If you’re like most people who want to build an online business, at some point you will have had the goal of making what is called “passive income”. You want money to come in based on assets you have (such as a web site or social media account), rather than based on the number of hours you work.

You do work once, with perhaps a little more from time to time to keep it fresh, and the pay-back comes without your direct involvement.

To do this, most beginners turn to affiliate marketing, selling other people’s products for a commission. (That’s what this ad is; we let you know about a product. You take a look. If you decide to buy, we get a commission.)

If you are going to do affiliate marketing well, you need to take several steps to get it going:
1. Find the best products to promote
2. Write promotional ads to sell the product you selected. (Actually, what you want to do is to “pre-sell”; don’t sell the customer on the product; just sell the potential customer on the idea of going to the sales page for the product)
3. Learn through trial and error how to drive traffic to your ads.

Those steps are easy to describe, but not so easy, especially for a beginner, to actually do.

Michael Cheney has been an affiliate marketer for a long time, and knows how to get these three steps accomplished.

He just created Commissionology to make the process simple for you.

If you are new to affiliate marketing, this might be the best training investment you will ever make.

If you follow Cheney’s process, he says you can make more money online while doing less.

Cheney is, himself, living proof of the validity of his claim.

You may not have the same results, but he squeezes in a few hours a day for work. The rest of the time is spent with his kids, or cycling or just chilling out.

The weekends are pure down-time; no work allowed.

He also takes around 6 weeks of vacation every year.

He is able to do all this by practicing the proven principles in Commissionology.

He says you can do it, too. Why not let him tell you all about it, here: Commissionology

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