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yeah, I have done some Amazon Affiliate sales in the past. For holidays and stuff. You can make a lot even though the Comissions are small.

And , YES , there a lot of scams out there. Not just AMZN but many digital information programs on how to make money can be a scam these days.
I've run into a number of them the past 10 years since I have been doing it !

Lots of scams out of there. You are right. In 2018 about 75% of the info is on the internet for free. The other 15% can be bought in courses or ebooks for $10-50. The rest of it is shit you gotta learn through trial and error.

I agree trial and error while frustrating is the best way to learn.

Hey Johnny, you should make a video calling this bullshit BitConnector out.

He's claiming all these affiliate marketing things you just debunked will allow people to passively make $10,000 a month while on vacation.

This guys a fucking clown:

haha a while back I made a video talking about how one of these Bitconnect promoters sent me a cease and desist letter. I'll leave it at that, you can probably figure out the rest ;)

Yep yep, I read all about it... and this guy is pathetic. He has a course on how to get a 100,000 Instagram followers, and barely has a 1,000 himself. How fucking stupid is that?

While I suppose it's possible he's built up large followings within certain niches and not on his personal brand page, this guy is kind of a known bullshitter. I remember when he and Tanner J Fox did the $100,000 Bitconnect investment but conveniently the camera went away before they actually submitted it, and fast forward to today Tanner claims he's never invested in Bitconnect. Anyone who makes these lambo videos imho is on some bs trying to pitch courses. I think most people who sell courses make more money off the courses than they do actually doing the activity they are teaching people about.

Again, not saying anyone who sells a course is a scammer, if you have a knowledge base that people wana know about it would be kinda dumb not to make money off it and I am a huge fan of multiple streams of income but just be very careful who you trust and who you buy courses from as there's more garbage out there than helpful stuff

I totally agree with you bud, plus everything could be found for free on the internet, so I never understood people paying for this shit, especially courses in the thousands like the scam that is Amazing Amazon Seller course... what a fucking scam!

Yeah if I can pay $50 bucks to have someone else organize the material for me and save me from watching 10 Youtube videos, and I also get a peak at their method cool but thousands of Dollars, I just can't wrap my head around it.

I have a buddy who just bought some 10 hour lecture off ebay for $1500, he thoguht it was a steal because it normally sells for 5k. Blows my mind

Wow, doesn't he know that they mark them down like that on purpose as a marketing scheme? Oh, and I hear ya, organizing stuff on say a Udemy course is fine, for maybe 10 bucks, but anything more is too much!

Researching how to do something is procrastinating. Learn by doing and lean as you go. Thats the only way anyone ever becomes successful. If you listen to my advice then you don't get my point. All the information you could ever need is free unless you need a piece of paper verifying that you learned it.

Yes and no. To say nobody should ever research anything seems kinda silly. WHen your beginning something new you'll probably need some guidance. That said I agree over learning is just procrastination. If you want to start a Shopify store you dont need ot learn everything about every element of shopify. Start by setting up your shop, if you get hungup learn just enough to finish that step and move on. I

I think its important to find guidance or help when needed but learn just enough to do what your doing and go back to completing that task. Continue pressing forward untli you get hungup learn just enough to do that and continue to move on.

I agree many people research and learn and never do anything

Yes very true. The whole thing gives me a Ty Lopez vibe.

i agree with the trial and error part. Usually most of the courses use pressure selling and scarcity this is something I noticed in a lot of their promo emails or facebook ads. Its very common. I think Youtube and Udemy are great ways to learn starting with YouTube than moving on to a paid options but something not too expensive but do this after you get some experience.