Using the $7 script? Here’s how to boost your sales…
One of the quickest ways to build an optin list is to use the $7 script which gives 100% commissions to your affiliates.
But there is a problem with the system…
It has nothing to do with the script itself, but rather the PayPal payment page your customers land on when they decide to buy they product.
The problem is there is nothing to indicate to your prospective customer who the seller is. Normally all they see is your PayPal email address or that of your affiliate.
When your prospective customer sees your affiliate’s PayPal email address and not yours, they could get confused and decide not to buy. Some might even think it is a scam!
The $7 Secrets Conversion Booster explains an ingenious system which replaces the PayPal email address with a banner of your choosing. This means your prospective customer will always see your banner on the PayPal payment page even when the link is one of your affiliates.
It might seem a trivial issue, but if your prospective customer feels uncomfortable about the transaction, you lose out in two ways:
- You lose the optin the sale would generate.
- Your affiliate loses the sale and may not promote
any future products you create.
If you are technically minded this is all you have to do:
- Create a 750 x 90 pixel banner related to the sale of your product.
- Upload it to E-junkie’s FREE SSL image hosting & click tracking service at http://www.sslpic.com (you need to use secure hosting with https instead of http to avoid the security warnings browsers will generate when they open the secure PayPal payment page).
- Edit the $7 script to pass the secure image url along with the rest of the transaction details to PayPal so the payment page can be generated which displays your image instead of a PayPal email address at the top of the payment page.
Don’t worry if you’re not PHP savvy and the thought of editing scripts scares you, the $7 Secrets Conversion Booster explains the process step-by-step…

This is the submitter I use. It’s not just an RSS submitter, it also pings a number of RSS aggregators, so when you add new content to your website all you have to do is click a button to automatically ping them, and your new content will be added (which gives you more incoming links and also gets your new pages quickly spidered by the search engines).
There is another way to create a category specific RSS feed, but first you need to go into the ‘Manage Categories’ section of your blog admin and get the category number. You can either right click over the category name, and copy the link, or run your mouse over the category and look in your browser window status bar for the url which will look similar to this:
The tag-slug can be found in the ‘Manage Tags” section of your blog - it is created by adding a hyphen between each word in the tag, so if you know which tags you’ve used you don’t really need to log into your blog to get them. Another way to find tag slugs is to run your mouse over a tag and view the url in the browser status bar.
