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Showing posts from March, 2018

What's the Fastest Way to Get Started?

Once you've decided to get started as an affiliate, there are two ways you can choose to build your business: Slow and steady, with minimal extra costs  (This is the method we teach in AffiloBlueprint) Faster, but with additional costs  (But these costs are easy to make back once you're up and running) Which method you choose depends on how much money and time you can spend, and how fast you need to see results.  For anyone wanting to see results FAST, and prepared to spend a bit of money to get the ball rolling faster, here's my most straightforward and simple method. What's the Fastest Way to Get Started? Step 1: Create a one-page website I see a lot of newcomers get bogged down with creating big websites with lots of content: Not only do you need to create all that content, but you also need to figure out how to put your website together. So instead of creating all that extra content, you’ll just create a one-page website.  The only thing you

I quit my job

I quit my job and I have one year to get to profitability I have a dream I want to ship products and earn $1,000 a month doing it. Why $1,000? I’m currently living in Bali, where I can live comfortably off of $1,000 per month. This isn’t San-Francisco or Dubai where $1,000 moves quickly. In Bali, $1,000 can pay for your rent, scooter, eating out three meals a day and most importantly all the coffee you could possibly drink. OMFG STOP! Mr. Aj if he is reading this he is probably facepalming because he said “OMFG STOP” to a similar guy. But how do you actually do that? Do you really need to be a domain knowledge expert with 1,000 years of experience prior to creating your startup? Should you do it AirBnB style and work on a single product launch for two years and don’t give-up? Do I create one new start up every single day, throwing virtual spaghetti at the wall and hoping something would eventually stick? These questions are the start u

Yes, You Can Catch Insanity

In 1994, Susan Swedo, a researcher at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in Bethesda, Maryland, had a hunch that there might be an immunological explanation for obsessive-compulsive disorder. As a model, she was studying a phenomenon known as Sydenham’s chorea, or St. Vitus’ dance. First described centuries ago, Sydenham’s chorea is a rare manifestation of rheumatic fever that affects children almost exclusively. It is a disconcerting, unmistakable illness to witness. Children are overcome by rapid, uncontrollable jerking of the hands, feet, and face, contorting their bodies in a distorted, disturbing “dance.” Sydenham’s chorea is caused by molecular mimicry gone wrong. Molecular mimicry generally works like a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Streptococcus bacilli have thrived through the eons by cloaking themselves in proteins that resemble their host’s own cells. Disguised, it evades the immune system just long enough to establish an infection. But sometimes this tactic