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Partnership Wanted with an Affiliate pro for .coms

jakeyboy

New Member
affiliate
Hi Everyone

I own .com domain names that begin with very high rate search engine keywords and I have reliable hosting. I am looking for someone who is a pro at building, maintaining and SEO of websites to go 50/50 in the income from having affiliate websites using my names and hosting.

I own:

EmeraldDealers.com - emerald keyword has avg 226000 searches per month
SapphireDealers.com - sapphire keyword has avg 301000 searches per month
SapphireDealer.com - sapphire keyword has avg 301000 searches per month

EngagementRingsSales.com - "enagagement rings" keyword term has avg 1229000 searches per month
EngagementRingSite.com - - "enagagement rings" keyword term has avg 1229000 searches per month

ArbitrationUS.com - arbitration keyword has avg 90000 US searches per month
ArbitrationUSA.com - arbitration keyword has avg 90000 US searches per month
ArbitrationNYC.com - arbitration keyword has avg 90000 US searches per month

MortgageShed.com - Mortgage keyword has avg 300000 searches per month

Anyone interested please PM me.

Forgot to say not interested in being associated with Porn, Adult, Politics, and Gambling
 
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What's the advantage to for the JV Partner you seek? I think you are a bit low on the rev share for the person doing the work, unless you are planning on a healthy ad budget in addition to SEO. SEO takes a loooooong time to be fruitful. Ad budgets for paid ads produce results immediately. Also, this is a massive undertaking you ask of someone all on a "possibility".

Is the JV responsible for the content, frequency of content, design, etc.?

Is the JV responsible for shopping cart integrations, payment gateways, etc.

Is the JV responsible for the list building, autoresponders, email design and content, etc.?

Is the JV responsible for any compliance with the W3C, FTC (U.S.), European Union (EFTA), and other countries?

Is the JV responsible for the development and deployment of your disclosures?

Will you have an escrow account for revenue distribution monitored by a third party?

If you are selling physical products, who does the product sourcing, sets up the accounts, manages the billing and product payments?

I can go on all day, but you get the idea!

I've been a businessman for 47 years, and along the way I have learned I MUST rely on one of two practices when entering into a relationship with someone to do my work.

1. I have become an expert in that which I plan to outsource to them, so in this way I have the skills to properly monitor and distinguish the value of the work I am provided.

or

2. I have to have a second hand person that I have absolute proven trust and reliability in to find the right person for me.

I am not trying to put a "bee in your bonnet", however, we have seen many attempts like this before that have no real plan, attempts mostly made by those that have no clue how to do it themselves before hiring someone to do it for them.

I am jumping in with these questions and remarks before the sharks get here to chew up and spit out the remains. I expect you have good intent, but frankly, if you really want this to work, you will need to have a plan outlined that all can view here in your thread. Otherwise, one of two things will happen. Either you will be taken to the cleaners by someone that knows how to redirect your traffic, or you will get someone that doesn't really have the skills, but convinces you they do.

To be honest, you are in the absolute finest forum for a Newbie to learn how to do what you want for a final set of products. It is my recommendation that if you really want this to work, do a couple of these sites yourself. "Learn it before you burn it" is an old expression from the car business. I learned it from Joe Gerardi. Sold 13,001 cars at a Chevrolet dealership between 1963 and 1978. Girard has been recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's greatest salesman. Joe and I spent a lot of time together in the '70's and he will be the first to tell you that if you haven't the skills to do it yourself, that's fine. However, "If you don't have the knowledge to do it yourself, you will be taken to the cleaners the long way around".

I saw your intro thread and I disagree with your implication that you are to old to learn this stuff. You stated, "It's very hard for an old dog to keep up with all the new tricks". I, and any of us here, will completely disagree with you on this! I am 64 next month, I look forward to learning everyday of my life! I have trained people in the restaurant and nightclub business, the auto industry, the computer supply manufacturing and distribution industry, the financial and business startup industry, the software development industry, and the real estate industry. You are never too old to learn anything. You could be trained as an astronaut, you may just not qualify for the job in other ways. Still though, you would have the knowledge the job requires. That is what you must do first. If you have the credentials to do the work you seek from the JV, post them above. If you don't, get your learning cap on and let us all help you achieve your dreams!
 
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What's the advantage to for the JV Partner you seek? I think you are a bit low on the rev share for the person doing the work, unless you are planning on a healthy ad budget in addition to SEO. SEO takes a loooooong time to be fruitful. Ad budgets for paid ads produce results immediately. Also, this is a massive undertaking you ask of someone all on a "possibility".

Is the JV responsible for the content, frequency of content, design, etc.?

Is the JV responsible for shopping cart integrations, payment gateways, etc.

Is the JV responsible for the list building, autoresponders, email design and content, etc.?

Is the JV responsible for any compliance with the W3C, FTC (U.S.), European Union (EFTA), and other countries?

Is the JV responsible for the development and deployment of your disclosures?

Will you have an escrow account for revenue distribution monitored by a third party?

If you are selling physical products, who does the product sourcing, sets up the accounts, manages the billing and product payments?

I can go on all day, but you get the idea!

I've been a businessman for 47 years, and along the way I have learned I MUST rely on one of two practices when entering into a relationship with someone to do my work.

1. I have become an expert in that which I plan to outsource to them, so in this way I have the skills to properly monitor and distinguish the value of the work I am provided.

or

2. I have to have a second hand person that I have absolute proven trust and reliability in to find the right person for me.

I am not trying to put a "bee in your bonnet", however, we have seen many attempts like this before that have no real plan, attempts mostly made by those that have no clue how to do it themselves before hiring someone to do it for them.

I am jumping in with these questions and remarks before the sharks get here to chew up and spit out the remains. I expect you have good intent, but frankly, if you really want this to work, you will need to have a plan outlined that all can view here in your thread. Otherwise, one of two things will happen. Either you will be taken to the cleaners by someone that knows how to redirect your traffic, or you will get someone that doesn't really have the skills, but convinces you they do.

To be honest, you are in the absolute finest forum for a Newbie to learn how to do what you want for a final set of products. It is my recommendation that if you really want this to work, do a couple of these sites yourself. "Learn it before you burn it" is an old expression from the car business. I learned it from Joe Gerardi. Sold 13,001 cars at a Chevrolet dealership between 1963 and 1978, Girard has been recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's greatest salesman. Joe and I spent a lot of time together in the '70's and he will be the first to tell you that if you haven't the skills to do it yourself, that's fine. However, "If you don't have the knowledge to do it yourself, you will be taken to the cleaners the long way around".

I saw your intro thread and I disagree with your implication that you are to old to learn this stuff. You stated, "It's very hard for an old dog to keep up with all the new tricks". I, and any of us here, will completely disagree with you on this! I am 64 next month, I look forward to learning everyday of my life! I have trained people in the restaurant and nightclub business, the auto industry, the computer supply manufacturing and distribution industry, the financial and business startup industry, the software development industry, and the real estate industry. You are never too old to learn anything. You could be trained as an astronaut, you may just not qualify for the job in other ways. Still though, you would have the knowledge the job requires. That is what you must do first. If you have the credentials to do the work you seek from the JV, post them above. If you don't, get your learning cap on and let us all help you achieve your dreams!

Thanks for the clarity. I needed to hear these things. As an accountant I have said similar to my clients starting out in bricks and mortar businesses. I guess I was hoping to spend my time now with my grandson. I will apply your advice and start studying up. Do you think my names are worth developing this way?
 
Thanks for the clarity. I needed to hear these things. As an accountant I have said similar to my clients starting out in bricks and mortar businesses. I guess I was hoping to spend my time now with my grandson. I will apply your advice and start studying up. Do you think my names are worth developing this way?

As you know, even an absentee owner has to dip his wick in the business some of the time. You do not have to toil for ten hours a day to achieve your goals in this business. There are those that do, but it does not reflect on what is fortuitous for you. You will still have loads of time for that handsome kid to go fishing (my favorite sport these days) with you.

The domain names are not what will determine your success. While it is true you want some sites to have names that play into the sites mission, it is also true that sites often have names that have no "apparent" relationship with the sites mission or goals. Sites like Quora, EBay, Amazon, all have names that do not fit with traditional naming conventions for the sites. On the other hand, they are huge brands and have paid their dues through the early years when the SE's had lower thresholds. Today, for sites that do not seek that level of accomplishment, and often are there to service a smaller demographic and penetration, naming conventions can play a role in their rankings on the SE's to a small degree. They moreover play a role psychologically with the visitors to the site(s).
  • make it brand-able
  • make it pronounceable
  • make it as short as possible
  • make it a .com
  • avoid names that may infringe on trademarks
  • make the name intuitive
  • use broad keywords
  • if the name is unavailable, try adding a suffix or prefix
  • avoid spaces
These are just a few. You can find more at MOZ and other sites like it.
 
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