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Part 1
This article is written
from my own experiences, on the many problems facing South African
based internet marketers. As a South African, myself, I have been
trying to establish myself in internet marketing, for the last three
years, but have come across a number of obstacles, which have proved
seriously detrimental to my efforts. If you are South African, you can
probably relate to this. If you have been battling what seem
insurmountable odds, or if you are new to this concept, the message is
the same. Stop wasting your time and your money on what is bound to be
nothing less than - wasting your time and your money and I will explain
why I said that. If you are an internet marketer, who is not South
African, you should also read this article, because you are,
unwittingly, leaving a lot of money on the table.
As we all know, South Africa is a part of Africa
and is unfairly considered as a third world country, with the incorrect
perception that this second largest continent, is nothing more than a
waste of time, in the field of internet marketing. Well, I beg to
differ. I will attempt to outline some of the misconceptions,
obstacles, causes and remedies that I have encountered.
Yes, it is true that Africa has not progressed as
much as the so called first world countries, but it is taking giant
strides towards that. The advent of the internet, is only just
beginning to catch on and the vast majority of the population, still
have no access at all, but it is coming and it is coming fast. The
internet is now available in all countries around the world and Africa
is no different. We all know about the Nigerian internet scams. It is
just that the vast majority of the population are poverty stricken and
cannot afford the service, many are illiterate and the majority of the
continent consists of large open spaces and small villages, making the
physical provision of any basic services such as electricity, clean
water, telephones and other communication devices extremely difficult.
It is also an ongoing problem, where these desperate people steal
cables and anything that can be traded for a meal. So, at this stage
the internet is only available in the bigger metropolitan areas. It
makes sense, doesn't it? Imagine how easy it is to supply services to a
very densely populated area like England and where everyone is
literate, in a fixed abode and living above the poverty line.
South Africa is the most technically advanced
country in Africa and not far behind the standards of the other
technology rich countries, but we are seriously lacking in internet
technology. The internet is still very new to South Africa and has only
just begun to catch on. It is experiencing a phenomenal growth rate and
more and more businesses and individuals are "hooking up". All of the
major cities are able to offer various means of connection such as
ADSL, bluetooth, wireless and people are getting connected on their
pcs, laptops and cellphones. The rural areas are battling to get
connected and the only option available to them at this stage is the
old antiquated dial up system using a telephone line, or via satellite.
Promises have been made by government, that in a few years, everyone
will be able to get a telephone and therefore, will have internet
access available to them. This represents an enormous potential for
wary marketers.
This is the overview of the situation with
internet access in Africa and more particularly, South Africa. In the
next article, we will look at some of the problems faced by South
African users and the effects they have on internet marketing.
Part 2
Recent political changes, have reversed the
fortunes of the South African population, in that the previously
disadvantaged black community, now have money and the fine things in
life, including access to the internet. Whereas before they wouldn't
have been considered a viable market, they are now able to access the
internet and dabble in small business. They want more. The whites, on
the other hand, now find themselves out of work, unsure of the future
and desperately seeking an alternative means of income. Both groups
make good target markets, and both are particularly keen on using the
internet to improve their lot in life. Remember, the internet is the
biggest employer in the world and does not recognise age, colour,
education, physical disabilities, wealth etc. People hear of the
successes achieved on the internet and are fooled into looking for a
quick fix. The internet and marketing via this medium, gives everyone
an equal opportunity, well, almost everyone. Not South Africans,
unfortunately.
Something like 70% of the S.A internet community,
access the internet on the computers at their places of employment and
as much as two hours each workday, is lost to private usage of the
internet. Obviously these people are not all looking for ways to make
money, but a large percentage are. These people who are newly exposed
to all the hype on the internet are easily sucked in to believing the
sales pitch. A lot of money is being spent on all sorts of junk and
causing many heartbroken families. I was like that too. I firmly
believed I could make a lot of money on the internet and set about
joining all sorts of schemes. They do not work, but these desperate and
naïve people don't know that. Imagine if it was possible to
guide them, to channel all that energy and curiosity and of course all
that money into your bank account? If those people all trusted you and
listened to your advice, if you were able to develop well thought out
plans and business opportunities? If those people all joined your
membership site?
One of the biggest drawbacks in S.A is that the
internet and allied services are still very expensive and difficulty in
finding a good service provider. Other first world countries have
direct, fast, unlimited service at very reasonable prices and if they
do experience problems with the service provider, there are plenty of
others to try. According to a recent survey, something like 70% of all
internet users, regularly access the 'net from their places of
employment. The employer provides pcs and internet for business
purposes and these curious people cheat their employers, by using his
service for private usage. People send emails to friends, go shopping,
download files, look at pornography, play games, gamble and read
classifieds and other adverts for a better job, or an easy method of
earning more money. From this survey it was estimated that as much as
85% of this target group were looking for self employment
opportunities. Now, that's a lot of people! If the price of internet
access was cheaper, all these people would use it at home. In fact,
most do have internet access at home, but due to small caps on their
usage and exorbitant prices, they rather use the employer's service. My
point is that millions are searching for opportunities on the internet
and the fact that crime is rampant only makes them more determined, to
start a business from home. This is a huge potential for marketers. So
what is the problem? Why are more South Africans actively getting
involved? In the next article, we will start looking at these problem
areas.
Part 3
As the internet is still relatively new to South
Africa, we don't have many experts, or experience in the field. Those
calling themselves experts, have only a limited knowledge and are far
too expensive, when compared to overseas competitors. Simple things
like service provision, web hosting, design and site building,
software, tools, optimisation and advertising, are grossly overpriced.
In most cases, they are bought overseas and resold here. I was given a
quote, last month, of R120 ($17) per month, for basic, small webhosting
service, excluding the domain registration and excluding the internet
service provision. That was only the hosting! I was quoted R6000 ($857)
for a designer, to look at one of my websites and to make a couple of
small changes. It is crazy. We pay between R8 and R12 for an mp3 song,
which costs from 10c to 90c in the U.S.A.
The state owned telecommunications company,
Telkom, have the monopoly and squash all opposition. This has led to
very highly priced access and an indifferent service. Nearly all
packages offered by them, or sub contactor service providers, are
restricted and capped. The actual service, the technical help and the
customer relations are dreadful. The dial up service is very
unreliable, the speeds are far lower than advertised, due to the poor
state of the physical 'phone lines and the modems cost the earth. Take
the U.S.A for example, where there are something like 800 million
people with regular access and hundreds of competitors all offering
better prices. The internet is a way of life and the huge speeds and
download capabilities are taken for granted. In South Africa only
something like 27 million have any form of access, largely due to the
high costs. I got a quote from Telkom last week for satellite service.
The basic installation cost is R3100 ($443), paid upfront. The monthly
rental for the satellite service, capped at 3 Gigs, is R1263 ($180) and
I still need a service provider who comes in at a basic charge of R284
($40) plus consumption and of course I still need to keep my basic
phone service for R110 ($16) plus call usage. Once the cap is reached,
the service is suspended and additional packages can be purchased for
R120 ($17) per 250 Megs. So in all it will cost me, monthly, around
R2317 ($331) for a basic internet service of 4Gigs and a phone at home.
Obviously there are cheaper options available in the cities, but living
out of town, there is no choice. By the way, a friend living in the
U.S.A got a similar quote for only $40 (R280) per month and his service
boasted more facilities and no capping whatsoever.
For some reason, probably the old apartheid days,
South Africa was boycotted by the wealthy first world countries and
nobody has told them yet, that times have changed. South Africans
suffer many discriminatory obstacles in the use of the internet and
over the last few years, I have repeatedly been stumped by these. I
have two messages of advice here. To the frustrated, aspirant South
African marketers and those who will follow shortly, stop and listen.
Do not waste more time and money trying all sorts of offers, you will
not succeed. Rather use the time to brush up on your skills. Select a
market niche and learn to use control panel, FTP, html, php, hyperlinks
and all the other things, that will help you to run your business. Wait
for the solution. I have enlisted the help of two of the world's top
marketers to find a way around the problems, for you. To the marketers
who are knowingly, or unknowingly discriminating against certain
countries, you are leaving money on the table and missing out on a huge
potential market. But, that's okay, I'll take it. These are some of the
more general problems experienced by South Africans. In the next
article, we will look at some of the specific problems affecting our
marketing abilities.
Part 4
By now, you are probably wondering what other
problems I'm talking about and how they are affecting our chances of
success. If you have been involved for a while, you have probably
encountered a few of these yourself and if you are a newbie, you are
likely to still come across these problems soon.
There are obvious generalities that exclude South
Africans from participating. We joined about 163 survey companies, when
we first started out on the internet. We soon found out that most were
American companies and only for Americans. That makes sense, when the
product, or service being rated is only available there, but why do
they mislead us and take our money. You must have seen the misleading
ads about how quick and easy it is to earn money by doing simple
surveys. A lot of them claim to be international, for anybody who
understands English. The same thing happens. You are invited to do the
survey, but as soon as you type in your address, you are told it is not
available in your area. We wasted a lot of money on these. The
foolproof unconditional money back guarantees are a lot of hogwash.
Just ignore them.
The same thing happened with the typing services.
My wife joined a few of them, with the promise, that as long as she had
a basic working knowledge of English, no experience was necessary.
Money as easy and fast to earn, on simple assignments. Well, she wasn't
given any assignments and on enquiring as to the reason, she was told
that we spell differently. That was not ever mentioned at the time of
joining and was also money wasted. For Pete's sake, we speak and spell
correctly. It is the Americans who changed the language.
We also joined a lot of companies who promised to
pay us for surfing and reading emails. We worked our butts off and
eventually, after almost a year, had earned a whopping $247000! We
tried to cash in, but were then told that no cheques could be issued.
Monies were only paid into American bank accounts. They said they were
an international company and anyone in the world could join. But, not
get paid.
We often see special promos on free hosting, free
domain registration and other all too important services. All looks
great from the outside, but as soon as we apply we find out that we are
unfortunately not eligible. I don't know how many times I have won
prizes. Cash, free products, a trip, ocean cruises, but on trying to
claim them, I'm told they don't apply to South Africans.
Very often, freebies are included to sweeten a
deal. I joined a music site for mp3 downloads. The price was inclusive
of a whole bunch of bonuses. I was to get meal tickets, petrol (gas)
coupons, membership of some or other club, discounts on shopping, blah,
blah, blah. Needles to say, I joined and paid full price, but never got
any of the goodies that all my American counterparts received. I am
very into music and 2 years ago I purchased Music Match Jukebox, with
free updates for life, access to the online music shop and full usage
of something I think was called Radio Gold. It was full access to 150
live radio stations. After I received my purchase, all I had was the
jukebox and the promise of updates. On enquiry, I was told "Sorry, but
this offer doesn't apply to you", but I paid the full price. Why don't
they tell us before we pay? Why don't we get a discount? This seems to
be common practice and apart from the obvious discrimination and
disappointment is false advertising.
Anyway, these are some problems I have
experienced, but not really connected in any way to our functionality
at internet marketing. What are the problems facing South African
marketers? More in the next article.
Part 5
We have covered quite a few problems facing South
Africans already and here are some more.
Overseas companies, particularly those in the
U.S.A, offering opportunities, services and resources, usually require
a fixed email address, at the time of joining. This is to prevent
temporary accounts and others such as Hotmail, from being used, as it
is very easy to cancel, or change, after joining and the marketer is
left with a useless address, in his contact list. South Africans have
another problem, in that most of our suffixes, such as .co.za,
telkomsa, za, are not allowed. Usually your country is required and
many of the drop down menus have small, insignificant countries such as
Zimbabwe, Malawi, Mauritius, Ivory Coast listed, but not South Africa.
So we have to get ourselves an email address with an overseas company,
just to comply. Why?
We, as South Africans, have no shopping carts, or
payment processors, suitable for international use, or integration,
into overseas websites and the biggest culprit is PayPay. They are the
first choice, worldwide and any marketer not offering PayPal, as a
means of payment, is seriously disadvantaged. Why then, do they not
deal with South Africa? Sure, you can make a purchase through them, but
they will not collect monies for you, or allow you to make a
withdrawal, if you are South African. Other smaller countries are
catered for, but not S.A. There are other options, but none as popular.
Most payments, affiliate plans and opportunities, pay through PayPal. I
joined dozens of respected affiliate plans and spent a great deal of
effort, on advertising, before I found out the truth.
A few months ago, I was experiencing the common
problems all new marketers face. I knew what I wanted to do, but not
how to actually get it done. I'm talking about the setting up, in order
to start business. I needed a domain name, a website, content and
products, a hosting service, a shopping cart, a mailing list facility,
a form for grabbing visitor's details, a payment processor, or two, etc
etc. You know what I'm talking about. There are so many options
available. The web is full of them. Some are free, some cheap, some
having special offers, but which was the best for my needs? Nobody
tells you that sort of information. How much space do you need for a
bookstore, how much bandwidth do you need for customer downloads? How
does the speed affect you? I had played around a bit with wysiwyg
editors and done a little html coding. I had used a couple of free
websites and hey, the last one I built without their website templated
builder. I thought I was getting good, but still a little out of my
depth. That scared me a bit, so I decided to look for a ready made,
turnkey business. They all say the only thing you need to do is to
enter your password and account details, then sit back and watch the
money roll in. Well I eventually found something that sounded ideal. It
was expensive, but I thought I would be saving in the long run. I
wanted to sell ebooks, articles, plr, courses and so on. I paid for
this business, as I had seen the example and even test drove the
shopping cart prior to purchase. Just when I thought I had found a
shortcut to starting my business, the problems began. What problems?
Read the next article to find out and to see the solution.
Part 6
We were talking about the problems I encountered
after I had bought the bookstore. Well firstly, the whole bookstore was
inphp with cpanel control panel, my sql and a whole lot of Greek terms.
You remember I had worked with online and offline editors in wysiwyg
and a little html. Well now I was lost. I was warned not to try to edit
in an html editor, or I would corrupt the php. I had never used these
before and couldn't understand why I couldn't find the pages, to edit
them. Then I found that the currencies shown on the products were not
compatible with the Rand, but I thought so what, I'll just sell in
dollars. Then I found that PayPal was not an option. Damn, but hey, I
could still use NoChex, or the other one, I forget the name. No way,
Jose, those weren't allowed either. I had to have a banking account in
USA or UK. I eventually got EGold to work, but how many people pay with
gold? That bookstore is still sitting, gathering dust.
There are no local, South African internet
companies, for memberships, product sourcing, resources, search engine
optimisation etc, so we have to look abroad. Although these are offered
reasonably, overseas, we are still subjected to the exchange rate. At
present the rate is 7 to the $, 14 to the Pound and around 9 to the
Euro, but even so, it is usually cheaper, than our own prices and of
course you are spoilt for choice.
Training is another area seriously lacking. With
all the conferences, seminars, teleseminars, video training and group
discussions unavailable to us in S.A, how are we expected to learn and
to keep abreast of developments? Dial up is not powerful enough and
anyway it is limited to times between 7pm and 7am, which is a bad time,
as even if you stay up all night, it is roughly midnight to midmorning
in the States. So how do we learn?
So, with a very limited number of companies
prepared to do business with us, with our lack of choice, with our very
expensive internet service, with very little access to all the great
offers, with our SA email addresses, with our antiquated dial ups,
without access to genuine training videos, with the exorbitant exchange
rate, with our different spelling, without any reciprocal banks or
payment processors, without a compatible shopping cart, with the scams
and rip offs and all the rest we have discussed, can South Africans
ever hope to get involved in internet marketing?
The truth is rather bleak. Nobody is worried about
us, or the problems we have and nobody seems to care. The big "guru"
marketers don't seem to be able to think outside their statelines and
regard us as a waste of time. They are happy to take our money, though.
But wait, there does seem to be a solution for you. As I said earlier,
I have teamed up with two of the world's top marketers and together, we
are trying to resolve these issues. We will put together a complete,
turnkey package deal, a ready to run business, with domain, hosting,
website, content, decent affiliate plans, a stream of products, an
exclusive membership, a working shopping cart and payment processor,
training and ongoing support, a proven plan, optimisation, adsense and
other monetised methods for those poor South Africans, who want to be
marketers. The hardest part of having your own business, is setting it
up and getting it working. You will be able to enter the market place
and do very well for yourselves, with our help, so in the meantime,
there are a few things you must do.
Familiarise yourself with market trends and choose
a niche market, in which you want to trade. Start practicing the basics
and learn how things work. Get your mind sorted out. Tell yourself you
can do it and will change your life. Sign up to our newsletter and
mailings. If you really want to finally realise your dreams, give up
the job, work from home, earn a good income, have flexibility and
satisfaction, and be competitive in the international arena, then there
is only one way you are going to acquire this - through us.
To remain informed of our progress, by newsletter
and mail, to get recommended tools and lessons and to start your
journey to wealth, sign up here. It's free. Click this link :
http://dersalsites.com/newsletter/
| About The Author
Derek Robson is an up and coming South
African internet marketer, with a vision of empowering all fellow South
Africans, to have equal opportunity and success on the internet. He has
started a string of sites, resources, courses and articles as part of
Dersalsites. To sign up for our comprehensive ecourse, on internet
marketing and to start out on the right path, click the link below.
This course consists of over 243 pages, videos, graphics and is
formatted into 13 daily lessons. It is titled "The Magical Formula For
Earning A Life Changing Income". Click here :
http://dersalsites.com/course/
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