Client Needs Suggestions for GigBucks.com yeaaaaaaaaa



He's trying to take on fiverr

He should just be content with his 20% cut and be happy.
 
A few ppl on my forum were bidders for this it just got sold on flippa. There's tons of room to do add-ons and little upsells, but I wouldn't force any cpa shit or fill it with ads. Also might be wise to launch your own offers and keep them featured indefinitely (or feature aff'ed products masked as offers within the site etc).

Site looks cool though wish your client well with it.
 
Is "the guy" getting a taste of any transactions that occur? If so why throw away money by sending a paying customer to another vendor? If he isn't profiting from a market he creates then he ain't doin' it right.
 
Is "the guy" getting a taste of any transactions that occur? If so why throw away money by sending a paying customer to another vendor? If he isn't profiting from a market he creates then he ain't doin' it right.

i have no idea this guy actually bought one of my large projects and he doesn't really know how to make money online much... so he is asking for all this advice etc... i now confused since you guys seem to know he's getting paid some way other than just a listing fee.
 
i have no idea this guy actually bought one of my large projects and he doesn't really know how to make money online much... so he is asking for all this advice etc... i now confused since you guys seem to know he's getting paid some way other than just a listing fee.

So the guy bought gigbucks from you?

Regardless, what I was getting at is that there should be a higher LTV (life time value) from having a customer interact with gigbucks, whether by listing or buying services, than by shipping them off to a CPA offer or an AdSense link.

For example:

Let's say a guy comes to the site looking for back linking services, he looks around and finds a vendor and a transaction occurs. Say the site owner makes a $2 commission from each transaction. Now say on average a customer participates in 4 transactions (he comes back ever few weeks to buy more back linking services), over the lifetime of that user his LTV will be $8.

But say instead you have a CPA banner for an eBook on "Build Backlinks for Free!" from clickbank and you get a $7 commission per sale. The customer gets to the site, sees the banner, clicks, and buys the ebook and never returns to gigbucks. By shipping the customer off to clickbank the gigbucks owner makes $7, 1 buck less than the average amount of commissions that would have been generated had he participated in the gigbucks market place. The LTV of a visitor that leaves via an AdSense link and never returns is probably going to be even shittier.

The guy that now owns gigbucks is going to have to figure out the LTV of his visitors via the market place and then weigh that against the value of shipping them off elsewhere, any advice without knowing the LTV is speculative.
 
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ahhh no i should have clarified... he bought an unrelated project in another niche and he's trying to get free consulting cause he's a noob kinda 50s-60s old guy.

i'll forward your information to him - agreed and thanks for puttin in the effort, being a cool human. haha



So the guy bought gigbucks from you?

Regardless, what I was getting at is that there should be a higher LTV (life time value) from having a customer interact with gigbucks, whether by listing or buying services, than by shipping them off to a CPA offer or an AdSense link.

For example:

Let's say a guy comes to the site looking for back linking services, he looks around and finds a vendor and a transaction occurs. Say the site owner makes a $2 commission from each transaction. Now say on average a customer participates in 4 transactions (he comes back ever few weeks to buy more back linking services), over the lifetime of that user his LTV will be $8.

But say instead you have a CPA banner for an eBook on "Build Backlinks for Free!" from clickbank and you get a $7 commission per sale. The customer gets to the site, sees the banner, clicks, and buys the ebook and never returns to gigbucks. By shipping the customer off to clickbank the gigbucks owner makes $7, 1 buck less than the average amount of commissions that would have been generated had he participated in the gigbucks market place. The LTV of a visitor that leaves via an AdSense link and never returns is probably going to be even shittier.

The guy that now owns gigbucks is going to have to figure out the LTV of his visitors via the market place and then weigh that against the value of shipping them off elsewhere, any advice without knowing the LTV is speculative.
 
This is one of the better sites i've seen sell on flippa. IMO that site has turned to shit. There are decent websites for sale on it, but the reserves are so ludicrous by the idiotic sellers, it's hardly worst bidding on anything anymore.