Selling Click Bank Prodcut First Time?

Scheme

Banned
Nov 18, 2006
968
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Dallas, Texas
Well, I usually tend to stay away from asking retarded questions (try too) but I have a GREAT niche idea and really its an informational e-book in the debt field, I just have no idea (besides writing it, which is done) how to sell it... I am thinking click bank is my best bet, and honestly my e-book is not on there, and isn't a bullshit product it actually has value.

Someone help me please?
 


You can do that, but what about making a blog around debt as you seem to know about it, and then promote your own blog and product. Add content to it to build it up. Start a facebook fan page about debt and give helpful tips ect, start a twitter account and build up your following there as well and then when you add content to your site you can share a summary of it on those sites and link back to your blog. You can also use squidoo and hubpage as your own little free web pages and monetize them and get traffic back to your site
 
> So better just to market and create, and sell it on my own and avoid click bank?

Got a related question about doing this yourself.

I read that paypal passes on chargeback fees from the credit card companies of 20$ to you, so a successful chargeback on a 15$ product could cost you 35$. After figuring in the transaction fee and tax, it means that for a 15$ product:

· 5% chargeback rate = 14% loss of profit
· 20% chargeback rate = 56% loss of profit
· 36% chargeback rate = 98% loss of profit

Above that, you're into the red.

I'd like to know what a realistic chargeback rate is for an average digital product? In real life, can you ever expect a 20% or 30% chargeback rate?

I'd also like to know whether this is a good reason to price products higher. For example, a 30$ product at 36% chargeback rate would only be a 70% loss of profit, rather than all of it.

Or perhaps this is all bullshit and you actually hardly ever get shafted for a 20$ fee?

Lastly, could one advantage of being an advertiser on clickbank be that they protect you from all this stuff. Chargeback rates are high there, but maybe they absorb it somehow?