Although the website looks like many of the scam affiliate websites on the market, the Forex Autopilot site at www.forexautopilot.com, created by Marcus Leary, seems like a well though out and well documented piece of software that can help individuals to make money automatically trading on the Forex market. The website gives testimonials and video examples of how the software works so that individuals know the basics inside the software before purchasing it.

How It Works

There are only three simple steps to setting up the Forex Autopilot after paying the hefty one time price of almost $400. The software can be downloaded onto the desktop and then installed and configured according to the individual’s wishes on their computer. The system of Forex Autopilot can be set up as a demo account so that the individual can play with the different settings before setting it up on their real brokerage account. Once they decide to do it for real, they can set up a real account with their broker and then run the Forex Autopilot advisors on the account so that the trades start being made as the software evaluates the trends in the market so that the buying and selling can be done twenty-four hours per day.

The site at Forex Autopilot also shows the trends of the trading system over a one and half and a five year span of time so that it shows the percentage of growth in income gained by using the Forex Autopilot software. It also shows the reality that the growth is not a steady uphill climb, but one that is natural in the trading world where some unexpected losses can occur, but the overall growth using Forex Autopilot is out the roof.

Sun
18
Jan
10:18 am

At the outset, the Doubling Stocks website, http://doublingstocks.com/, comes across as a money making scheme, with the man who walks out and says that it is the ‘most important’ page a person will ever read while a pop up slides down to get the user to order immediately without reading the information on the page; since there are only ‘four spots left’ to do so. The funny thing is, when refreshing the page again, the box still says there are still only four spots left; thus raising suspicion at the outset.

Information

Once individuals get past the cheesy opening and shady offer when the Doubling Stocks page opens, the information presented on the following page is interesting in concept and seems to be valid with the technology that is available today. In essence, the Doubling Stocks creators have created a stock trading robot named Marl that will run on individual computers twenty-four hours per day examining the trends in the stock market so that the best possible buys can be made, and also selling before the market takes a downward turn.

The owners of Doubling Stocks are offering a newsletter to individuals who buy a subscription that shows where to buy so that they can make good investments. The investments can be made for little money, which is why it is called penny stocks, but the yield is high on the investment by following Marl’s predictions. The owners give a money back guarantee so that the $47 investment is worry-free. They allow the users to try the newsletter for eight weeks to decide if it is beneficial to them and will refund all money if they decide to cancel. The risk is believing that the funds will be refunded if cancelled. The owners of Doubling Stocks do put their contact information on the site, which helps it to seem more legitimate, but the overall feel of the site is that it is a money making scam.

After giving users information through charts about the amount of money that can be made by blogging like the owner of the site Blogging to the Bank at http://www.bloggingtothebank.com/, Rob Benwell, he writes a personal letter to the people reading the site. As unbelievable as his last name is the date of the letter which amazingly is the date the site is opened, changing each day to give the site user the feeling that he wrote it that day just for them. He works to encourage users that their failure in making money by blogging or using internet advertising is not their fault, it is just ignorance of certain principals that he is willing to share after months of keeping it a secret.

What is Offered

Blogging to the Bank offers users the latest techniques to making money with little to no effort on the part of the users. The downloadable guide and bonus features that he gives for the low price of thirty-seven dollars (do all on-line marketers and affiliates get together and determine that thirty-seven dollars is the best price for which to offer downloads?) Unbelievably, Mr. Benwell offers almost two thousand dollars worth of bonuses to people that order within thirty minutes. Unfortunately, the offer did not change when thirty minutes had passed, further confirming the bogus nature of the site. Although there are multiple references and from people that supposedly benefitted from the Blogging to the Bank information as well as charts of the amount of money the owner of the site made in a short amount of time, none of them are convincing in selling the information.

It is always easy to tell when a website is sketchy by what the marketers do when the website first loads. Commission Blueprint at instantly shows a pop-up advertisement to order a free manual before learning anything about it. It is touted as a ‘quick cash’ manual that usually costs the user almost one hundred dollars, but they are amazingly offering it for free.

What They Offer

This affiliate based website, Commission Blueprint, offers consumers the wisdom of two super affiliates who have learned the secrets to earning a lot of money by using certain techniques to manipulate Google to earn profits from ClickBank. As the user reads through the information, the owners, Steve and Tim, thoughtfully write a letter each day to their prospective clients – or maybe change the date each day so that it looks like fresh material.

The Commission Blueprint claims not to need money from sales of their methods but they want to share them with other people so that they can be successful too. They offer proof of their concept through an article purportedly written by ClickBank on their successful use of their product, and also through charts that supposedly show the profits made by the owners of the site.

To give them credit, they do offer fourteen videos and three in-depth manuals that explain all aspects of the technique that they are promoting to make money as an affiliate for a variety of products. Amazingly it can all be downloaded for a mere $97 and is sold through the payment system of none other than ClickBank.