Quote:
Originally Posted by Brad Callen
2. Go to Google, enter bfmscript. Then browse through the results. That will ONLY bring back pages that contain that text on the page. What if you're looking up an affiliate ID named something more common, like "weight loss"?
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That does make a bit of sense, though I tend to disagree as any affiliates id is a single word as you cant have spaces in your affiliate id at clickbank. SO "weight loss" cant be an affiliate id.
Secondly even if the name were a common name like say "loss" or "weight", what are the chances of hop.clickbank.net being appended to it and it not being an affiliate id?
Not saying that your software necessarily uses the same method, but the fact remains that unless you have access to clickbanks database which I presume you don't (unless you have partnered up with them) all a software can do is replicate what a human would normally do, only do it faster.
So using a search engine would be the most common way of approaching this.
The question that people should really be asking is "Ok, it finds affiliate id's but does it show who is a super affiliate and who is a regular made one sale in a year kinda affiliate?" coz that's what would make the data relevant.
Simply mailing thousands of affiliates with the hope of them answering is like throwing **** at the wall and hoping something sticks.
One more thing is that in your video it shows a lot of blogspot blogs where an affiliate has his link in, and obviously your whois search will bring "Google" up as the owner. Don't you think this oughta be filtered?
All the best with your product launch