How to avoid doing stupid things as newbie?

by sscot
36 replies
Yes, fellow warriors...... Your old experiences will be useful to newbie Internet marketers.
#avoid #newbie #stupid #things
  • Profile picture of the author ChrisBa
    Originally Posted by sscot View Post

    Yes, fellow warriors...... Your old experiences will be useful to newbie Internet marketers.
    Always double/triple check everything.. especially with paid traffic sources..

    Here is an example of why - How I Lost Over $2000 in Less than a Minute | AffChris
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  • Profile picture of the author Marvin Adam
    Don't believe everything you read. Don't act like your goal was to make a full income in a heartbeat. Don't get too overly excited with things that already seem to be scammy. Don't invest thousands of dollars into coaching, unless you really have the time and can stick to a dedicated work ethic. Work on self-motivation all the time, if you're not disciplined, learn how to be it.

    Most importantly: Don't give up.
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    • Profile picture of the author discrat
      A little dearth with this Thread... Vague

      But I will bite.

      I think not being able to visualize the Success from the git go is a huge problem.

      You have to truly believe that it is possible. Condition your Mind of that possibility.

      Too many Newbies are just half- arsing it thinking well this may work but it may not.

      That is a domed approach.

      First get he mental picture that this can be done.

      Once you have that you will be miles ahead of the Masses


      - Robert Andrew
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    • Profile picture of the author sscot
      Originally Posted by Marvin Adam View Post

      Work on self-motivation all the time,
      Totally agreed....... for me, this was something very hard to handle at the beginning till it brings some unpalatable bad bargains.
      Signature



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      • Profile picture of the author MikeVietri
        Do not buy a product unless it is in aliment with what you are already doing and if you think it can benefit or expand what you are working on.

        I have had the mistake serial times where I buy something new that has almost nothing to do with my current project and by the time I'm done reviewing it, I also always get a refund, just turns out to be a big mess in the end.

        Just stay focused, remain positive, do not try to "make it" instead have fun with what you are doing and enjoy helping people

        oh and ONLY WORK ON ONE PROJECT AT A TIME, specially if you are just starting out.
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        • Profile picture of the author Jeff Schuman
          Forest Gump said it, "stupid is as stupid does", although the saying has been around longer then that. The only way to avoid doing something stupid would be to not do anything at all. What fun would that be.

          We have all done stupid things with our Internet business. Here is one of mine....

          I set up a Google Adwords account over 12 years ago without really understanding what I was doing. I went to bed and woke up $500 poorer the next morning with absolutely nothing to show for it. On a positive not I decided that day to learn how to rank web pages for keyword phrases so I could get free traffic and that worked for almost 10 years and made me hundreds of thousands of dollars off of that one site.

          Don't be insanely stupid and you will be alright.
          Signature
          Jeff Schuman - SEO Blog Writer For Hire! Buy affordable, SEO, quality, MMO niche blog articles. Fast turnaround.
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  • Profile picture of the author Jack Gordon
    Talk less. Listen more. Read a lot.

    Don't delude yourself into thinking you know it all. None of us do. Always be in learning mode.
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    • Profile picture of the author Dan Riffle
      Originally Posted by Jack Gordon View Post

      Talk less. Listen more. Read a lot.

      Don't delude yourself into thinking you know it all. None of us do. Always be in learning mode.
      Also, never trust someone with two first names.
      Signature

      Raising a child is akin to knowing you're getting fired in 18 years and having to train your replacement without actively sabotaging them.

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      • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
        Almost by definition, as a newbie you will do stupid things. It's the cost of admission to the School of Life.

        The trick is to only do them once.

        Chris is right about double and triple checking things.

        I once set up an Adwords campaign, got everything all set up, then copied/pasted the link to the download page as the destination instead of the landing page. Fortunately, a friend noticed and messaged me so I only lost a few hours worth of clicks.
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      • Profile picture of the author TheGMa
        Originally Posted by Dan Riffle View Post


        Begin quote ...
        Originally Posted by Jack Gordon View Post
        Talk less. Listen more. Read a lot.

        Don't delude yourself into thinking you know it all. None of us do. Always be in learning mode... end quote


        Also, never trust someone with two first names.
        LOL! Cute, Dan

        - Annie
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        • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
          Originally Posted by TheZafraGroup View Post

          You can avoid stupid mistakes by going through trainings. It will save you a lot of time, effort and money by studying what works and what doesn't. Move the ego aside and watch what experts do. Take consistent action and build a list. Test everything and always check your links to make sure they work and you're sending the right one.
          On the surface, this is good advice.

          The problem is that taking many of the trainings out there would fall under the "stupid mistake" column, and most newbies don't have the experience or context to judge which trainings are worthwhile and which are useless or worse.

          I would amend this to finding one teacher with whom he resonates and who is really succeeding. Not a "I made $10k last month and now I'm selling the method because I can't make another $10k any other way" flash in the pan. How does he tell? History leaves clues, and the basics haven't changed in centuries.
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          • Profile picture of the author Kurt
            Originally Posted by mrvm1 View Post

            Get a mentor who has been through it all before and listen , learn , be patient. At least you may be able to avoid most of the pitballs then.
            But i concur with everything that hs been said here
            good luck
            Mac
            Originally Posted by mrvm1 View Post

            pitfalls even not pitballs ( lol )
            I agree that pitballs should be avoided no matter one's experience. Four out of five pitball doctors recommend penicillin.
            Signature
            Discover the fastest and easiest ways to create your own valuable products.
            Tons of FREE Public Domain content you can use to make your own content, PLR, digital and POD products.
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      • Profile picture of the author Jack Gordon
        Originally Posted by Jack Gordon View Post

        Talk less. Listen more. Read a lot.

        Don't delude yourself into thinking you know it all. None of us do. Always be in learning mode.
        Originally Posted by Dan Riffle View Post

        Also, never trust someone with two first names.
        As if someone whose motto is "enjoy every sandwich" could actually give reliable advice.

        Get a job, hippie.
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  • Profile picture of the author Marvin Lex
    Don't be afraid of making mistakes. Start a project that is in line with your passions and talents and then learn from your mistakes, you'll make plenty anyways. When looking back, I didn't learn the most from ebooks, coaches or courses, but when I did something and it ended up in a huge fail. Those were the most valuable lessons although I didn't recognise it at that time.
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  • Profile picture of the author mrvm1
    Get a mentor who has been through it all before and listen , learn , be patient. At least you may be able to avoid most of the pitballs then.
    But i concur with everything that hs been said here
    good luck
    Mac
    Signature

    theaffiliatepod.co.uk
    Less work More money More time

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  • Profile picture of the author mrvm1
    pitfalls even not pitballs ( lol )
    Signature

    theaffiliatepod.co.uk
    Less work More money More time

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    • Profile picture of the author arrival7
      Test, test, test
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  • Profile picture of the author TheZafraGroup
    You can avoid stupid mistakes by going through trainings. It will save you a lot of time, effort and money by studying what works and what doesn't. Move the ego aside and watch what experts do. Take consistent action and build a list. Test everything and always check your links to make sure they work and you're sending the right one.
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    • Profile picture of the author Tony Marriott
      You can't stop newbies making mistakes.
      Everything you do to avoid making mistakes will inevitably lead you to a mistake.

      So stop worrying about making mistakes. That is all part of your learning curve.

      Often is your biggest and fastest learning curve.

      Instead of trying to avoid all your mistakes jump in and do something. If it works great if not you will have learned something anyway.

      Too many people spend too much time learning and too little doing. That's the real mistake.
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  • Profile picture of the author AmericanMuscleTA
    How to avoid doing stupid things as a newbie??


    Bahahahaha! We ALL did, and do, stupid things when it comes to IM.


    It can't be avoided.


    Some things... start building your list right away. And don't use free services, find a good service like AWeber.


    Use tracking and make sure you install it right (after two years I found out I had my installed wrong and wondered why it seemed some pages weren't tracking... yeah, just found this out... STUPID).
    Signature

    David Hunter | Duke of Marketing
    www.DukeOfMarketing.com
    www.BibleAndFriendsYouTube.com

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  • Profile picture of the author Randall Magwood
    Originally Posted by sscot View Post

    How to avoid doing stupid things as newbie?
    Don't quit and restart, quit and restart, then quit and restart, then quit and restart, and quit and restart then quit...... for 3 years, then come back online and say 'I am not quitting anymore.' Then quit 3 weeks later.
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  • Profile picture of the author TheGMa
    Hi all! (wavies)

    Let's get real. Don' worry 'bout the mistakes, swee'pea. Mistakes are a great learning tool.

    Do like the rest of us: Find the most common ones and make as many as you can during your first 3 months. Take copious notes and write down what you've learned.

    This accomplishes 3 things

    1. You've gotten the mistakes out of the way; and
    2. You have your own dynamite checklist so you don't step-and-repeat; and
    2. You will have written a mess of excellent articles to use in a freebie and/or blog.

    - Annie

    PS - what really gets under my skin are the mistakes I didn't know I could make 'cause, let's face it, I have a college degree.
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  • Profile picture of the author Regional Warrior
    The one thing everyone forgets we are all still newbies as we are always learning...

    Jason
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  • Profile picture of the author SiteNameSales
    Watch your mind if it starts gravitating toward bright, shiny get-rich-quick opportunities.
    Don't believe everything you read, every webinar you attend nor every Youtube tutorial review that you watch. Take everything with a grain of salt, including this post.

    You can find your own way if you can get up every time you fall down.

    One sign that you are probably in the wrong business is if you are attracted to landing pages where there's a photo of a guy sipping pina coladas in some tropical paradise.

    You're probably in the wrong business if you are the guy who created the landing page with a guy sipping a pina colada in some tropical paradise.
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    • Profile picture of the author motorkitty
      Originally Posted by SiteNameSales View Post

      Watch your mind if it starts gravitating toward bright, shiny get-rich-quick opportunities.
      Don't believe everything you read, every webinar you attend nor every Youtube tutorial review that you watch. Take everything with a grain of salt, including this post.
      THIS. Exactly. I'm extremely green here (first post on WF), and "shiny object syndrome" is unbelievably easy to catch. My advice, for what it's worth as a complete newbie; DON'T BUY ANYTHING. At least, not yet. Not until you've gone through the basics of website setup (only spending money on your domain and hosting), substantial and relevant content posting, building organic traffic, and, most importantly, being REALLY sincere about your product or purpose. Everything you need to learn about IM is literally free all over the webs in many, many forms. Get started with that first and then, and only then, maybe consider upgrading to memberships or plug-ins. The longer I hang around WF the more I realize that the basic building blocks of IM are all the same no matter how someone chooses to package and/or market them. The thing that separates success from failure is hard ass work. HARD. ASS. And, the other thing I've learned quickly is that most of the people making $10K a day or whatever else they claim to make are making it from selling you IM info. Not everyone. . . but a large percentage. Stick around WF for awhile, do extensive research, and get to work. Be smart.
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      • Profile picture of the author Kieran D
        I would say take as much sensible action as possible and don't be afraid to mistakes. Mistakes after all is how you learn. It's better than being a perfectionist constantly and being paralyzed to move forward because of fear.

        Kieran
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        • Profile picture of the author ShaunRetson
          Having a good mentor really helps.
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  • Profile picture of the author TheOverseer
    We are all newbies. Everyone here has started from scratch. Making mistakes is a normal thing. Learn from your mistakes. You got to crawl before you learn to walk
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  • Profile picture of the author Tomek Kurpanik
    Probably the best way to avoid making silly mistakes is to never make them again. There are lots of IMers that read a ton of quality content on here and elsewhere on a daily basis, and they still make the same mistakes. I think it's best to equip yourself with good knowledge, cross check it using different sources and then implement the advice accordingly. Nothing sinks in better than burning yourself by making wrong decisions! :-)
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  • Profile picture of the author Jason Kanigan
    Originally Posted by sscot View Post

    Yes, fellow warriors...... Your old experiences will be useful to newbie Internet marketers.
    I've held off answering because I don't know what you mean by "stupid things."

    What's your definition?

    Wasting time?

    Not making money?

    Using black hat methods?

    Let me know, and I'll be able to answer the question specifically.

    Thanks!

    Keep in mind, as a newbie you are GOING TO MAKE MISTAKES. You're going to lose money. That's how you learn. It's unavoidable, except by doing absolutely nothing.
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    • Profile picture of the author sscot
      Originally Posted by Jason Kanigan View Post

      I've held off answering because I don't know what you mean by "stupid things."

      What's your definition?
      Since there's no specific definition, consider it as something brought bad bargains.
      Signature



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  • Profile picture of the author Bluebridget
    Originally Posted by sscot View Post

    Yes, fellow warriors...... Your old experiences will be useful to newbie Internet marketers.
    I think it is very helpful but not all is good or suitable with all people.
    Read, do for practice to find out what is good for ourself
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  • Profile picture of the author MValmont
    Stop reading too much and start taking action. You will learn way more that way.
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  • Profile picture of the author Lisa Gergets
    If you're not making mistakes, you're not learning. As a newbie, mistakes are part-and-parcel of the experience you're gaining. Fail often. Fail forward. Make the mistakes and learn from them. That's really the only way.
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  • Profile picture of the author xxxFerdinandxxx
    Originally Posted by sscot View Post

    Yes, fellow warriors...... Your old experiences will be useful to newbie Internet marketers.
    Hi,

    I would recommend you to go to Warriorplus and from there click on Marketplace and search for FREE products. They usually have "FREE" or something of similar kind written in their titles!

    That is a way to avoid making mistakes in the beginning

    I mean the worst mistake, is if you go ahead and buy every product claiming to help you make loads of money in my opinion.

    Anyways, I highly recommend you checking out the above as you will learn loads for absolutely free. This way you won't lose any money ; )

    Hope I gave you some insight!

    Stay awesome!
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