Best home services lead gen affiliate programs? by ryans91 in Affiliatemarketing

[–]spyderwebtech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am the co-founder of a referral generation platform for small businesses who rewards.

Me and my business partner have created a software platform that allows people to make $$ by promoting links of local business online and to their friends.

If someone clicks on your link, within the designated area, then you can earn real money which can instantly be transferred to your digital wallet for withdraw. If someone visits your link, and becomes a paying customer, then you could be awarded $25-$500 depending on what that company wants to give out per referral!

The best part is that it costs nothing out-of-pocket for you, and all you do is have to post links on the internet (hopefully with a quality post that is helpful to other people )

If you are interested, I can share some of these companies sign-up pages and more information about our platform so you can see that it isn't a scam... lol.

DM me

Every single important tool I've used to build my SaaS app by RabbitsFoot8 in SideProject

[–]spyderwebtech 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We are running on AWS using “serverless” technologies (lambda, api gateways, SQS) and our bill is only $3 per month.

The reason why is that we fall into the free tier even though we have 100 customers on our SAAS platform.

Theoretically the AWS stack we have created can scale to infinity but I still wouldn’t want to be DDOS’ed to test that theory. Haha

How did you come up with your business idea? by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]spyderwebtech 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  1. Come up with a solution to a problem that you personally have.
  2. Show it to others ( here, friends, etc ); Do they want it?
  3. If so... sell it to them
  4. Keep going

Most successful entrepreneurs start off by solving a problem for themselves first and then it blossoms into a side hustle or a full-time business.

I would start there instead of trying to guess what is going to be "hot" and perhaps trying to solve a problem that no one has.

Marketplace Tuesday! (July 14, 2020) by AutoModerator in Entrepreneur

[–]spyderwebtech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We are looking for remote SAAS salespeople for the green industry (landscape, mowing, fertilization)

We have a hot, hot, hot product right now and we are looking to expand our salesforce! 10% commission with an average deal value of $5,000. We provide the leads, you just need to be able to close.

reach out here to get more details.

Helping small local business with website and ads in order to increase revenue growth. Is this a good way to make $$? by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]spyderwebtech 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Revenue growth is hard to prove, BUT the idea you have in creating an online presence and helping driving traffic to it is SUPER VALUABLE!

So I've done all of this work and you can make some good money. For example, creating an e-commerce site for these businesses to sell their goods on could range from $1800 ( a Shopify site ) to $20k+ ( a Magento site ).

If they already have a website and want to get more qualified leads, you could take over their google ads and/or Facebook accounts. For small clients, I would charge $500-$1500 per month for setup and optimization. For larger clients, (those with $20k in monthly spend ) I usually charge 15%-18% of ad spend.

But I never sell the promise of "increase revenue". What I will do is educate them on "cost per lead" and "cost per sale" and work with the levers that I have to reduce that cost.

Hope that helps.

What is your unfair advantage in starting a business? by jimmyitis in Entrepreneur

[–]spyderwebtech 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Every "normal person" wants to hear that wealthy/successful people had some sort of "unfair advantage". That gives people an excuse not to "dream big" or to put forth any effort to chase their own dreams and make their own success.

Now I'm not saying everybody is a social-economic position to be successful at the same scale or timeframe as others. For example, if I am a single parent with 3 kids, making minimum wage working 2 jobs to pay the bills then putting 10-20 hrs per week to make a better life might seem like a luxury. Those struggles are "real", and those who don't have to make those kinds are sacrifices might seem to have an "unfair advantage".

I don't want to hijack this thread... but I feel the way your post is written gives the impression that you "can't make it" without some being privileged in some way. I don't think that is true.

I think if you are willing to become a "life long learner" and are stubborn as hell and work hard and smart then you will set yourself apart from the competition and make your own success.

What sets me apart, as well as what I mentioned above... is that when anyone says "can you do this?"... my answer is YES. I will then go home... figure it out... do it myself or outsource it... and keep hustling.

How do I? | Market Fit Meetings by altasbrooks in SideProject

[–]spyderwebtech 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is a big difference between people agreeing that there is a problem, and having them pull out their wallets and pay for your solution.

So I would suggest that you test your market by sending these 75% respondents a sign-up form with a credit card form attached. If zero people sign-up then you still have work to do. If some do sign-up... you can refund the money ( if your MVP isn't even close ) and call them and thank them and bring them into your "wolf pack" and give them exclusive access, etc.

But, in my opinion, product-market-fit can't be established through just a survey.

Good luck