Working hard and making money have nothing to do with each other in the 21st century.

My father-in-law was a hard-working farmer his whole life.

He started out working for his father across several properties. 

He eventually bought a mostly sandy property.

He ran a mixed farm, sheep, cattle and cropping, which managed to keep his head above the financial water, but would never make him a wealthy man.

Farmings biggest problem is that if you have a good year, so do all your neighbours and the price for your product goes down.

When you have a bad year, so do all your neighbours, and the price goes up, but you don't have much to sell.

The second biggest problem is related to that price fluctuation.

When you put in a crop or increase your herd, you must pay fixed costs to get your product through to ready for market.

Those costs go up every year, but when you get your product to the farm gate, someone else tells you what they'll pay you for it.

That price is not related to your costs to make that product, and you never know from one year to the next what that price will be.

Poor farmers go bankrupt, good farmers survive, great farmers make a profit, but no one gets wealthy unless the farm has been in the family for generations.

When my father-in-law retired, he sold the farm, and that's when he became wealthy.

All those years of hard work only managed to allow him to stay on the farm as he could cover his costs.

The wealth came from the appreciating value of the land, not his hard work.

When you spend your time working hard for a living, it's unlikely that you'll earn enough to become wealthy unless you focus on accumulating assets that appreciate or pay dividends back to you.

That's why you must work smarter to increase your income and your income streams.

Relying on one source of income is a risky move.
 

Regards,
Brent.


P.S.  Let's make this a simple exercise.

Imagine that you have set up an affiliate site that consists of two pages, a landing page to collect their email address and a thank you page that is a bridge page to the product you are promoting.

You buy some traffic that converts 50% to sign-ups, and 5% of those purchase the product.

From 200 clicks, you'll get 100 subscribers and 5 sales.

Over the next few weeks, you get another 5 sales from the autoresponder emails you send.

200 clicks will cost you approximately $80.

Assuming the sales were for $47 and your commission is 50%, your ROI is $235 - $80 = $155.

Now you have made a profit, and you have a list of 90 subscribers + 10 buyers.

How many times would you repeat sending traffic to your pages?

How many more small affiliate sites would you set up?

The answer to those questions only you can answer, but if you had 10 sites like that and you bought traffic to each one every day, how much money would you be making?

This is not passive income, but it is certainly low maintenance income.

These are the types of numbers that many affiliates make, but they are not guaranteed.

There are steps that you have to take in the correct order for this to happen.

Fortunately, these steps are laid out in easy-to-follow format here.

https://go.wm-tips.com/ezaff.

 
  Brent Milne
12 Torrens St
Happy Valley
South Australia

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