Myth and Traps of Earning Money on the Internet
By Nach Maravilla
For a new online entrepreneur,
the Internet is a wild frontier full of promising unknowns.
The newbies often think of the Internet as the new business
medium that produces overnight millionaires. The Internet
is THE wave of the future, and everyone who wants financial
success simply must be on board
A number of new entrepreneurs
are particularly seduced by stories of "I-got-rich-quick-on-the-Internet."
For these newbies, the Internet is the new nirvana of financial
windfall, where making money is as easy as 1-2-3.
But, nothing could be farther
from the truth. Here are some of the common traps and myths
that new online entrepreneurs fall into on the Internet.
1. Build it, and they will come.
This is the biggest fallacy on the Internet. A common misconception
that companies and entrepreneurs who are new to the Web have
is that people will visit if they put up a Web page. They
falsely believe that merely having their own site is enough
to keep their traffic soaring and cash register ringing. In
order to have a popular site, you've got to offer something
to the user -- unique and quality content, interactivity,
fun, and freebies -- something more than an 800 number. Users
may come to your site once, but to keep them coming back you've
got to have fresh original content and product offerings that
they can use.
2. Give it for free and they
will come. Extending the first fallacy above, entrepreneurs
oftentimes think that having some freebies on their site is
enough to entice people to visit and, more importantly, buy
their products or services. While the word "Free" is a powerful
come-on for visitors on the Internet, it is not always a guarantee
that people will indeed come to get the freebie on your site.
Take the case for example of one of the leading search engines,
Altavista. Altavista created a free ISP service, thinking
that it can lure more people into the search engine and earn
additional revenue by serving ads through rotating banners
common with free ISP services. Unfortunately, their expectations
were not met and Altavista shut down its free ISP offering.
3. Get rich quick on the Internet.
Unless you have been hiding in a cave, you should know that
a number of dot-coms have been falling from the sky these
past few months. Many dot-coms failed because they held the
false belief that having a flashy web site is enough to solicit
venture capital financing, even though they have no solid
business models. Some dot.coms who were able to get venture
capitalization got carried away by the first round of funding
but could not get the next round because of unprofitability.
The Internet is a business medium. Like any other business,
the basic business principles still apply.
4. Send emails to an "opt-in"
list dying to receive your product offerings. The word "opt-in"
list is a much-abused term on the Internet. Unscrupulous marketers
prey on unsuspecting newbies, selling them mailing lists of
people supposedly interested in buying their types of products.
These new online entrepreneurs then send out thousands, if
not millions of emails, hoping that financial reward will
come as soon as their emails are opened. However, instead
of sales, all they get are hate mails, aside from being cut
off by their ISPs and web hosts. Not only will their reputation
go up in flames, they become officially called as "spammers,"
the menace of the Internet.
5. Join affiliate programs and
start earning money. Many newbies fall into the trap of believing
the hype that participation in affiliate programs is the way
to go on the Internet. Some even set-up their own web sites
with the sole purpose of putting up affiliate banners. While
it is true that affiliate programs are gaining in importance
in overall e-commerce efforts, you will never earn the thousands
of dollars promised by the web-marketing gurus prone to hype.
Affiliate programs are merely additions to your revenue streams,
and NOT your sole revenue source. It will only work if the
programs you participate in have a good fit with the contents
of your site.
6. Purchase business opportunities.
Business opportunities on the Internet abound. When you surf
the Internet, bizopps are just about everywhere from getting
paid to surf, buying reports with reseller rights to MLM opportunities.
Some will be downright scams, while other programs are not
worth spending a minute of your time. Don't be surprised to
find out that thousands of others are selling the same exact
product; others even with the same exact Web page as yours.
Only a small percentage of these programs will earn for you
a few hundred dollars. Be extremely wary of business opportunities
on the Internet, and make sure you do a careful cost-benefit
analysis before paying for anything.
Written by Nach Maravilla,
Publisher http://www.powerhomebiz.com
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