I would love
to slap you. Maybe
you deserve it,
but certainly
you need it.
I need
to pour iced water over your head, flog
you with a sausage
and yell as loud as
I can in your ears
"FORGET EVERY BIT OF ADVICE THE OLD INDUSTRY GURUS TOLD
YOU, THE OLD ADVICE ABOUT AUTOSURFS
DOES NOT WORK!"
Yes,
you might be a little surprised. Yes
you've probably
not been flogged with a sausage before,
and you'll probably be a
bit confused as
to why I've got an entire website dedicated
to an industry I don't hold much faith in.I really
believe that right now
(October 10th 2006)
the entire industry'
exists because
of one company alone
and I'd like to use
this opportunity to explain why you might
have lost
money on investment
after investment this year.
I'm
pretty much out on a limb here. Nobody else seems to share my pessimism,
but then look around where are
the autosurf commentators
and advisors of last year? Have you received any email updates from these people telling you how much money they've lost and how
they are trying to recover
it? Are they still providing advice and strategies?
They aren't because when
the autosurf industry is strong, its actually hard to lose
money. Whether you tell people to diversify,
or to invest only in one
company, the advice will appear to work.
It's only when
the industry is not going strong
that people follow
the old advice which once seemed to work, and effectively flush
their money down the toilet.
I'm dedicating this article to the people
who are
scratching their head this year. The people who've consistently lost money in nearly every surf site
of 2006 and wonder what is going on.
We can't blame Stormpay any longer,
we can't blame e-gold
or SEC regulations so I'm going to tell you
exactly why the
odds are so hugely stacked against you this year.
1) Due
Diligence DOES NOT work.
Due Diligence was the pompous buzzword
of 2005. Every forum post required it to be used to assert your status as an autosurf elite. It means "do proper research about a company" before you invest.
Due Diligence makes some very dangerous
assumptions - It assumes that if you know the name and contact details of a webmaster they will never run away.
- It assumes that the webmaster is competent.
- It assumes that it is hard to falsify DD documents.
2)
People are Wrongly Petrified of the Word Ponzi' Because they Associate it with 12DailyPro's Collapse.
Before 12DailyPro was around last year, people were not really concerned about how an autosurf made money. Suddenly this Ponzi word began infecting
everything to
do with autosurfing. People began to associate 12DailyPro with Ponzis with losing all their money. The case is MUCH more complex
than that. If it were that
simple then other autosurfs would have been hauled in front of the SEC too and this has not happened.
People are convincing themselves that autosurfs are trading in forex, investing in offline opportunites are living a dangerous lie. I'll leave it again until another time to explain exactly how an autosurf makes money but
for now don't let autosurfs blindside you with this kind of
rubbish. A company declaring links with forex traders is much more likely to be a scam than one which keeps its operations more private.
3) People Confuse Reputation With Competence.
People seem to be connecting
experience in a forum with an ability to run an autosurf.
Haven't you noticed that all these new autosurfs and HYIPs are being run by people with no experience at all in running
sites. Why do you believe they will learn the
ropes and excel?
4) Diversification Doesn't Work if There are no Good Companies Around
There have been times this year where there has not been even one autosurf worth investing in. Often it is worth
getting out of the market for a few months until something credible appears again. If we'd have all done that since January, imagine how much we might have saved.
5) People
Believe That Low % Autosurf Sites Are More Stable Than High Percentage Sites
I remember last year hearing a respected autosurf commentator
explaining that sites offering 1% interest per day for a year should be considered as bankers'. He was explaining that they are much more stable that high % short-term sites. How many 1% for 1 year sites do you see now? How many of them are being advertised or are attracting attention? There's about three I can think of and not one would get noticed in a forum.
6) People Still Have Blind Faith in
AutoSurf Owners
I'd argue that during
2005 nearly every autosurf owner began their website with the best intentions in mind. They genuinely thought that they'd be
able to pay members and
keep the site running. I argue that this year the story is different. People have come to
realize that when a site
closes it is the owner who comes out smiling at the members expense. I believe that some companies (perhaps
CompactSurf) set off with a
financial target in mind. When they got a certain
dollar value in their e-gold account they decided to close. It really is impossible to read the mind of the autosurf webmasters and there is nothing at all you can do about it.
7) People are Still Following
Tipsters Like Sheep
Nothing makes me more angry at how irresponsible
HYIP and Autosurf commentators have become. Read most of the autosurf blog sites, or read some of the emails that you get from those people and you'll recognize that there is ALWAYS one company being marketed. As I said, there can be (and there have been) times where not one HYIP or autosurf is credible. Most of the bloggers take the least-bad company and market that. As soon as it has problems they switch their downline into another company, collecting their commissions on the way.
The most common question I'm asked is "Which autosurfs should I invest in?" My standard reply is invest in the industry leader and nothing else. I'll define this industry leader later, but I'm keen to keep this article academic and don't wish to go
off-track. Most people are disappointed by my reply.
They were expecting me to whisper a company name in their ear and magically unleash the next way they can make millions. I could pander to demands and reel off the company that pays me the highest referral commission but I very much want my reputation to last longer than a typical autosurf's lifespan.
To Conclude
* I hope by now you can appreciate just why you've been losing money this year and can see that autosurfing now is very different to how it used to be.
* I do not recommend many
companies, simply because it is extremely difficult to predict their motives and their future.
* A wise investor will not search for opportunities which really do not exist.
* I have not yet
completed an article about what new strategy you should adopt .. but it is in my to-do list. If you understand the gravity of my arguments here then this update is essential reading.
Copyright (c) 2006 Martin Pavion