tangible measurements. It'll click in due time - keep at it!
  • Thanks for all the responses. I hope the conversation continues.

    I want to explain again that I'm not talking about people who are beginners and just starting. I'm talking about people who already have tweaked and tested and sought advice and implemented advice again and again and again and still just can't seem to get past the chump change phase of this.

    It's not a problem of attitude because I'm talking about people who have put in the work for a long time consistently. You don't do that if your attitude isn't there. It's just that at some point, if things objectively aren't paying off, you wouldn't be smart not to stop and wonder if something bigger is going on.

    It's not a problem of "doing the wrong things" because they have put in the time to learn, as much as is possible, how to do this right.

    You know there are Hall of Fame players in every sport that never won a championship. Some of them are among the best to ever play. Getting over that hump has a lot of factors to it. It doesn't necessarily mean they didn't do things right.

    It's frustrating when people assume that those who are making a lot did something special and correct while those who aren't must have just not done it right.

    But I'm still open to the fact that there is some idea I'm just not implementing properly. I just don't really know what it would be at this point.
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    • This would mean that you've done everything, and couldn't make it work. Which I do not believe. Not even close.

      Here's the cold hard truth:

      1. I've built more websites than you have. Maybe 50x more?
      2. I lost way more money "learning/testing" than you have.
      3. I work my ass off, and I bet you that I work a lot more than you. Every single day. I take 2 days off in a month.
      4. I have bought 2 ebooks in my whole life. That's it. What does that say about me?

      You're probably doing it wrong. Sorry, broham.

      There's no "some idea"... the only thing that differentiates winners from "not-winners" is hard work, better planning and persistence. That's it. I create my own luck.

      Have you been working towards one goal the whole time? Do you have a plan? A way to make money, ways to reach an audience/get visitors? Like a proper plan, not just in your head? Are you building a business or just throwing **** at a wall hoping that some of it sticks?

      Try starting a business offline and tell me if it's any different...

      edit: reading my post now it may appear that I'm attacking you, but trust me - I'm not.
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  • Like what they say, you can always build a good quality website about a certain niche, but the question is, do the web need another website about that?
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    • Which is why you should do research before building anything. Again, that's just common sense.

      Also, "another website" is a bad way to look a things. You can always build a better website, all that matters is that there's enough demand. Same concept applies to any offline business.
  • It's a cliche that's said a million times... but the REAL difference between "winners" and "losers" is persistance. There is no set formula to building a successful business online. And for that reason, it's impossible to have any kind of experiment.

    Making money online is an art, it's not a science. What bnetwork is saying does make sense. He's willing to put in the grunt work to continue to TEST after **** hits the fan. Most people try and regurgitate a system that they learned from someone else, and then pray that it works. Inevitably a pothole will emerge at some point in the process, and "losers" will claim that the system is faulty. "Making money online is too hard and a complete waste of time." "Winners" will dig a little deeper, and keep at it till they kind a solution.

    The difference between "winners" and "losers" is the willingness to run over the inevitable potholes along the way, and keep driving till you reach the desired destination.
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    • I don't know why it's so hard to understand what I'm saying in this thread. Persistence is NOT the difference here. I am someone who has persisted for a long time. And I plan to still do so. But despite that the success is not coming. I am wondering if there are others who have also persisted and not succeeded.

      You say persistence is the difference, but what do you base that on? It's just an assumption. I bet there are tons of us who are persisting and working as hard as the people succeeding, even using many of the same techniques, yet still not having the success. I believe there are other factors involved.
  • Banned
    Bottom line is, If a person isn't seeing any results, they are not doing everything right.

    You can't honestly claim your doing everything right, If your not meeting your own expectations.

    I'm not picking on anyone, I'm not saying anyone is better at anything, it is what it is, you keep going until you get the results you want.

    I can't remember a day in the last 6 years that I wasn't running IM test, I still make money from older projects/sites (everyday), but I never stop testing new things related to my business.
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    • This is just a kind of tricky argument based on the word "right." Ok I'll take that away from you by using a more precise word.

      Just because a person is not achieving a significant amount of income does not mean they are not doing the very best work that can be done. The same work done by two different people does not necessarily lead to the same results. And that doesn't mean the one who gets the results did anything special compared to the other one to be the one that got them. There may be outside factors that determine that. To say anything else is pure speculation and assumption. But of course the people who are doing well always want to make that assumption because it makes them look better.

      Nobody is doubting that you do a lot of hard work. All I'm saying is that the fact that you succeed and someone else doesn't may have nothing to do with you doing any harder work or any better work. You may even be using the very same techniques and tests (no I don't mean copying things, I mean testing things in the same way, each to find what works using a valid method).

      My whole point in this thread is to question how much of success in this field is really down to what anyone does and how much really is truly luck. I think it's more luck than a lot of people are willing to admit.

      This is a field where, from what I can gather, a very very small % of people ever make any significant amount regularly. The gurus like to claim this is because they just don't put in the work. I think that is true of some. But there are lots of people putting in a heck of a lot of work, doing nothing really different than the gurus. It's just that there are two facts:

      1) Some small % is going to succeed just statistically
      2) Once you start to succeed it can become a cycle as you have more money to invest in the next project, more followers, more sites to build links from and on and on.

      So it all leads to this illusion that the gurus are doing this great work and everyone else isn't doing what they're doing.

      I could be wrong, but my point is I could be right and nobody has shown very solidly which one it is. And I get very tired of hearing people sidestep anyone questioning things by just labeling them a negative person and claiming if they only had more faith they would be doing well. Well how do they know? Perhaps what they're really doing is just trying to ignore the evidence that these things only work a % of the time by blowing off the people who do the same things and don't succeed.
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  • Work smarter, not harder...No need of tons of action, the need is of the right action at the right time. Split nanoseconds, focus sharply, wait patiently and press any key to continue !
  • No offense Builder, but you seem to spend a huge amount of time debating on the forums, often versus very experienced people - like in the Adsense thread you seemed to just want to debate and counter everyone.

    I'm all for debating club, but if you spent some of the time you spent on writing all these detailed "devil's advocate" posts on your own sites you would probably see greater results.
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    • This right here sums it up quite well.

      I asked him to give me some specifics - he didn't. Because he hasn't done anything significant towards "making money online". Meh.

      What are you saying exactly? Do I believe that after building a few hundred niche websites (just the setup) for clients, then about 100 for other projects, setting up a private blog network that's still going strong, selling about 3000 SEO packages (on the other WF) and flipping 15+ Adsense websites plus creating an authority website in a huge medical niche... you would have found a way to make money online? Simple - yes.

      But, you haven't done any of those things, have you?

      And this is borderline... I'm 100% convinced that you're just trolling.
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    • And more sidestepping. Do you know how much time it takes me to reply to these posts? Maybe 20-25 minutes. Give me a break.

      I may work 7-8 hours and spend 20-25 minutes on here, often while I'm eating. To try to make my time on the forum a factor in this is just silly.

      Not sure which Adsense thread you mean. Nor do I remember any thread where I wanted to counter EVERYONE. There are maybe 2 or 3 people I've had debates with on here. Most of my posts other than that are asking specific tactical questions.

      Bottom line - no my time on the forum is trivial compared to time working. Also, I find it interesting you say how I'm debating with "experienced" people. Well I'm experienced too. The difference is my experience hasn't led to so much money like some of them.

      So one interpretation is I should listen to them because they know how to make things work.

      Another interpretation is they should listen to me just as much because I'm evidence that these things only work a % of the time and not all the time.

      When someone succeeds, there seems to be this temptation to say "Ah this stuff does work when you figure out a way to do it right." The correct interpretation is "Ah this stuff works some % of the time. I wonder what % that is?" My experience is just as valuable as theirs in determining that.
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  • me too. I added plenty of backlinks,shares of my site, but still no trafffic and not even conversions. I am so worry.
  • you will start getting traffic. don't worry and try forum commenting and blog commenting.
  • Dude, why are you so upset with everyone and arguing? Who cares if anyone else is struggling. The point is that you are struggling and you need to take responsibility as to why you are not getting the results you want.

    Listening to you ramble on the forum clearly shows that you would rather assign blame and drown in a pool of self pity and waste time asking the wrong questions.

    Stop asking who else in this forum is struggling to. Who Cares!

    But instead start laying out what it is EXACTLY you are been doing step by step. And let the experts tell you what it is your doing wrong. I guarantee you that judging by your ramblings and debates with others you are not thinking like a winner.

    And therefore you are getting the results you are getting in your business.

    Just accept responsibility and figure out whats wrong and fix it.

    Remember that its not action that pays off. It is the RIGHT CONSISTENT ACTION that pays off.

    People that succeed at I.M get results because they do things in a certain way.
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    • I challenge you to show valid evidence for your statements here.

      You say if someone isn't getting the results they want that they are responsible. What %? 100% responsible? Or do other factors play a part? I'm not asking for your opinion but I would like to see some valid evidence backing it up.

      Lay out the specifics and ask for help? How many times can I repeat that I have already done that. Many many times. For years, both on this forum, other forums, in private discussions with many people. Am I not allowed to start one thread that isn't another rehash of those but a discussion of where things stand having already done that? You start one thread asking an honest question about how this works and it's like challenging a religion people get so annoyed by it.

      I guess "thinking like a winner" is always staying in denial and never honestly reporting results that aren't working and talking to others who also are not getting results to compare notes. This is again like religion. Even if you work as hard as you can, as smart as you can, for years with a great attitude and persistence (which by the way I still am doing and will be doing yet more of in just a minute), at no point can you stop and honestly assess that things aren't working cause then you're not "thinking like a winner." Give me a break.

      That may be. But that isn't the question in this thread. The question is "If 100 people all do things the way that those who succeed at IM do it, how many will succeed? All 100? 50? 10?

      I haven't seen the research on this but my estimation from what I've seen is that maybe 15% or something of those who really know what they're doing and apply it consistently make serious money in this. Very very few. By far most people do not make serious money at this even when they are doing things just as well as those others. And yet, somehow, people fight to hold onto this belief that those who are doing well are "thinking like winners" and the others aren't. I think it's nonsense.

      Again I may be wrong, but I'm looking for some evidence of this not people's "positive thinking" opinions.
  • Banned
    You realize "Keeping up with the Joneses" doesn't usually work out long term, right?

    I don't understand the fascination of needing to be just like someone else.

    Do your own thing & move forward with your IM business.

    It's ok to pick up hints & tips on the small details, but trying to copy every single detail is obviously not working. Be creative.
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    • You seem to have a pattern of completely misquoting people you respond to. Where did I say anything about "keeping up with the Joneses"? I didn't, nor does it have anything to do with what I'm talking about.

      I have no concern whatsoever about being "like someone else".

      I have now responded more than once clarifying that I was not talking about doing things the same as anyone else, but using best practices in testing to develop one's own methods. Each time I clarify it you ignore it and keep going with your made up view that I'm somehow telling people to just copy each other.

      Maybe if I ask this a different way we can get you on topic:

      How viable is building sites to make money off ads and/or affiliate offers to make significant income? Specifically, how wise of a bet is it on average for someone who knows the fundamentals and has a couple years experience? Not for someone clueless, but for someone who has a pretty high level of knowledge and skill compared to the average person.

      I'm not asking if a few people can succeed at it. Of course they can, that's proven. I'm asking on the large scale, is it a wise and viable option? Or is it one of those things that only a very few are going to succeed at no matter how hard or how smart they all work at it.

      If you don't think that's a worthwhile question to answer, then nobody is forcing you to respond. But for anyone who does think this is a worthwhile question, I'd like to know your thoughts - and even better if you have any actual evidence to back those up so we can be well informed on whether this is a smart path to invest tons of energy into or whether it's more like a lottery ticket that you have only a small % chance of it paying off.

      I wonder too if there has been any research on this. We have tons of research studies on things like investing in stocks and bonds and so on. Is there any research on investing in building and monetizing sites?
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  • I've been going six years. I have not had enough success, yet.
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    • How would you define "enough"? 6 years is pretty significant. Are you having any success at all?
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  • Banned
    Hey man, what are you doing exactly? I had similar experiences for the first 3 years of my IM journey...then things just came together. Just ****in' lucky I guess, which is why I'll disagree with flip flops from my personal experience.

    For example, I understood the importance of traffic and a good sales funnel with a great amount of preselling via email series. Problem was that the traffic wasn't converting! I'd get 100s of hops a day, even on affiliate sites and 0-1 sales.

    Then, out of the blue, traffic started converting. I honestly didn't do anything different because I WAS doing everything right for my business model. SO I can say it was luck, or some other variable that I still don't know about to this day...I'm glad it came together though.

    So all I can say is that evaluate what you're doing, evaluate your business model. If you are doing everything right then just give it more time...but always improve upon your system whenever you can.
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    • Thanks for your story. It shows what a crap shoot this can be. But I find it hilarious that you say you did nothing different and suddenly things started converting and you have no idea why. And then your signature says you have the big secret to all of this

      Anyway, I agree that all you can do is keep looking for ways to improve. But if you've already done that and don't know what more to do, all you can do is hope for some odd turn of events like happened to you.
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    • Sorry I just actually clicked on your signature! hahahah. I owe you an apology sir.
  • @Builder154

    Do yourself a favor and read the following books:

    Think and Grow Rich - Napolean Hill
    Psycho Cybernetics - Maxwell Maltz (Christian Based)
    The Magic of Thinking Big - Dr. David J. Schwartz

    No offence but I truly believe you have a mindset barrier that is limiting your success! The principles of success can be learned and the habit of success is developed by constantly setting goals and achieving them. An environment of pessimism will breed failure!
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    • I read all those books and more many years ago. I am not a believer in that kind of positive thinking stuff, sorry. In fact that's one of the problems I'm finding in the IM world, as I've said in this thread. When people succeed, there is far too much belief that they are somehow doing some great special thing. And when people don't succeed we just make up things like they aren't "thinking like a winner."

      There is a difference between realism and pessimism. I'm not a pessimist. If i was I wouldn't have kept working this long and I wouldn't be continuing now. But I am a realist. And it's only wise at a certain point to stop and take stock and see if this stuff really truly is a good bet or not. It's too much of a guru-driven thing where a few bigshots inspire tons of other people. I really want to know how the community as a whole is doing to get an honest assessment of this business.

      The funny thing is in almost every other business this is done as a matter of routine. But if you even ask for such information in this business, the "think positive" crowd jumps on you.
  • I think you should quit. It's clearly not for you.
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    • Yeah it's only for people who blindly believe and don't ask for evidence backing up that it works for more than a handful of people.
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  • Here are some stats for you to chew on! This isn't focused on IM specifically but it does include home-based business which will include various other types of businesses beside an online based business. Very interesting stats:

    Small Business Success/Failure Rates | The Big Picture

    :

    I bet you a $100 I can build a site from scratch and get it to the $10-$20/day mark within 6-7 weeks! If you believe that success is such a rarity in this industry then this should be virtually impossibe, right?
    • [1] reply
    • When did I say success is such a rarity? What I said over and over is we don't seem to know how rare or common it is. We know a handful of people do very well. But we don't really take the time to find out the overall success rate among highly skilled people in this industry.

      I also wouldn't be so impressed with you doing what you said unless you got it to $10-20 a day PROFIT.
      • [1] reply
  • Stop feeding the troll guys.

    If you're not a troll: I sincerely hope that you find a job/career that suits you well. Quit trying to make money online and do something which you know you're capable of being successful at. And best of luck!
    • [1] reply
    • I wasn't convinced that he was a troll, but honestly reading his last few posts just make me laugh. Responding to my "quit - its not for you" post with "Yeah it's only for people who blindly believe and don't ask for evidence backing up that it works for more than a handful of people."

      Kinda convinced me. Someone as articulate couldn't possibly be that delusional/stupid.

      WP Builder. I'm out.
      • [ 1 ] Thanks
  • Banned
    Actually its the profession of trial and error. You can't stop doing tons of actions. and its not necessary that you will get the return every time. So I suggest that you shouldn't be fed up. continue doing the job.
    • [ 1 ] Thanks
  • IM is the ultimate glass ceiling. You could be banging your head against it for years, making a few small dents here and there...however you could in theory remain forever banging your head against it.

    When you do break through the ceiling, the increase in earnings is quite dramatic. You start to almost disbelieve it, as it takes so little time to earn more than you have in years marketing online.

    What you need to do if you are doing the SAME thing for YEARS on end with no results is find out WHY you are not succeeding and change your approach based on your constructive criticism of yourself. Sometimes, it's as simple as changing from one area of IM to another, e.g. emailing to PPC, or vice versa.
    • [ 1 ] Thanks
  • This thread is highly entertaining. What a lot of opinions!

    I can relate to this. I have been there. I decided to build the best sites on a certain subject, with the best content, best this, best that... and didn't get anywhere with them. They sit floundering in SERP dust and no-one gives a crap. Link building blah, 3 year old site, still no results. I literally have sites that are the best quality site out there on certain subjects and don't make me a crap of money. ****ing kills me the amount of work I put into these piles of glittering poop.

    Then I have one-pager sites that have made me thousands. There is a lot of take away from this... so, as I see it:

    1) Testing, Testing, Testing. You do not know if an idea is going to succeed. You need to create tests AND be able to form actionable conclusions from them. Sometimes your "best" ideas come to naught, and other times, a dumb-ass web site idea you thought of when you were taking a dump, turns out to be a gold mine. Quite often we get too enamoured of our own ideas. Don't be, that is just your ego.

    2) If you find yourself hammering away at the same wall and it won't break down, stop it! Persistence is SOMETIMES valuable, but sometimes it will just give you a sore head. The REAL pros are the ones who can sense which ideas are worth persisting with, and which ones are worth cutting your losses on. You need to be driven, for sure, and focused, but not just blindly hacking at whatever or bouncing around randomly.

    I will give you a real-life example: I used to build a lot of medium to large adsense niche info-sites thinking that all I had to do was rank a lot of keywords and I would be gold. A logical truth, but an ASSUMPTION that I would be able to rank those keywords. I had no idea at the time that I would never get to the top of the hill, because the authority sites in the niche were already so established that they were gaining links and power faster than my resources would allow me to catch them. In this case, when the enemy can run faster than you, persistence simply leads to exhaustion. You need to choose your battles.

    Another thing I learned was that CTR is to a great extent "pre-ordained" by the niche - and that a site quickly reveals it's general CTR and therefore moneymaking potential. Now, I will only build a few pages and wait for the CTR to reveal itself.... if the CTR is bunk, the amount of effort it takes to rank the pages and expand the site isn't worth the time, I will just forget it and try something else.

    There's a lot more I could say here but I have too much to do, taking the actions that will make money. Start with a super small and EASY niche, try and make a dollar a day on auto pilot and then make some conclusions based on that.
    • [ 1 ] Thanks
    • [1] reply
    • Exactly, Lexi. There is a fine line between persistence (good) and banging your head against a brick wall (bad). You've got to develop the self-awareness to know WHEN a plan is viable and when to quit and change your approach. There is no shame in quitting, in fact it can lead to success, but you have to develop an intuition as to when something will never work no matter how long and hard you try, vs a plan which is good, but just requires some persistence.

      An example of this is SEO newbies who spend years blasting away with AMR, scrapebox etc., yet they wonder why they still can't rank in 2012. They continue to blast without ever changing their approach, despite the overwhelming evidence (i.e. lack of results) that suggests the SB/AMR approach will never work. The plan needs to be changed.
      • [1] reply
  • Doing it right = sending traffic to converting offer

    If you are not doing that then you are doing it wrong. Writing articles doesn't matter, backlinks doesn't matter, social media doesn't matter.

    Are you doing that? Or are you in the process of trying to figure that out?
  • I felt like that all the time, until I stopped and worked on one thing at a time. There are so many different ways to make a living online and everyone wants to pitch their idea to you. My biggest success, is with clickbank. I promoted until I could hire someone to make my own site. Now I spend my time more efficiently on other things while the affiliates do the marketing for me
  • Funny,

    I was just reading this article by Fraser Cain who runs Universe Today. I'd say he's massively successful, getting 100,000 search engine visitors a day. He also runs Keyword Strategy.

    https://www.keywordstrategy.org/1102...oose-keywords/

    And what does he says:

    "When you hear success stories, remember to think rationally. You’re probably hearing stories from lucky people. For an extreme example, think about winning the lottery. Lottery winners believe it’s extremely easy to win a jackpot. But go ahead and ask the millions of people who don’t win each week. This is known as confirmation bias."

    So after years and years of success and more traffic than most of us will ever see in our lives, a ton of experience with building traffic and so on, he agrees with two things I've been saying:

    1) Luck is very much involved and many of the people who do well and want to attribute it to doing something special and act like those not doing as well are somehow inferior or just not doing the right things are really just lucky and using confirmation bias

    2) He brings up the lottery. When I brought up the lottery, I was called a troll.

    So this guy has the same exact attitude and beliefs I do and is massively successful. But when I say my same beliefs I'm called "not thinking like a winner".
    • [ 1 ] Thanks
    • [1] reply
    • Banned
      Again, your comparing yourself to other people.

      Is this part of doing everything right, you mentioned lottery & someone else on the net mentioned the same word?

      Do your own thing, stop worrying how successful (or not) anyone else is.




  • There are a lot of money making offers that say you need to take action to make money. the truth with most of them is they know that the people who are buying them are after get rich quick schemes so they dont take action when they see they have to go through training videos etc. A lot of people dont even get round to using these kind of systems either. I've been part of Inner Circle training groups and they will teach you the same stuff for marketing like do solo ads, banner advertising, post in forums etc and get leads to a squeeze page. The funny thing is these gurus havent actually made money in another niche apart from make money online so a lot of its just like a pyramid system where they just keep attracting new people. I would like to see these people go into other niches and try and make money.
    • [1] reply
    • Does that describe the offer in your signature?
  • If you don't know the proper way, every time your effort will bring the same failure. So, is not it better to spend few times and money to learn the proper way than trying the same thing again and again? Find out the exact way, focus your try on that point, set strategy, give effort to reach the target. Only than, you will get the success.
  • Let’s assume that 2 people were marketing the same products with the same knowledge base, marketing tools, motivation and effort.


    My answer to that would be his

    My advise is to start going to some of the seminars, meet the top guns in the business, buy them a beer and befriend them! I believe that If you do that, you will eventually get noticed, you will make a name for yourself and you will see how your "luck" changes.

    Think about it, who was Tristan Bull, Alex Jeffreys or Kenster just three years ago?

    They were you and they were me…struggling at IM until they figured it out, made contacts and became who they are today!


    Making a ton of money in IM is not easy and never will be. The competition is crazy.

    There will always be those 3% ers in every aspect of life that are raking in millions. But you know what, you don't necessarily have to be the Lebron James of IM. Besides we LOVE THIS!!!!



    Just my 2 cents worth.
  • I dont get the point of this thread. Truth is that failure is part of life and most people in any field will fail irrespective of how hard they try, or ho much luck they have (remember that lottery winner collecting food stamps). If nobody fails, everybody succeeds which is impossible. Hard work doesnt guarantee success, it only improves your chances of achieving success. By trying hard you at least give yourself a chance of succeeding (how small it maybe). If you dont try at all, you have zero chance of succeeding - you have already failed.
  • I'm finding this thread fascinating in seeing the lengths people will go to to avoid a simple question. I will once again ask it and see if people are able to focus on it or continue diving all around not to answer it.

    Different fields have different levels of luck involved. It takes more luck and there is a wider disparity of success in certain fields like the recording industry and less luck and little bit flatter playing field in other careers like, say, being a teacher or a plumber.

    Where does IM lie in this spectrum? Is IM more the type of thing like sports or music where a few huge stars make 90% of the money and most people will never make a living at it no matter how talented or hard they try? Or is it more like teaching or plumbing where most people, if they want to, can find a way to make a living at it and not a lot of luck is involved, you pretty much do the work to a basic level and you'll get by?

    Yes a little bit of luck is involved in everything in life. But some areas require far more luck than others.

    Where does IM fall on this spectrum? Stop dodging the question please.

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  • 144

    Everyone talks about how taking action is the big difference that separates people who succeed and who don't. But I have taken tons and tons of action for quite a while - a while meaning years. I've had some little successes here and there. But nothing too much. A few bucks here and there. Anyone else taking tons of action consistently and still not getting anywhere even in the neighborhood of serious returns? It's frustrating when you look back and realize even at minimum wage, the amount of hours you put in you'd have made a ton more money. Or that even charging a few bucks per article writing for other people you'd have probably made more than your own articles are bringing in for all those hours invested.