The Affiliate Code Scam or Could It Actually Be For Real?
The Affiliate Code scam or real you wonder? It looks like it’s going to be the next big product in affiliate marketing and promises tons of money. How much of that am I willing to believe? Well, anyone who has worked affiliate marketing would know that many of the most loudly announced systems to make you the next internet gazillionaire are exactly that: a lot of noise. You could drown in programs that will have you on perma-vacation in no time, with just the click of a few buttons; and systems that will make you tons of cash today, with your only complication in life being how to invest all that newly won wealth.
Why mention all of this? Well, I’ve been through that. And even though our mind tells us once again that this can’t really work as easily as it is made out to be, often enough we are desperate or frustrated enough to just give it a try, again. Maybe this time it’ll work, against all logic. Kind of like playing the roulette, isn’t it? Well on the other hand having worked myself through system after system like a gold miner (and gotten as dirty too) looking for that elusive nugget or better yet a whole deposit, I’ve learned A Lot about internet marketing and affiliate marketing on my way and I’ve also developed something I’d like to call the “scam-dar”. (A bit corny, I know)
There are some alarms that tend to go off when I read about the latest must-have program, that this time for sure is going to make you rich real quick-like. First: When nobody has ever heard of the guy that’ll give you the ONE tool you were missing to make it, for only a few bucks. In affiliate marketing people that know their stuff are known themselves. Names go around rather fast and if the program designer’s name isn’t recommended by a bunch of the known affiliate marketers I’d think twice to put my hard earned cash into his hands. Second: If the program promises you that you won’t have to work for your money – click here and get rich. Yeah, duh. Money doesn’t fall from the sky, unless God himself makes it so. So that’ll give you two conclusions, or they don’t have a solid base for their promises and you will have to pay your dues anyway or it just won’t work. Rule in general: If it sounds too good to be true . . . well, that’s normally just what it is.
Now if you are looking for known authors that have produced programs that have helped lots and lots of people you could look for example at Michael Jones, bestselling author of The Adwords Code, The eBay Code, The Torrential Traffic Tactics. The last big thing he put on the market was the Clickbank Code, which steam rolled the competition and is known to have made good on its promises. That program showed in an easy to follow step-by-step format how to get everything you can out of Clickbank affiliate marketing. Now The Affiliate Code takes this to a whole new level: why limit yourself to Clickbank when there is an endless market out there for you. Why put your sailboat in a puddle, when the ocean is just behind you?
So after having asked my money back on some of the didn’t-get-rich-quickly-systems I have come up with enough cash to give this one a shot. And in the end Michael Jones offers a solid money back guarantee for a whole 8 weeks. So really there isn’t much of a risk in it for me, right? His promise is that it’ll work right away, so in eight weeks I should know if it’ll work. If The Affiliate Code doesn’t work, I’ll simply ask for my money back (again) and go back to a more traditional approach. But who knows, maybe . . . just maybe . . .
Want to find out more about The Affiliate Code Scam, then visit Julio Garabot’s site here: The Affiliate Code for more information.


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