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SpiderWeb Marketing - an Unbiased Review
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About an hour after you start looking for an Internet based business, you start clicking every banner or link that shows up and run down every bunny trail that you can find. Inevitably, you will find SpiderWeb Marketing sooner or later in your search. Should you pass and try another route, or see where the trail leads?
The first thing you will notice about SpiderWeb is that it is free. This can be good news and bad news. That fact alone means it will draw tons of lookers, but it also means some business builder may take a peek at it as a source of added income.
I joined SpiderWeb as a producer looking to add to another income stream. I found the tutorials very easy to set up and use. For each affiliate program (all 22 of them), there is a video that walks you through the signing up. Most all of the affiliate programs are free, but a few are paid programs. You can pick and choose the ones you want to join. You sign up for the ones you want to use, and pass on the others. Later, if someone in your downline elects a program you do not subscribe to, the program will default upline until it finds an active member for that program.
Two of the 22 (at this time) programs they suggest for driving traffic are Direct Matches and Yuwie, two popular social networking sites. SpiderWeb prompts you for some information about yourself and even has some Shout Page copy you can cut and paste. SpiderWeb also has an option to produce an automated blog. You set the posting tool on autopilot and the blogs magically appear on your page. Sounds great so far, huh?
Oops. I went to Direct Matches after signing up, just to see what I had done. I did a search for people looking for business associates which is what SpiderWeb suggested I use. The results come up ten to a page. I viewed seven pages,(70 profiles), and found 59 Spiders. Two pages had ten out of ten. To my amazement, 37 of them had “been involved in Internet marketing for 10 years” (including me.) Basically the same numbers come up if you search groups or blogs, and similar results appear on Yuwie.
Is the SpiderWeb marketing system good for some people, or most people? I would say yes for “some” and no for “most.” It gets a yes because it provides detailed instructions to get signed up for 22 affiliate programs. That alone might have taken you days to do on your own. It gets a big no for the fact that their advertising and marketing strategies point to SpiderWeb and Kimball Roundy more than they point to you. I’d give it a pass.
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