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Adsense Arbitrage Exposed

Posted in Adsense and Adwords by alex on the April 4th, 2007

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This is the introduction to a report I’m polishing off on the subject of Adsense Arbitrage. It comes out tomorrow and you can sign below to receive a free copy.

It’s estimated that nearly $1.9 Trillion are traded daily on the world’s largest market: FOREX.

An entire industry exists to exploit the spread between one currency and another. This may be the most poignant example of Arbitrage of them all.

In the traditional sense, arbitrage does not entail the possibility of a loss: it is the practice of buying something at a fixed price and selling it to an existing buyer for a pre-established price. The profit margin is built in.

In practice, this is often not the case as billions of dollars are “gambled” on the currency and stock markets, buying low, selling high… when things go right.

The players in these markets sit on enormous sums of money. Even a difference of 0.5 percent can make a killing for the portfolio owner and this is what they strive to do, day after day.

The problem with arbitrage at this level is not its complexity but rather the obscene amounts of capital required to make it worthwhile.

0.5% of 100 million dollars is still five hundred thousand: not bad for a day’s work.  (For someone with only $1000 to invest, the profits are negligeable…)

The capital and profits are flipped again and again and the capital base often grows quickly and effortlessly.

Adsense Arbitrage functions on a completely different level.

It involves more variables that require “personal” attention. It does not enjoy infinite vertical scalability. Meaning at some point you can’t just pump more money into the same “pick”: you have to diversify.

This makes Adsense Arbitrage unattractive to huge money players since they would potentially need ten of thousands of sites and pages to flip their hundreds of millions on a daily basis.

That is very good news indeed, as it leaves room for small players to make their mark and fortunes.

On a smaller scale, with anywhere between 5$ and $50,000 daily cash flow, profits can be shockingly high, creating an augmentation of starting capital in the several hundred percent range.

Very small numbers like a basic 5$ per day can quickly amount to important sums of money when combined with spectacular ROI, as can be achieved with Adsense Arbitrage.

A very attainable figure is to double returns on investment. For every 5 dollars spent, 10 dollars are returned. On an annual basis, the capital growth exceeds what can be achieved on any stock market.

Assuming that one reinvests all profits from their operation and starts with a capital of only $5 per day for 30 days ($150), Adsense Arbitrage could allow this capital to double every month.

At the end of month 2, capital would be $300, by the end of month 6, it would have grown to $4800. 4 months later the capital would be $76,800.

After a full year, starting with only $5 a day, the reinvested capital would reach a whopping $307,200.

As you can see the profit potential is plainly astronomical. However do not be fooled into counting your dollars before they hatch. The possibility exists but the road to these riches is fraught with the need for proper application and discipline as well as continual testing and improvement.

Adsense Arbitrage Exposed was not written to coax you into taking foolish action based on the desire for fortune. It was written to clarify a system in which exists the possibility of explosive and multipliable profits.

This report assumes a certain level of knowledge from the reader as I cannot cover all the bases, which for the time being will be relegated to the “fluff chapters” of less savory ebooks.

As you get started on your journey to Arbitrage profits, I invite you to proceed with caution and patience, giving each step and element the importance it deserves.

Choosing to keep this report brief, I have only covered in its pages the most essential aspects of the system, none of which can be safely ignored.

Adsense Arbitrage Exposed goes out tomorrow.  If you aren’t on my preferred mailing list, I suggest you sign up now.

Once you download it, please leave any questions or feedback here.

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34 Responses to 'Adsense Arbitrage Exposed'

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  1. Terry Reeves said,

    on April 4th, 2007 at 10:39 am

    I hope this gets me into your mailing list. I enjoy your writing style and what you have to say.

  2. alex said,

    on April 4th, 2007 at 10:53 am

    Hi Terry,

    If you signed up on the newsletter link above, then yes you will get your report tomorrow.

    Thanks for your comments, always nice to hear positive feedback.

  3. oakhem said,

    on April 4th, 2007 at 3:28 pm

    Where is the newsletter link?

  4. sut said,

    on April 6th, 2007 at 7:51 am

    i missed in the ebook proof that you ‘make’ money with this.

    or just putting book out there for those 180/other affiliate commissions?

  5. alex said,

    on April 6th, 2007 at 8:05 am

    Hi Sut,

    Frankly I’m a little surprised to see such a negative comment.

    Does everything need to be hyped with income screenshots? I do black hat and will never show my adsense account or a site that has my adsense code on it.

    As for affiliate commissions, there are 2 links in the book. Both of them lead to balanced reviews of two products I found worthwhile. If you read properly, you would see that I softly suggest people read the reviews if they want more info about those subjects. I don’t push anyone and I certainly didn’t do this for commissions.

    I think this report offers you, for no cost, more than any paid ebook on the subject does. Sorry you didn’t see it that way.

    Thanks for your comment,

    Alex

  6. Jamie said,

    on April 7th, 2007 at 5:07 am

    Newbie here going through the archives. I saw the comment Sut left, and I was also surprised. My kids learned something from Joe & Steve from Blues Clues-”Stop. Take a deep breath. Think(relax, focus).”

    I suggest this for everything, even now (wink).

    Later and go out and learn,

    Jamie

  7. alex said,

    on April 7th, 2007 at 5:12 am

    Hi Jamie,

    Thanks for your comment and welcome to Net Frontier Marketing.

    Your advice is timeless. Anger, frustration, the lot… they are so very temporary, while the things we do under their influence can last a long time.

  8. RushMan said,

    on April 7th, 2007 at 10:35 am

    Alex

    I just now finished your Adsense Arbitrage book and wanted to thank you for the time, trouble and efforts.

    I for One will be using your ideas (along with some additional tricks) to make some bucks!

    Just wanted you to know that I appreciate your forum as I always find good learning’s here. Keep it Up.

  9. alex said,

    on April 8th, 2007 at 2:44 am

    Hi Rushman,

    Thanks for your comments, I’m glad you found it useful and happy to have you as a reader.

    Cheers,

    Alex

  10. Rian said,

    on April 8th, 2007 at 5:10 pm

    Alex,
    Got your report….been meaning to knock it out. I just polished off Mike Plante’s ebook, Brad’s free report, and the mp3 interview w/ Mike Plante from the KE Elite Sessions. I think this will be my last main resource I study before actually attempting an arbitrage campaign.

    One question, should I be purchasing keyword rich domains, or will a general niche domain name/keyword be ok? I’ve got 40+ domains now and need to start utilizing some that I have.
    I’ve got more playstation3 domains than I’d like to admit. I might auction them off if the demand is right.

  11. alex said,

    on April 8th, 2007 at 9:52 pm

    Hi Rian,

    Sounds like you’ve do your homework…

    I’d say keyword rich domains are of secondary importance but not entirely unimportant.

    Good luck, let me know how it goes.


  12. on April 9th, 2007 at 12:38 pm

    I just read your free report. It’s very very good. I’ve been doing arbitrage for about 9 months, and can tell your readers that it just about sums up everything you need to do to make money in arbitrage.

    The only real variable in arbitrage is finding profitable keywords and niches. Although you touched lightly on it in the “Brainstorming” section, I would strongly recommend your readers learn more about niche marketing and keyword research if they are still having problems turning a buck.

    Overall - Great Job! I would recommend this to anyone thinking about doing arbitrage or anyone who is currently not making money with it.

  13. alex said,

    on April 9th, 2007 at 9:26 pm

    Hi Robert,

    Thanks for your comment. I agree, I could go deeper into the niche finding and keyword research but I wanted to cover everything and keep it relatively short. 22 pages seemeds reasonable.

    Glad to hear someone is making money with Arbitrage, it’s a good business.

  14. Sami said,

    on April 23rd, 2007 at 4:26 am

    Hi Alex,
    Thanks for your great job! Really good reading with your report.

    About Adsense Decoded, because I have it, I don’t think it’s a so nice product. At least, it not as detail as your report. Think of it: only for Aweber, he talked more than 10 min, it’s one video out of his 10 videos! For monitize, just need give some links is ok, but he talked more than 10 min, in fact, all he talked no more than giving you a link!

    I don’t know how the other people thinking after watching his 10 video.

    Anyway, your report is much better than his, and yours is free.

    Thanks for your effort alex!

  15. alex said,

    on April 23rd, 2007 at 4:52 am

    Hi Sami,

    You must be pretty advanced with Adsense… I know what you mean with the Aweber thing, it drove me crazy.

    Thanks for your feedback, really appreciated,

    Alex

  16. Sami said,

    on April 23rd, 2007 at 10:20 am

    Hi Alex,

    I come back to check here again. Thanks for your response!
    Really many guru do this kind of things like Adsense Decoded does. The salesletter did very well, but inside it’s another thing, but you can not say they are cheating, they just hide most of things, they don’t want to decoded really. Like the reviews on the salesletter, the people said two sections are good, but he didn’t say the other 8 is not good! or not enough! After you reading or watching, you still don’t know how to do, especially for newbie. Then you need to buy another book to decoded again, but another is same, needed to decoded again… If you are not savvy enough, you never can decoded inside, but they made money already. I am not saying all, but many.

    Many times, free reports are much better than paid ones. You can find very truth from free stuff. Many examples: your report, Brad’s report, Ken’s free affiliate ebook from SBI, Niche Inspector’s free report…

    For Adsense arbitrage thing, maybe Adsense Arbitrage voodoo is much better than Decoded. You are right, 180 is a good one.

    Thanks again!

  17. alex said,

    on April 24th, 2007 at 12:20 am

    Hey Sami,

    The problem is you have a bigger audience if you sell to the newbies and most of them are in way over their heads if you give them more information than Adsense Decoded does.

    On the other hand, I do agree that the premise is not quite right since the sales letter is all about arbitrage and the subject is treated very lightly in the videos.

  18. Robert said,

    on April 26th, 2007 at 4:13 am

    Hey Alex,

    I was reading your report a second time today and loved it all over again! :-) Nicely complements adsense decoded imho.

    Wanted to ask you a question.

    Since second tier PPC traffic isn’t as good as what you would get from the big 3 what measures do you advocate towards protecting your adsense account? (from invalid clicks, click bombing and any other unforseen, malicious activities which are against adsense tos either from second tier traffic or otherwise)

    I came across http://www.adsenseclickguardian.com and a few other similar scripts which claim to protect from most of these activities.

    Whats the scoop?

    Whats your take and any specific software recommendations that you use to protect your adsense account?

    Thanks again,
    Robert

  19. alex said,

    on April 26th, 2007 at 4:25 am

    Hi Robert,

    Thanks again!

    I’ll have to check around for commercially available applications since I use something else.

    I can’t vouch for one or the other right now since I haven’t reasearched them but here is the basic idea.

    You want a software what tracks the source of the traffic you are getting and stops displaying adsense ads to your visitors once they have clicked once or twice on them. You might also consider banning some third world countries, meaning they will never see adsense on your site. This is going a bit far but can be useful in protecting your income.

    That makes sure people can not go trigger happy on your ads and get you banned.

    The other “best practice” is to mix up traffic sources including some generic traffic if possible. Easier said than done, yes.

    Finally,you want to use moderation. If you’ve had an adsense account for 3 years and made so far $5.17 it will raise flags if you buy 2000 clicks a day and suddendly start making $500 overnight.

    Bonus tip: be skeptical of anybody that offers you adsense keywords with a payout of $20 to $65, that is a crock of BS.

  20. Robert said,

    on April 27th, 2007 at 1:46 am

    Hi Alex,

    Thanks for the detailed reply and excellent tips.

    If it’s not a secret can you whisper the name of the software you use to protect your adsense income?

    Initially I was just inclined to use an ad rotator like phpads new (now called openads)

    But the more I dug into protecting adsense the more I discovered and it looks like a simple ad rotator won’t be enough.

    Here’s two more sites I’ve come across that claim to protect your account. Both are FREE!

    http://www.adsenseshield.com & http://www.adlogger.org

    Both block ads from being displayed after a certain number of clicks. So at least they will do the bare minimum of what you recommended.

    I don’t mind paying and don’t mind experimenting either but if you screw up an adsense account it’s a mighty pain in the rear from what I’ve heard.

    Therefore looking for informed advice. Prevention is better than cure right? :-)

    Regarding your bonus tip: I’ve fallen for it atleast twice far as I can remember but this was more than a year back when adsense hype was at it’s greatest.

    Won’t be a sucker for that anymore, but I’m sure there are plenty of newbies who will get sucked right in.

    Hope you get a chance to set things straight by researching & expanding on this at some point.

    Thanks again Alex,
    Robert

  21. alex said,

    on April 27th, 2007 at 1:55 am

    Hi Robert,

    The software I use was built in house. Essentially it just checks the source of the traffic, the IPs and countries and blocks users from clicking on ads more than once or twice, depending on sites.

    Essentially, there is no way to be perfectly safe but if you watch the logs and block users from clicking too much as well as banning notorious fraud countries, you are doing everything you can.

  22. Robert said,

    on April 28th, 2007 at 2:26 am

    Hi Alex,

    Thanks for expanding on your earlier answer.

    After hours and hours of research I finally realized any such software can certainly protect to some extent but it won’t save you against someone who is truly malicious. (akin to locking a car to prevent it from theft but a professional car jacker can still get inside anyway)

    I won’t post what I discovered but will say even with one page view and using the right browsers a malicious person can still clickbomb any account and it’s amazingly simple to boot.

    So I guess using some sort of software protection and having the right stats are your only safety in addition to your earlier tips. Not the answer I was looking for when I started this research but oh well.

    Robert

  23. alex said,

    on April 29th, 2007 at 11:03 pm

    Robert,

    You’re right one, it’s easier to cheat than it is to prevent all sorts of cheating. It’s part of the game in just about any industry. Thankfully most people play fair…

  24. luke said,

    on May 21st, 2007 at 10:05 am

    Hey Alex

    I came across this page while searching on arbitrage.

    I’d love to see your book as your post makes great sense in describing the objectives of such a business.

    Any chance this is still availalble?

    cheers
    Luke

  25. alex said,

    on May 21st, 2007 at 10:11 am

    Hi Luke,

    Yes it is, you can simply sign up for the newsletter in the sidebar on the right and the download link to the report will be emailed to you instantly.

    Do not apply these methods yet, Google is making changes and that will affect the business model. Sign up to the RSS feed and you will receive the article when I update on the subject.

  26. Philomina said,

    on October 8th, 2007 at 9:42 pm

    Just joined your newsletter and received a copy of Adsense Arbitrage Exposed. Will these methods still work since Google is cracking down on arbitrage. Also are there still any bonuses if I purchase Adwords180.

    Another thing, where can I find more info on the Affiliate Slam using Xrunner other than in the Black Mask. I just need some tips on how to make this work and the affiliate programs that would accept this kind of traffic/links.

    Thanks for your help..

    Philomina

  27. alex said,

    on October 8th, 2007 at 11:07 pm

    HI Philomina,

    Yes, the arbitrage still works strong as ever, only you have to watch out when doing Google to Google, which I avoid entirely.

    Bonus is still available for Adwords 180.

    As for the affiliate slam method, I’ve pretty much described the scope of it. The rest lies in the details and you won’t find direct information for it. You might look at sits like ha.ckers.org and sla.ckers.org for ideas but it is technical.

  28. Julian said,

    on November 12th, 2007 at 1:54 pm

    I was wondering if your Adsense Arbitrage Exposed report is still available?

    Thanks.

    Julian

  29. Alex said,

    on November 12th, 2007 at 3:44 pm

    Ditto Julian above! Is it still available and how can I acquire a copy?

  30. Kobi said,

    on November 13th, 2007 at 2:53 am

    Hi Alex
    I would like to get my hand on the Adsense arbitrage report
    could you please let me know if it’s still available?

    Thanks
    Kobi

  31. ton said,

    on November 13th, 2007 at 10:12 am

    please send 20 pg. adsense arbitrrage ebook

  32. Alex - swtP said,

    on November 13th, 2007 at 5:16 pm

    I’ve added my nickname tag to avoid any confusion. I thoroughly enjoyed this short book, and wish I had read it long before. Being a beginner (not really a newbie) I still don’t quite understand Adsense in general. I just purchased your newest product only because I really enjoy your writing style and direct approach (limiting all the ‘BS’/Fluff and filler). I’ve gone out and purchased a couple of books on Adsense and Adwords just to try and get an understanding of it. From their I hope to begin implementing some of what is in your new book: GooglePayLoad.
    I’ll have to wait a couple of weeks to buy Adwords180. Will your bonus still be available? Thanks for this great site and your honest reviews.


  33. on December 12th, 2007 at 10:48 am

    Adsense Arbitrage Exposed

    Needless to say it was great! Very enlightening

  34. David C said,

    on December 15th, 2007 at 9:08 pm

    Hi

    Just found this site entirely by accident (sorry, I cannot tell a lie!). What do I have to do in order to acquire this ebook? I’m most interested in the subject, and like your style of writing. Now, enough of the “mutual admiration society” stuff LOL

    Take it easy,

    DC

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