Archive for March, 2007



Carnival Scam, the real Agloco, free MLS listings

Carnival Scam

WiseBread, the blog I read daily, gathered a few videos that I find very entertaining. The Real Hustle, a UK television series, uncovers scam behind some of the fairground attractions. It is pretty amazing how easy it is to fool people in believing the game is fair. Check it out

Carnival Of Scams - Top 4 fairground cons at WiseBread

The real Agloco

I wrote about Agloco before. What I didn’t expect at that time is just how popular it will be. I guess old tricks can work just as well when you put new wrapping around them. Trader’s Narrative explains why:

How People Think it Works:

  1. Spend Some Hours Surfing
  2. Get Gobs of $$$

How Agloco Really Works:

  1. Spend Some Hours Surfing
  2. Get Limited Agloco ‘hour units’
  3. Convert ‘hour units’ to Agloco ’shares’
  4. Agloco Goes Public
  5. Agloco Becomes Profitable
  6. Agloco’s Board Declare Cash Divident
  7. Agloco ‘members’ Receive $

What Everyone Ought to Know About Agloco at Trader’s Narrative

Free MLS listings

Talks about real estate bubble don’t make your head spin yet? Jonathan from MyMoneyBlog uncovers some savings in listing your house at MLS for free. That is probably just around $500 but in times when real estate prices go south, each penny counts

Iggys House Beta (via MyMoneyBlog)

Bargainist — hot deals for guys and girls

The Bargainist ChickThis post continues my weekly series of bargain site reviews. Last time I reviewed DealNews, a website with 10 years of experience in bargain hunting.

Dejarik Media, the blog network behind Uncrate.com and Outblush.com, two stylish blogs entertaining fancy male and female shoppers, made a big splash in November 2006 when they launched Bargainist, which is the bargain site of this week.

The team is doing very well with their two shopping blogs and it was a very logical step for them to extend their offering to a more frugal part of their readers community, to those who won’t blow $165 for a belt buckle.

A deals site or a deals blog?

Bargainist has a typical blog layout, each bargain is served as a separate blog post with several posts added daily. The website has a Stores section with promotions sorted by stores, and Archives where you can browse past deals by month, category, and store. Coupons and Freebies sections have, you guessed it, coupons and freebies. Tips section has,… nothing as of the moment. I figure the team is too busy sweeping deals and at the end of the day has no time left for any tips. Maybe they should borrow some from my blog? ;-)

Non-commissionable deals

Most of the deal links go to affiliate sites (nothing unusual) but the team does post a non-commissionable freebie once in a while, which is a good sign. A big problem with many deal sites is that they will ignore a good deal if they can’t earn a commission on it. There is no incentive for them to publish these deals, or rather the incentive is too far stretched to realize their importance.

The truth is that in the long run, the effort they put into posting non-commissionable deals will pay back to them many times and then more in a form of regular customers who will advocate the website to their friends and will help make it a success.

No deals on weekends

The site is not updated during weekends which is a pity since good shopping deals happen 24/7. As I am writing this on Sunday night, the last deal is posted 2 days ago, on Friday.

What puts Bargainist apart from many of the other deals sites is the broad selection of deals. They are not too geeky for women, and offer enough hi-tech gadgets to attract guys as well, a perfect combination.

I like the simple blog-style design of the website however it certainly lacks the bells and whistles that other deals sites offer. For one thing they could have at least enabled readers comments!

Summary

Overall a nice deals site (or rather blog) with a distinct design, featuring a well balanced combination of deals that appeal both men and women.

Pros: simple design makes it easy to browse the deals, wide deals variety, non-commissionable deals are not ignored
Cons: deals are not updated on weekends, some advanced features are lacking (can’t discuss deals, can’t compare prices on similar merchandise, etc)

High Yield Bank Accounts - March, 2007

This is another update from my favorite banking deals blog. Fed held the target for the fed funds rate at 5.25% this week for the sixth consecutive meeting and savings rates don’t seem to have changed much since January when I did this roundup last time.

Checking/Savings/Money Market Accounts:

3-Month Certificates of Deposit:

6-Month Certificates of Deposit:

9-Month Certificates of Deposit:

12-Month Certificates of Deposit:

18-Month Certificates of Deposit:

36-Month Certificate of Deposit:

48-Month Certificate of Deposit:

60-Month Certificate of Deposit:

High Rates with Conditions / Large Balances - Open to All

Source: Bank Deals Weekly Summary for March 24, 2007 at BankDeals

The art of negotiating the lowest price

This is not my favorite topic to write about since I am not good at bargaining the lowest price. It is a very psychological process and I don’t feel comfortable doing it face to face.

Thanks to the internet I don’t have to. I can do most of my shopping online in the comfort of my home. Even with such things like new cars, while I still have to come to inspect the purchase in person, I don’t have to negotiate the car price at the dealership.

Prices on all big-ticket items are usually negotiable and price negotiating skills can be very helpful when there is no choice but to buy something in a brick and mortar store. This is why when I stumbled upon this Readers Digest article full of haggling tips I couldn’t resist not to comment on it. Here are the 5 skills outlined in it with my own comments and examples from my shopping experience.

Remember that prices on big-ticket items are negotiable

We often forget that if the price is above $100 it almost always means it is negotiable. I was negotiating prices for the washer and drier when we bought our house 4 years ago. I bargained last year when we had the storm door installed. And I never skip the chance to haggle when we buy a new mattress.

Not all of sales assistants have the power to cut the price and some can only do a very limited reduction. If you don’t seem to be having success with a particular sales person, don’t be afraid to ask for the manager.

Don’t be afraid of silence, it almost always works in your favor

People who are in the retail shopping business are usually pros in their niche and know exactly what the price should be. With rare exceptions (Black Friday door busters?), the price will be average and will have a built in margin to account for the case when you start bargaining and the seller has to give up some. My biggest problem is that when I see something I like for the price that I think is right, I get attached to it and feel afraid to lose it.

The art of getting the best price is to remain flexible. Don’t concentrate on one thing. Play uncertainty. Hesitate. Stay silent at the negotiation. The sales assistant may just snap off and offer you a better deal to secure you as a customer.

If your competitors can do it for less, you guys probably can too

Price matching is a very effective negotiating technique. This is why it is important to do your home work before you head for the store. Call a few places, get the quotes, and go to the place of your choice. It doesn’t necessarily have to be the one with the lowest price. For example when I was buying our TV I got a quote from ABS and Sears. The price was lower at ABS but Sears was closer to my house and had better warranty terms so I drove over there and bought the TV for the price ABS offered.

Don’t start with the details — talk first about how you feel as a customer

This part of price negotiation is the most difficult for me as I am not good at showing my emotions in open. Nevertheless it worked for me a few times in the past. Once I bought a vacuum cleaner that I thought was on sale. When I came home I realized the price was higher than I thought I paid. I felt I was tricked.

It is hard to say what exactly happened, maybe the assistant’s broken English was partially the reason. Anyway, I called the store and explained the situation. I didn’t go into any details, I just poured my feelings about how upset I was. The sales person who sold me the vacuum cleaner wasn’t available to remedy the problem and I said I am returning it back. As I was already on my way to the store, a manager called and said they will credit the difference.

Request a compensation when a store breaks its contract

When the repairs you order are not done on time, when the construction materials you purchase are not delivered the next day as promised, you have every right to expect something in return. The fittest and slimmest businesses survive, this is the foundation of our capitalistic economy. Who else but you as a consumer can enforce this rule?

Unfortunately you can’t always expect a positive result. I am still puzzled how scam shops survive in our time of open source, collaboration, and social networking. This however happens here in there and I am sure you know what to do if you are not treated fairly. BBB, Yelp, and ResellerRatings are just a few places to go when in trouble.

Why Amazon doesn’t like deals sites?

I was recently doing random searches on Amazon and their affiliate program and discovered interesting facts which I think should have gotten better media coverage but somehow went almost unnoticed.

I will tell you about what I found shortly but first read this quick introduction into affiliate marketing. Feel free to skip the first part if you think you know all about how affiliate programs work.

Affiliate programs are deals sites’ bread

Affiliate commissions are the main source of revenue for all bargain sites. The banners and context sensitive ads can be rarely seen on these websites. Some don’t have them at all. The idea is simple, they want you to buy stuff — not click on ads and browse away.

Affiliate programs can be very profitable. In fact they can be so profitable that many resellers don’t even bother setting up a website. They just do all the marketing via Pay Per Click ads. If you see a Google ad that brings you to a big merchant like Amazon — it is not Amazon promoting themselves but rather some entrepreneur pocketing the difference between the commission they receive on things you buy and the fee they pay for your click on the ad.

The higher sales volume is — the better commission rates the resellers can negotiate thus climbing up the commission tier ladder. The big guys like FatWallet can negotiate rates so high that the cash back they pay to the shoppers is often equal to what smaller affiliates get paid as their entire commission.

Why merchants need affiliate programs?

Affiliate programs expand the merchant marketing base. Resellers can be compared to contractors who get paid based on what they do versus a fixed annual pay of an employee.

In addition affiliate programs add flexibility to the merchant marketing efforts. Companies often change affiliate rates and thus regulate what type of product they want to promote or what distribution channels they prefer to use.

Just as with contractors, affiliates are the first to go when times are tough. This is what happened on October 13 of last year. Many high-tier Amazon affiliates received a letter saying that Amazon in essence doesn’t want them any more. The interesting part here is that not all resellers were affected. According to an Amazon rep

The changes […] will only affect Associates within the Deal & Coupon category, which can be defined as a category of Web site dedicated to finding the best deals or price discounts across the Internet (and brick-n-mortar stores as well) and/or websites that provide coupons to different retail stores, online or offline.

Most merchants outsource their affiliate programs to specialized networks. The notable three are Comission Junction, LinkShare, and Performics who probably cover most of the online retailers. Very few large companies do their affiliate marketing in-house, one of them is Amazon. This gives Amazon a lot of flexibility with what they can do to their associates.

Why did Amazon kill the program for deals sites?

The only explanation I can see is that deals sites were cutting into Amazon’s profit margins way too much. Since they are the ones who would usually dig out heavily discounted merchandise and post it for sale on the front page, Amazon would get very little if any from sales that these sites generate. Merchants often have a few products that they sell at a loss to attract buyers and gain regular user base. It looks like these products is what deals sites are/were selling most of the time.

Why offer changes that make the program unusable? Why not just reduce the rates? This question is a little tougher to answer but I still think I know the answer. Many affiliates who received the Amazon email that day suggested that it didn’t look like a typical official email from Amazon. Some even questioned its authenticity. In addition it happened shortly after the end of the quarter when the financial reports are usually published. All of this points to the fact that someone at Amazon got very unhappy about the numbers and demanded an immediate action which was produced in a hurry.

As it often happens in big corporations, immediate results are more important than long term effect, thus the outcome, Amazon lost affiliates, affiliates lost business. As SpoofeeDotCom commented on Amazon Associates forum

This is happening to my site (Spoofee.com) and it’s devastating =(

Top Tier partners are punished for performing well?

Read more about why Amazon doesn’t like deals site from these great sources:




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