January 30th, 2012
In the current economic climate we are all looking to make a little bit of extra cash and one way could be through affiliate marketing. But just what is affiliate marketing?
Affiliate marketing is basically a revenue sharing programme between a brand and a website owner. So how it works is you put ads on your website and is a customer click through or new customers go to the company you could earn a bit of the profit.
When it comes to affiliate marketing there are three ways to earn money – pay per click, pay per sale and pay per lead. So what’s the difference between the three?
Pay per click
How this option works is that every time a potential client leaves your website by clicking on one of the ads you earn a certain amount of money depending on the product or service offered.
Pay per sale
This way you would earn money for every sale is made through a customer clicking on an ad.
Pay per lead
This basically means you can earn money for every customer who registers on the company website as a result of the ad.
Making money from affiliate marketing
If you own a website or a blog affiliate marketing could be a good way to earn a few extra pennies and you don’t even have to do much you just have to place an ad on your site.
However, there are some disadvantages to affiliate marketing as you have to make sure you have properly researched the company so that you will get all the revenue you are owed. Also in some cases an ad could be on your site for months without any click through and if the commission rate is small it could take a while to get any kind of revenue.
You also have to make sure that you are keeping your website going with content that people want to read because if you don’t have visitors to your site you are not going to make money from affiliate marketing.

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June 29th, 2009 | No Comments »
Swiss franc depreciated strongly in the middle of the week after the central bank intervened on the currency market to curb the currency growth, writes Financial Times.
Traders have said that Bank for International Regulatory worked on the currency market in name of the Swiss central bank, initially buying euro to destabilize franc, after buying U.S. dollars for the same reason.
And last week held... Read More

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June 25th, 2009 | No Comments »
“Russia could put Ruble in free flotation in two years and should continue interventions on the money markets during the transition period”, said the central bank chief in Moscow, Sergei Ignatyev.
Official believes that Ruble has already exceeded a port of the way to free-float (free trading on value markets and fixing the exchange rate according to the average stock on the interbank market), according... Read More

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June 22nd, 2009 | No Comments »
Latvia tries from hard to maintain the monetary fixed regim to stay in ERM II mechanism in order not to lose the opportunity to adopt the euro, the currency that would bring greater financier stability.
Latvia is trying to get international aid to avoid a devaluation of the currency, which could lead to renunciation of reporting to the euro, in a moment in which neighboring states raise the issue of... Read More

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June 18th, 2009 | No Comments »
Pressure on fixed monetary regime of Latvia, whose effects are felt from the money markets and shares of Scandinavian countries to the Baltic States, suggests that the days of this type of monetary policy, now in just a few countries in Europe, could be counted, writes The Guardian.
Monetary fixed regime has at base linking of exchange rate of the currency by a strong currency such as euro at a fixed... Read More

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June 15th, 2009 | No Comments »
Polish zloty was devalued to a minimum of last five weeks compared to the European currency, the strongest decline among Eastern European currencies, in the context in which investors have sold assets from the region of fears that Latvia will be forced to depreciate their currency, writes Bloomberg.
Zloty depreciated by up to 1.7%, up from 4.5770 zloty to the euro in the most dramatic decline of emerging... Read More

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