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Latest Affiliate Marketing Business News

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Ethical Issues in Affiliate Marketing at Affiliate Summit West 2009
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Ethical Issues in Affiliate Marketing at Affiliate Summit West 2009.

Haiko de Poel, Jr., Managing Partner, dp internet services, LLC DBA ABestWeb (Moderator)
Connie Berg, CEO, FlamingoWorld.com, LLC
Alex Brutin, VP Business Development, FreeCause
Chuck Hamrick, Affiliate Manager, www.affiliatecrew.com/
Brian Littleton, President / CEO, www.shareasale.com

Session description:

There are two sides to ethical issues in affiliate marketing, and we will entertain audience questions for a panel of industry leaders.

Audio of the conference session available free at www.geekcast.fm.


Latest Highest Paying Affiliate Programs News

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U.S. Army Wounded Warrior Sports Program – Team Roping – 10 May 2008 – Las Cruces – New Mexico – FMWRC
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www.armymwr.com

PHOTO CAPTION: Spc. Jake Lowery of Fort Richardson, Alaska, competes May 10 in a Troy Shelley Affiliate team roping at Denny Calhoun Arena in Las Cruces, N.M., as part of the Army’s new Wounded Warrior Sports Program designed to give active-duty Soldiers with life-altering injuries an opportunity to compete in sporting events.

Cowboy-Soldier Launches Army’s Wounded Warrior Sports Program

Photos and story by Tim Hipps, FMWRC Public Affairs (cleared for public release)

LAS CRUCES, N.M.—Purple Heart recipient Spc. Jake Lowery officially launched the U.S. Army Wounded Warrior Sports Program with an inspirational team-roping performance at Denny Calhoun Arena on May 10–11.

Lowery, 26, of Fort Richardson, Alaska, lost his right eye and sustained massive head injuries when he was hit by an improvised explosive device that killed a fellow Soldier in Fallujah, Iraq, on Feb. 11, 2007.

Less than a year later, Lowery, a lifelong cowboy, was back aboard a horse and roping steers despite suffering from a traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.

"This pretty much keeps me going—it’s the only thing that does," he said. "Without it, I’d just be hanging out in my room somewhere."

The Wounded Warrior Sports Program was designed to give active-duty Soldiers with life-altering injuries an opportunity to compete in sporting events by paying for their athletic attire, registration fees, transportation, lodging and per diem.

Lowery travelled from Alaska to El Paso, Texas, and connected with family for a ride home to Silver City, N.M., where he, stepfather John Escobedo and grandfather Pete Escobedo loaded a trailer with horses and drove to Las Cruces for a weekend of roping.

All three competed in the Troy Shelley Affiliate event.

"This is one of the best things the Armed Forces could have done because it’s just therapy for these guys who feel like ‘I lost this. I lost that,’" said Sgt. 1st Class (ret.) Pete Escobedo, 83, who served 27 years in the Army. "If you really want to do something with yourself…Jacob is a prime example. He’s really trying.

"We’re thankful for the Army for doing everything it can for him."

Lowery teamed with different partners to successfully rope two of six steers in the first round of competition on Saturday. After roping two more in the second round and another in the third, he was sitting in third place entering the final short round. But when prize money came into play, his steer got away.

"It looked good to me," Lowery said of his final toss. "I’m not sure how he got out of it. I guess it happens that way sometimes, especially in this sport. Maybe I roped him a little too low. If not, I don’t know."

Despite struggling with limited depth perception, Lowery is encouraged that his roping skills will continue to improve. He already bounced back to win an all-around crown in Alaska and teamed with his stepfather to capture the team-roping title at the Professional Armed Forces Rodeo Association’s 2007 World Finals in Fort Worth, Texas.

"I’m not back to where I was, by any means," Lowery said. "I just keep practicing and hope it eventually comes back."
Lowery’s first run of 8.43 seconds was one of the fastest of the morning among 450 cowboys in Las Cruces. He posted another quality time of 8.69.

"Yeah, it was good, but it could have been better," he said of the full day of roping. "It was awesome just to come down and get out of the cold weather for awhile. I really enjoyed it."

Pete has faith that Jake eventually will overcome TBI and PTSD. Putting him on a horse is the best therapy he knows.

"I have been roping with Jacob since he was knee high to a grasshopper," granddad said. "I just don’t have words to explain the love that we have for Jacob and how much we enjoy ourselves doing what we do. He’s worked very hard. I’m sorry that he had to be injured the way that he was, but we’re doing the best that we can.

"He has taken his injury and forgotten it, to a degree, while he is doing what he loves the most. If you go to our house, this is all you’ll find: horses and cattle. If we’re not roping today, we’re roping tomorrow."

On this weekend, they were roping both days—three generations of cowboys taking turns roping steers in 100-degree desert heat.

"Jake has done remarkably well in coping with his injury," Pete said. "Instead of saying: ‘Well, I’m injured,’ he says: ‘I’m going to do what I can. The Good Lord handed me this hand, so I’m going to do with what he dealt me the best that I can.’"

John, too, is proud of how Jake has dealt with adversity, but he’s also experienced the aftereffects firsthand.

"Sometimes he gets those debilitating headaches and they just knock him smooth out," John said. "And then he just doesn’t feel like doing anything. And if he does feel like it, his head is hurting so bad that he’s not able to.

"There’s a lot of stuff in your head after you go to war and get blown up that you just can’t throw away. Me, I don’t have a clue because I’ve never been, but I can just imagine. A good friend of mine was a Navy SEAL in Vietnam and he got blown up big-time, and the guy’s got the best attitude of anybody I ever met.

"Jake wasn’t hit for ten minutes and he was on the phone asking: ‘What can I do?’" John said. "We got him cycled through (the recovery process) and once he started getting right, he called me up and said: ‘It’s not the events in your life that matter; it’s what you do with those events. If you want to lie around and be a crybaby, be a crybaby. If you want to jump up and do something…’"
That call made John proud.

"I told him before he left: ‘When you sign (enlistment papers with the Army), I can’t come and get you.’ And he said: ‘I ain’t worried.’ He’s never regretted his decision to go, not at all. He’s never got on the ‘Poor me, I wish I hadn’t’ and stuff like that. We hand him a lot and don’t give him the opportunity to lie around and have his own personal pity party. It’s like: ‘Hey, get up, let’s go do something.’"
Then another curious moment comes along.

"At to the world finals last year, he was sitting up at the top of the coliseum by himself," John recalled. "He just couldn’t stand the confinement of having people all around him. It’s just the little things, like he’ll forget to shut the gate (after riding the horse through)."

The affects also can be seen in Jake’s prolonged moments of silence.

"If we can ever get him to where he’ll just start talking again and intermingling with people and not being paranoid, I think life will be good," John said. "When he’s on horseback or working out, he’s a normal guy. But we’ll be sitting at the house watching TV or something and it ain’t the same guy. We drove six- or seven-hundred miles to the world finals—14 hours of drive time—and he probably said three words.

"But you stick him on a horse or in the gym, where his comfort zone is, and he’s fine."

At age 83, Pete derives inspiration from his injured grandson.
"His motivation is the love for this sport, and that keeps him wanting to get better instead of finding excuses as to why he can’t do something," he said. "He’s finding ways and reasons to do whatever he can. We really don’t worry too much about him, especially when we see how he’s progressing and conducting himself with his injury. He’s just not letting it get him down."

Jake believes that sets him apart from some of his fellow injured troops, whom he says "don’t seem to want to do anything." He couldn’t wait to get active again.

"Some of the Morale, Welfare and Recreation people told me about it when I was at the Warrior Transition Unit," Lowery said of the Wounded Warrior Sports Program. "About two days later, I sent in the paperwork. I sent them about four or five events they could pick from."

"This was the perfect venue for this particular guy," said Army sports specialist Mark Dunivan, who expects more applicants to follow. "I have been contacted by an amputee who wants to run in the USA Triathlon Physically Challenged National Championships in New York in July. I think it’s just a matter of getting the word out a little bit more."

Instructions for the application process to participate in the Wounded Warrior Sports Program are available at www.ArmyMWR.com. For more details, contact Dunivan at mark.dunivan@us.army.mil or 719-526-3908 or Peggy Hutchinson at peggy.hutchinson@us.army.mil or 703-681-7211.

To learn more about the Wounded Warrior Program, visit the U.S. Army online at: www.armymwr.com


Latest Wealthy Affiliate News

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Trinity Cemetery, Apr 2010 – 12
wealthy affiliate

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published as an illustration in an undated (May 2010) Everyblock New York City blog, titled "700-799 block of Riverside Drive." It was also published in a Sep 29, 2010 "Wealthy Affiliate Images" blog, with the same title as the caption that I put on this Flickr page. And it was published in an undated (mid-Dec 2010) blog titled "Wealthy Affiliate Scam Review – All The Dirt On Wealthy Affiliate!"

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Most of my photos focus on the rich, vibrant life that surrounds me here in New York City and various other parts of the world to which I’m lucky enough to travel. But death is part of our overall experience, too, and while it’s often hidden away in crowded cities like New York, it’s still here. I decided to acknowledge that a few days ago, by paying a visit to a local cemetery … I don’t really know what motivated the visit, other than perhaps the silence and peacefulness that I felt when visiting Arlington National Cemetery in Washington a couple of weeks ago.

In any case, I decided to visit Trinity Cemetery — not the one down on Wall Street & Broadway, but the one up at 153rd Street, between Broadway and Riverside Drive. It’s affiliated with the downtown Trinity Church, but it was established in 1842 when the church began running out of space in its downtown burial ground. Indeed, it is the only active cemetery in Manhattan at this point. In addition, the highest hill-point of the cemetery, right at the intersection of Broadway and 153rd street, was the scene of heavy fighting on November 16, 1776 when Fort Washington and its 3,000 soldiers fell to a larger army of 8,000 soldiers under Britain’s General William Howe.

The older downtown cemetery was the final resting place of a number of famous and historical figures, including Alexander Hamilton, generals, captains, Congressmen, signers of the Declaration of Independence, and delegates to the Continental Congress. In the uptown cemetery that I visited, there are the graves of more generals and Congressmen, as well as several members of the illustrious Astor family, and a prostitute who later became the wealthiest woman in America and wife of Aaron Burr (Eliza Jumel, in case you care), and several former Mayors of New York City. Indeed, I was told by the Cemetery Manager, when I signed the visitor’s book at the guest center, that former Mayor Ed Koch has already chosen his gravesite.

A pamphlet given to visitors shows the location of these famous grave sites, but I must confess that I paid no attention to them. I was interested instead in the mood of the place — the peace, the quiet, the serenity that one often finds in old cemeteries. Aside from one friendly guard/watchman, there was no one else there during the two hours I spent wandering around. I stayed on the marked pathways, but it was easy to walk quite close to the old gravestones and read the inscriptions; and I was fascinated by the elaborate family vaults — permanently sealed off, for the most part, now that all family descendants are gone. Near the visitor’s center is a new area, the mausoleum, where hundreds of small stones, arranged in neat vertical and horizontal rows, mark the resting place of people who, in many cases, have passed away fairly recently. Not in the 1850s or 1860s, as was the case with the old gravestones, but in the 2000′s. I saw one mausoleum stone with a data of 2010, and another with a man’s birthdate but no date of death — located just beside what I assume is his recently-departed wife.

Unlike people, whose constant motion complicates the job of a photographer, gravestones have the admirable feature of stability; they don’t move. Hence, every one of the photographs in this set is a handheld, 3-image HDR composition. I don’t know if it makes any difference, since many of the gravestones were fairly drab; but I wanted to pull out every bit of rich color that I could.

Sometime in the future, when I feel the need for another quiet moment of solitude, I’ll come back here. As it turns out, I only saw half of the cemetery: another section stretches from Broadway to Amsterdam, also from 153rd Street up to 155th Street, with the Church of the Intercession in its midst. I’m sure that it, too, has a story to tell … which I’ll do my best to communicate with pictures.


Latest Affiliates Marketing News

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Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
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Image by rogercarr
Photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.


Latest Free Affiliate Program News

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Using Social Media for Commodity Affiliate Programs at Affiliate Summit West 2009
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Using Social Media for Commodity Affiliate Programs at Affiliate Summit West 2009.

Dave Taylor, Principal, Intuitive Systems

Session description:

Affiliate programs are a commodity biz: you compete based on SEO or page design. We’ll explore other ways to approach your business, including how to use social networks to gain the upper hand.

Audio of the conference session available free at www.geekcast.fm.


Latest Affiliates News

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Affiliate Key Performance Indicator, EPC (Earnings Per Click)
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Image by Matthieu Dejardins, eCommerce Activist
Illustration from the following post: Affiliation Program: reasons, EPC, top publishers & network comparison.

Definition: EPC (Earnings per Click) is an important metric used by affiliate networks for reporting merchant or affiliate performance. Most of affiliate networks provide merchants and affiliates with an EPC figure.

This indicator represents the earnings per one hundred clicks sent by affiliates to the merchant’s website.

For example, we can tell that over the period of the last 3 months, an average payout to AT&T affiliates has amounted to .65 per every 100 clicks sent to AT&T, while Adobe’s affiliates have been earning an average of .49 on every 100 clicks referred.


Latest Affiliate Marketing Companies News

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Social Media Strategies in Affiliate Marketing
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With almost 50% of Internet users now creating and sharing their own content, this new medium is changing how markets operate and how companies communicate with consumers.


 
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