Thirty Day Challenge - Make Your First $10 Online
Posted on July 29, 2007 by
Adie
General, News
4 Comments
The “$10″ is not a typo.
I found out about this challenge from Yaro over at Entrepreneur’s Journey. I don’t know much about the challenge, but I like the idea.
For internet marketing beginners reading this blog, joining the Thirty Day Challenge might help you gain practical experience quickly. If you can make $10 in 30 days without having to spend any money, you’re on your way to doing well in the online business realm. Your experience of making $10 can help you make $50. If you can make $50, you can make $200. $200 can lead to $500. And so on.
I like the lower number because it’s an attainable goal for beginners. Many people are setting goals that are too difficult to reach. If you have no experience with internet marketing and you aim to make $2000 in your first month, you’re setting yourself up for failure. $10 is a goal someone can achieve with no experience at all.
Even if you’re a successful online businessperson, you may know someone that’s just starting out with internet marketing. They might find the challenge useful.
I joined the challenge even though I’ve made my first $10 already. I want to know how the challenge works. Hopefully, the folks there will do a good job of teaching the fundamentals of making money online.
Learn more about the 30 day challenge by reading Yaro’s blog post, Can You Make $10 Online In 30 Days?
And here’s the link again: ThirtyDayChallenge.com
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Looks like it could be interesting. I’ve signed up to see what all the fuss is about.
I would be wary of these guys. Dan Raine mad a lot of buzz with his 15k challenge website http://www.15kchallenge.com but all they promote are MLM sites with themselves making the big profits. I admit some of their marketing tactics work but the majority of their techniques are pretty black hat.
Thanks for the info. It will be interesting to see what techniques the challenge leaders promote. On their blog, they’ve recommended joining Digg and StumbleUpon.
Such a fishing rod. It looks like just another stinker. A troop of desperate future-internet-money-makers is a nice target anyway, if they are reading spam mails for 2 cents they will be satisfied with 10 dollars from Thirty Day Challenge, too. But the question is how the hell don’t they value their time&work (or how to start another Agloco company on your own, haha)