Saturday, February 23, 2008

Something you should Know about YUWIE





"Here's the mistake most of the people on Yuwie are making... they're spending their days pounding
on the new Yuwie members wanting to be friends and doing everything in their power to get a gazillion people to visit their page every day. They simply don't understand the power of leverage.

No matter how many people look at your profile on any given day, across a month, you will NEVER make enough money to have made it worth your time based on how many friends you have and how many people look at your page. Period.

The way you make money on Yuwie is the exact same way you make money in network marketing. You make money by building a downline organization. That's all there is to it... one simple step... recruit.

Successful network marketers understand that the power of the system is in the downline. The leverage they create. They create a simple system anyone can copy and follow, recruit new people, and then teach them their system. If their recruits will do as they do, they will succeed as they succeed.

The key to winning on Yuwie is a very simple system that anyone can recreate. So here's how you do it... you recruit five people and you teach those five people to both recruit five people and teach those five people to do what they do. (which is what you do)

You have to build a relationship with your downline. You go out and you find people to be in your organization, when they join it you show them how to succeed at it, and then rinse and repeat. If you will do that, you can earn as much on Yuwie as your heart desires. If not, then you should just delete your account now.

The fortune is in the follow-up!

When someone new signs up under you in your downline, you have to immediately teach them to do what you are doing and help them get started. If you do, then your organization will grow and that's how you make money.

If everyone in your downline is taught to go recruit five people and to teach those five to repeat the process, this is what your organization looks like...

Level 1: You
Level 2: 5 referrals
Level 3: 25 referrals
Level 4: 125 referrals
Level 5: 625 referrals
Level 6: 3,125 referrals
Level 7: 15,625 referrals
Level 8: 78,125 referrals
Level 9: 390,625 referrals
Level 10: 1,953,125 referrals
Total: 2,441,416 referrals

Ok... let's ignore everyone's page impressions except for those who are on your tenth level. That's the level where the fortune is to be made. Suppose each person on the tenth level has just one page view a day, thirty page views a month. That's a total of 58,593,750 page views per month.

If the RSR is $0.50 for the month for every one thousand page views, then your commission on just the tenth level is given as:

$0.50 * 58,593,750 / 1000 * 30% = $8,789

You're making almost $9,000 a month on your tenth level alone having done nothing but recruited five people you taught to recruit five people and so on.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Yuwie a social net working website


Yuwie is a social networking site website dedicated for the people .The board people in Yuwie decided that for some reason, using a free, and highly functional social service populated by your friends (like Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, etc.) is worth ditching for something built with very little ease of use or original design, but created to help you make ludicrous amounts of money by selling out your friends.

It works like this: you get a share of money for every page view on the service (the site makes its money by selling ads). Also, the more people visit your page, the more page views you get a percentage of. Yuwie then takes it a step further with referrals, letting you get a percentage of money from the activity of any friends you've invited to the service, along with their friends, and people who their friends have invited. This goes on for 10 "levels," so you could theoretically have close to 100,000 referrals if your friends and their invitees continue to invite others who use the service beyond the one-month probation period.

Does this idea sound familiar? It's a pyramid scheme. The problem with this, economically, is that it's unsustainable. The people at the top can't possibly pay out the promised amount, and the people stuck at the bottom aren't getting the same benefits as those who have spammed referrals to their friends higher up in the chain. Speaking of spam, even if you're on there with your friends, you're bound to get an intolerable amount of spam from people you don't know as the service grows. The second most popular group on the service at the moment has been specifically designed as a place to add random groups of other folks to beef up your bonus money. Is this the kind of network you want to be a part of? At least the site isn't asking for a sign-up fee--if it did, it'd be illegal. And it ought to be.

The worst part is that Yuwie is pretty much a carbon copy of MySpace, circa two years ago, with nearly identical profile features--meaning you're not really getting anything more than you would with a mainstream social network. That, and the ads are those wonderful seizure-inducing ones that jiggle and flash, combined with the large click-through ones that steal you away from whatever you're looking at while you wait for a redirect. Even MySpace won't do that.

It's also not an original idea--profit sharing has long been a part of the social Web services. More recently it has gone mainstream in the video space with Revver and YouTube's new AdSense program, but even then, you're unlikely to get the $10K a month Yuwie is promoting in their introductory video. The big difference however, is that these services reward creativity and the traffic it brings in over gaming. In terms of social networking, sites like (the now defunct) Fannect.com have offered their users the option to add Google AdSense to their profiles, while Facebook lets developers of third-party apps drop ads into their canvas area. There's also Capazoo, which lets users exchange virtual tokens that have been "tipped" from other users for real money.

These ideas are going nowhere. People are eating up sites like Facebook and MySpace because they're an easy way to people-watch and stay in touch in a more pervasive manner than e-mail or instant messaging alone. While it would be nice to make money off using these sites, I'd much prefer to support the people who have created them, and who maintain them with new and helpful features.

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