Making
money online, or not
I tried some of those “make-money-online” deals
recently, and as you might expect, I didn't make much money with
these ventures. I've listed the companies I used and how things turned
out. Good luck.
Cash Crate
The first method I tried was Cash Crate. With Cash Crate, you fill out
surveys and applications with various companies and get paid a fee through
Cash Crate. Some of the offers are “free” and others cost
a little, but you usually can cancel the offer and get a refund.
So for about a week, I filled out a bunch of surveys and signed up
for trial offers. Some of the offers were listed at “completed” on
the Cash Crate Web site, and others were “pending.” I earned
about $120 by the end of the week. Of course, as soon as each offer went
from “pending” to “completed,” I canceled the
offer. In the meantime, I received lots of junk e-mail. I used a specific
hotmail account for all my surveys, so my regular e-mail account would
not get clogged. I also received a lot of phone calls from solicitors.
The junk e-mail and phone calls were expected and easy to fix. The
problem was with my credit card. I only used one card, which had gathered
a lot of dust, so it was easy to track the activity online. I received
a couple of
charges
on the card from companies I had canceled with. The charges usually showed
up on my credit card as “J2” or “AP9” and then
the name of the company. I called the companies and told them I had already
canceled, but I usually got stuck with the $1 trial fee.
I eventually, had my credit card company switch my account number and
issue me a new card because some of the companies I had canceled with
continued to charge me.
Now, back to that $120 I had earned. After a couple of weeks, the offers
that were listed as “pending” started to disappear instead
of switching to “completed.” Apparently, there are only four
or five companies that sponsor surveys, so if you fill out more than
one with the same company, the extras don't count. Also if you cancel
an offer too quickly, you lose the fee.
The $120 shrank to about $30. I requested a check. There was a $3 fee
for the check. I'm waiting for my big $27 payment to come in the mail
any day now. It's been about three weeks since I requested the payment.
It was supposed to be processed on the 20th of the month. The Web site
still shows my payment as “processing.”
InboxDollars
Shortly after I tried Cash Crate, I signed up for InboxDollars. I put
a lot less effort into this money maker. I did just enough to get the
$30 minimum.
InboxDollars has many of the same surveys and offers as Cash Crate.
The difference is you get offers through e-mail in addition to the ones
available on the Web site. You get a penny for clicking on the e-mails
and get about two a day.
I requested the check for $30. After the $3 fee, it'll be $27 when I
get it. I requested the check in mid June, and it could get here in early
August.
Paid Posting Tools
It's hard to get rich with Paid Posting Tools. The idea is forum owners
pay you for posting comments in threads and starting threads. They pay
12 to 15 cents per post.
I signed up for several sites to post. Not all sites are sponsored by
the same “pay-for-posting” company. This means you have to
reach the payment threshold of the individual companies to get paid.
Some companies have a $10 minimum payment others have $15.
I'm not sure paid posting is worth it for forum owners. The theory is
if you have more action on your forum, more people will join. As a paid
poster, I found it challenging to post to these forums because they were
new and had little action. It's like having a one way conversation, which
can be a lot of work.
I cut back on my postings after about two weeks because it didn't seem
like an efficient use of my time. I still have not reached a payment
threshold.
Commission Junction
These technique has potential. I've recently joined, so I have not made
anything, but I have not lost anything. Commission Junction is a step
beyond Google AdSense. (I've made about $10 from Google AdSense in about
six months.)
If you have a Web site with a lot of traffic, you could make money by
putting ads on your site. That's where Commission Junction comes in.
It's a hub for advertisers. Webmasters can apply to advertise for companies
and get commissions.
Remember what I said about traffic? If you don't have a lot of traffic,
you may not get approved by all the companies.
So far, this is the easiest method for me to make money online. Of course,
I haven't actually made any money yet. But I'm sure someone out there
will sign up for Web hosting eventually, lol. |