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Doug Scott – ASAP Ventures

September 4th, 2008 IBabel 1 comment

Doug Scott is a very well-known name in Affiliate and Web Marketing circles – and a great subject for an interview, cos he tells it like it is without any bullshit or ‘black art’ stuff. He’s the man behind ASAP Ventures and a host of high-profile domains particularly in the travel and car-hire sectors.

This post would have appeared under the ‘Interviews’ section, except that someone got to Doug before me. However, this interview is so good you’ll want to hear it, believe me.  Fraser, from AffiliateBlog.co.uk did the interview with Doug and they have both agreed to me posting about it and producing a transcript.


I’ve reproduced a few choice snippets here, to give you a taste, and there’s also a PDF version of the full transcript available for download – but you’ll find it worthwhile listening to the whole Podcast, if you can decipher the accents – being a Brummie I speak perfect English but these two guys aren’t as fortunate as me ;-)

The full interview comes in at 40 minutes plus but it’s a great lesson in how things really work.


On Domains:

Fraser: Fly.co.uk that’s a kind of high profile purchase you made recently wasn’t it?

Doug: Yeah, that was GBP 87,500 (approx. $175,000). 

Fraser: That’s quite a big investment.

Doug: Personally, I thought it was a bargain – I thought they gave it away.

Fraser: You think so, that’s good.  So I take it you’re a real believer in a good generic domain name then.

Doug: If you’re going to sell something it’s much easier to sell fly.co.uk rather than dougscheapflights.co.uk.  As a company, what we do is we get traffic to websites. You know, carrentals.co.uk – is a very good generic. It probably does - over the past 5 years, it’s probably done between 50 and 100 million GBP worth of sales.  If we wanted to sell that domain it’s much easier to sell that domain having it as a nice name.  It’s much easier for a corporate to understand what they’re buying.
 
If you look at carrentals alone, that domain has probably had in the region of 5 million GBP spent on it.
Therefore, you might as well spend that much money on a nice domain name.

If you look at Fly.co.uk, that was 87.5k GBP, Recycle was 152k GBP - and I just look and I think, it’s so easy.  The traffic part has never been a problem to us. I always say to people you put content on websites and give them some links – that’s all you have to do.

Traffic & Link-Building:

Fraser: So why would people find the traffic part difficult then?  I know there’d be a lot of people out trying to desperately get traffic to their websites.

Doug: I think that most people don’t believe it.  They do it for 3 months and then stop.

You know, they don’t see the results they expect. I did an explanation yesterday to a couple of people, and they had a website and my first question was how many visitors does it get? And they said 5 a day.  I said, you’ve got 5 now, whatever you did last time do it again ‘cause then you’ll have 10 and then do it again and you’ll have 20 and once you get to a certain point theyre will be a logical point where what you should actually do is turn this into a process and have other people do it or have machines do it.

There’s no point you as an individual sitting in a bedroom trying to manually do everything.

Fraser: So processes for things like getting the content written, doing the link building, those kind of jobs?

Doug: We do processes for everything.  I say we do factory SEO. We have probably about 300 writers now around the world who write content for us.  We used to write it ourself but then it became cheaper to give to someone else in bulk. 

If we do link building, we have machines that do requests, we have people who do requests.  Basically we’ll trial something, trial something, work out how it works and then we will try to make it an automated process or a manual process.

Fraser: That you can then outsource, so you’re not stuck having to doing it yourselves?

Doug: You can outsource or you can build a machine.
 
Fraser: So how do you mean, can I explore that a little bit “build a machine” – you just mean an application that does it for you or what?

Doug ScottDoug: If I’m very simple about it, if you’re looking for links in a sector, what most people will do is, they will go to Google.  They will search for terms relating to their sector, they will try to find the contact forms and the email addresses of those people and then they will manually contact all of them. 

Now, aside from saying the legalities of how you contact them, the collecting of that data, well a machine can do all of that much, much faster than an individual will ever do it.  Now you may put a sanity check in – where we’ve now got all the data, we now get people involved, who then basically before we touch someone will look at the data to make sure it’s what it’s meant to be.

Fraser: Right yeah, so you’re emailing the right people and not asking the wrong sites for links and that kind of stuff?

Doug: Yes, in most cases it’s very limited in what we do about asking people for links anymore.  We have processes now – we’ve just learnt as time goes on that the efficiency of asking people is not the best way of doing it. 

If I went back 4 years ago we would have been doing very much more traditional asking for the link.
 
Now what we would do is we will try and create something and then tell the relevant people who really want to link to it because if you can kick that snowball down the hill the effect is dramatic.  It’s one of the discussions, you know going back to the domain name purchases  – you look at the 2 big ones which people know that we bought was Fly and Recycle.  Now have a look at the back links at any time you want of Fly and Recycle and you’ll see there’s a lot of them and there’s a lot of them based because of how much we paid for it.

Fraser: Right, that’s almost kind of self fulfilling, yeah you spent that money on an instant success because people talk about it because of how much you spent on it.

Doug: Anytime I mention it, anywhere, like here, other people will link to it. It’s the same on my blog, my blog has taught me a huge amount of how to create controversy.

Link-Bait

Fraser: Do you think that’s a good method? I know that some people have frowned at that link bait at money.co.uk saying that if the story’s not true it’s misleading and unethical, I mean  what’s your stance on it?

Doug: Depends on where you going with it.  Ethically wise, I would say I agree, it’s not ethical. Lyndon’s view is, commercially it’s hugely viable. Now if you’re Google what do you do with that I don’t know. What we’ve done in the past is we prefer to create a story – we play – rather than rifle shooting we play a lot more of a random game, a shotgun, where what we will do is we will create a 100 stories and some will get picked up – we don’t know which ones will but once one is picked up we will then exploit it.

So we let the world decide what the story is that wants to be told.

Paid Search:

Doug: Paid search to me now is pure arbitrage business. You know, it’s exactly what happens in money markets and share trading markets.  What you’re looking for is a hole in the market. And there’s enough data out there, if you’ve got access to the data – that’s what it very simply is – at one point we were running one paid search campaign with 4.5 million key words in it.  An individual can not do the analysis on that data – it’s just not physically possible. So you need to have a machine.

You’re changing your bid prices, time of days and things like that but you need to be able to take the data you’ve got and react to it.  It should be possible with enough data to take the click through value, the click through rates, the amount of money you paid on a position in Google – you should be able to forward forecast and reverse forecast what any price should be at any time of the day for any keyword in any month.

From our experience, if you’re in a very targeted niche, say if you’re doing car insurance, an individual will win every time because an individual will physically look at the ads and see how good they are, bad they are, in comparison to what other people are doing, and be able to make gut instinct changes – a machine can’t do that. 

But as soon as you go past the 100 key words – we proved it most of last year, ‘cause we ran 2 parallel campaigns on 2 different sites, and that’s exactly what we found.  The machines just won every time. 


These are just a few snippets from what is a very interesting interview.

Hear the full Podcast at: http://www.affiliateblog.co.uk/doug-scott-asap-ventures-interview.html

Download the full transcript here

I hope you find it entertaining and educational.

Dave 

Video Interview with Tyler Cruz

May 29th, 2008 IBabel 8 comments

My interviewee list is starting to build up nicely now.

For those who don’t know who Tyler Cruz is, he’s a prolific A-list blogger in this niche (MMO niche).

Tyler answered these questions via video, which was nice!

Thanks again to Tyler for your time. Was the best interview for this blog so far.

Tyler didn’t answer my last question though :(

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An Interview with Zac Johnson

March 26th, 2008 IBabel 4 comments

I managed to get self proclaimed Super Affiliate Zac Johnson for an interview. Enjoy…

Zac, why do you believe you’re a super affiliate and what do you believe makes someone a super affiliate?
Zac: I would consider myself a super affiliate because I have been doing this for over 10 years and started at the age of 15. I never had a job outside of making money online and have been able to bring in earnings of seven figures a year, while still being a one man company. Many people define “super affiliate” differently. From a company/business stand point, I would consider anyone doing the majority of business for a company, to be their super affiliate. As an individual, I would say anyone producing seven figures a year on their own can also claim the title.

How long did it take before your dreams turned into cold hard cash?
Zac: During my first few years of making money online, it was really exciting. When I think back on it now, it seems like it all went so fast, but I’m sure it wasn’t. I made my first dollar by making 468×60 graphics for people in the AOL WebDiner. I then learned about affiliate marketing and things just kept getting bigger from there on. Since I was only 15-16 when I started to make some good money, it was all appreciated and exciting to me. I started out with zero advertising dollars and turned it into what I have today.

I’m not all that experienced with affiliate marketing but know it can be a big earner. Do you think it’s as good as direct advertising?
Zac: I’ve focused mainly on affiliate marketing over the years, and a bit of direct advertising now. I think direct advertising has a lot more branding power associated to it, while you can start up in affiliate marketing with almost nothing, or a brand new web site. My recent success in blogging has done well with direct/private advertising. It’s great to experience both sides and be able to share my knowledge in the process.

In what niche have you had most success?
Zac: In the beginning I had a ton of success in the freebie/contest niche area. I must have spent 3-4 years in this area and it was really great. This was during 1999-2002, so the market was so unsaturated and there wasn’t a ton of the same offers floating around. I’ve also had great success in the social networking area. I wouldn’t have done as well in the social networking area, if I didn’t have such a great background in the freebie/contest area first.

Personally, I feel a lot more people than they think can make money not only online but by themselves in general. They just don’t because they think it won’t work for them. Do you believe anyone can make money online with enough practice?
Zac: In most cases, anyone can do anything if they have a passion for it and put the work forth. I believe that you are born with entrepreneurship, and it can be taught or learned… but some people are just born with it. Other people want to make lots of money, but have no interest or passion at all to make money online. When people see others making money online, they think we sit around and do nothing and just make money. I’ve been seeing and hearing that for 10 years now. If it was so easy… everyone would be doing it.

Now, we all know. Your blog isn’t your biggest source of income… would you be willing to share a few of your other sites, that really put the cash in your back pocket?
Zac: As mentioned on my blog in the past, I did well in the social networking area. MySpaceNow.com was one of my best performing sites, pulling in $800k profit within a four month period. I also have a network of entertainment and shopping/information sites I’ve compiled over the years.

Shoemoney or John Chow?
Zac: I’m good friends with both… how about ChowMoney. In all seriousness… both of these guys are great and have really fueled the blogging and make money niches online.

What’s the biggest way of building subscribers to a blog, in your opinion?
Zac: Quality content. You can advertise as much as you want, but people won’t come back or subscribe. Or, you can write quality posts that others write about, which will greatly expand the knowledge of your blog.

More and more Internet marketing blogs are being churned out day by day, minute by minute. Everybody pretty much seems to be saying the same stuff, it’s only the small few that say it in a different way that make it out alive. How long do you think it’ll take before the whole niche just gets sick of itself and dies on it’s ass?
Zac: It’s already happening and the good are already being weeded out from the bad. This can be related to TV. There are already so many shows on TV, but how many are actually hits, that the majority are watching. If no one is watching, the next season will be canceled. The same can be said for a blog or web site… readers will stay in it for the quality. If the quality isn’t there, neither will the readers.

What do you feel that you do differently, that other bloggers and Internet marketers don’t do?
Zac: I’ve been making money online for over 10 years now… so I have a vast experience and knowledge about affiliate, Internet marketing and what it takes to succeed. While sharing my information, I’m also telling it like it is and doing it for free. So many other bloggers and marketers out there are trying to sell ebooks, stuff with the same garbage everyone has been recycling for years. I’m trying to do things a bit different, and I get emails everyday thanking me for it.

Thanks again to Zac Johnson for this detailed little interview!

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An Interview with John Chow on TTZ Media

October 11th, 2007 IBabel 2 comments

John Chow

This is an interview with John Chow about his new ad network TTZ Media Affiliates and some general Internet Marketing. I recommend you join the network and give it a go, it’s highly customizable. Here ya go…

Can you explain exactly what TTZ Media Affiliates is?
In a nutshell, TTZ Media provides shopping ads to its affiliated sites. These ads feature hot selling products from thousands of online stores. When a reader clicks an ad and visits the store, the affiliate makes money.

What separates TTZ from other Ad Networks?
Targeting and customization. Unlike other shopping network that will only let you pull from a board category, TTZ Media ads allows extra keyword matching for products. So instead of showing ads for MP3 players, you can show an ad for a black 8GB iPod nano. This pinpoint targeting allows for much higher click rate. If you were writing an article about an iPod nano, an ad featuring the nano will get better click rate than an ad featuring different MP3 players.

TTZ Media ads are completely customization. Not only can affiliates control border, background and link colors, they can even control the hover color and font style. As far as I know, we are the only ad network to offer this. We also offer 15 different banner sizes and will be adding more in the future.

Have you had any reports of CTR averages?
CTR rates varies greatly depending on the site running the banner, the size of banner, integration, etc. It goes as low as 0.05% to as high as 5%. It really depends on the type of site and how well the site integrate our ads. Our best performing affiliates are technology sites and product review sites.

How long has your Ad Network been in production?
We’ve been working on this for the past six months. This is just phase one of the roll out. We have a lot of new features planned in the coming months.

A major plus about TTZ ads is the flexible customization options. Will there be any further customization options being implemented such as font size or the option for ads to open in a new window?
Right now ads do open in a new window. We can give affiliates the option to control font size but have no turn that feature on because it can really mess up the looks of the ads.

Obviously you are very well known for your prolific blog. How long were you blogging before you started to see some decent income?
My blog was started on December 2005 and made zero for the first eight month. Then in September 2006, I decided to monetize it and made $352.94. In September 2007, the blog made $20,512.17.

What advice can you give to anyone reading who is struggling to make some serious money online?
Don’t give up and don’t worry about the money. If you’re doing this money, you’re not going to make it. Read the other big blog and learn from them by reading between the lines.

For those just starting out in making money online who are maybe thinking about starting a new blog. What niche would you recommend is the most promising?
Anything but make money online. I would look at what I’m passionate about and then see that niche can be a moneymaker. If not, then go with what you are semi-passionate about. The worst case is to chose a blog niche because it’s the most profitable.

Do you plan to sell TTZ Media Affiliates to a larger company in the future?
The network just started. I doubt I can sell it for anything. I don’t have any plans to sell it in the future, but you never know. If someone makes an offer I can’t refuse, well. I do know it’ll be easier to sell the ad network than it would my blog.

Finally. John, in what field of marketing have you had the most success?
I’ve been having a lot of success with affiliate marketing. It’s become the blog’s second biggest income source after private ad sales. I feel affiliate marketing is something many bloggers overlook and that’s too bad. When done correctly, it’s a big moneymaker.

Thanks again to John Chow for a very honest, informative interview!

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An Interview with John Cow

October 10th, 2007 IBabel 6 comments

I managed to get John Chow parody sidekick John Cow from Johncow.com for a quick interview. Enjoy.

Did you imagine in imitating John Chow that your novelty blog would take off so quick?
Not really no, we didn’t have any expectations about the blog. Just figured it would be a fun idea to do.

How do you go about marketing a blog?
It totally depends on the blog, the niche and the writer. Hard to answer in a generic way. Obviously the cow has a lot going for him since it’s a parody blog.

What’s the most ‘mooney’ you’ve made in a month so far with JohnCow.com?
Nearly $3500,00 last month.

How long have you been marketing online?
People consider it marketing, we consider it fun. We’ve been blogging for about 8 months now.

Apart from John Chow, what other marketers do you admire?
Don’t know any. And that’s the truth.

MillionDollarHomepage emulations, copycats and similar concepts have been done to death ever since it ended. Were you suprised that even now, MillionEuroWiki still worked?
Not really, MEW is doing the same as a concept that’s proven successful. It’s not a milliondollarhomepage where you can stare at pixels, it’s a community site where members can interact and work collectively to achieve greater promotion for their sites.

What would you say is the best method to increase your subscriber count?
Work hard, try to get at least one post out a day and interact with your users. If they ask you questions, respond. If they annoy you, respond. And don’t be afraid to be yourself, if you dont like what someone has to say, tell them. Don’t change your ways. You will end up with an audience that’s not meant for the real you.

What do you do to avoid writer’s block?
Writers block..I used to think there was usch a thing but not anymore. Just because you keep deleting what you write because you don’t like it is no writers block. It’s the same with food, somedays you’ll enjoy your meal better than others.

Do you buy traffic?
We’ve tested $25 on stumbleupon traffic once. Crap results so we quit trying. We’re happy with the amount of traffic we’ve got.

Did we really need a 10th question?
Sure, why not.

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An Interview with ShoeMoney

August 12th, 2007 IBabel 2 comments

Below is a quick 10 question interview with Jeremy Schoemaker aka Shoemoney from shoemoney.com

Have you always wanted to be an entrepreneur or were you inspired purely by the popularity of the internet?
It was not something planned. The internet just made it really easy to evolve the business

How long did it take you to reach your first $100 in Google Adsense?
I think the first 30 days

Would you say that viral marketing outweighs SEO in terms of online awareness?
Totally. If you build a site based on organic traffic it will never take off like a viral campaign

You seem to have succeeded at every online project you’ve attempted, have you had any big failures?
Hmm well our costs to try things are pretty minimal so big failures… Not really sure. We try many things though

What area of Internet Marketing have you made the most profit?
Affiliate marketing is where we have had the most success

Do you think a completely unique idea is more effective than trying to dominate an already established market?
While new ideas can be lucrative often reinventing the wheel learning from other peoples r&d is the way to go

When launching a new online idea would you recommend preserving your budget carefully or spendimg every penny of it on marketing in order to establish the idea as quick as possible?
If its something you believe in then you need to spend whatever it takes to reach the tipping point

Do you think you should pay close attention to the opinions of friends and family with a new idea?
Totally

Do you agree with the notion put forward by John Reese in his ebook The Rebirth of Internet Marketing that making money online is getting harder by the day and will continue to get harder?
Yes. Mostly because of the global scale

What’s the best singular piece of advice that you could give to somebody trying or wanting to make money online?
Hard work over time. Learn from all experiences good and bad

Thanks again to Shoemoney!

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