Apr
7
Good Collections Of Free Products, Free Samples Products, Free Mouse Pads
Filed Under Online Business | Leave a Comment
Mindbees asked:
Everyone loves free stuff, and PR agencies give out free stuff for better exposure and as a marketing technique. When I had my website up I used to do product reviews relevant to the topic of my website and get free products constantly for review. All I would have to do is use the product as directed and write up a review for that specific product.
It is fun and easy! After you write the review you get to keep the product. And no, you don\’t have to write a good review in order to keep it. You should be honest in all of your reviews.
So, if you have a blog about blogging, let\’s say you could review services and products for bloggers, blogs and more and be able to keep those products you get for free! Free products are a wonderful thing. You can even save the review products you get for free for the holidays (if they are in decent shape) and give them out as gifts. Not too shabby since you didn\’t have to pay for them!
All Free Sample products contain listings of free items in many different product categories, with great new free samples added all the time. Choose from many free product samples including candy, health and beauty products, food, make up and cosmetics, perfume and cologne, baby products, diet pills and many more categories are available.
Companies distribute free product samples to give consumers the opportunity to try their latest and greatest product lines. My Savings makes it easy for consumers to try before they buy, by linking them to the best real brand name free samples available. Free sample products creates an impressive guideline mark to the company‘s goods and general awareness about the product qualities and improvements. So you can take advantage of the hundreds of free stuff and freebies offers available on the Internet from promotional printed accessories.
Print4Half.Com ‘s customers can use our online tools to design their own free products from scratch. There are thousands of professionally designed custom printed free product templates to choose from. Choose images from our image bank or upload your own logos or photos for them. If you have your own template design for logo printed free sample products you have the option of uploading it to the print4half design team for quick spec approval. Our prominent categories of free products include Free Mouse Pads and Free Drink ware.
ARIEL
Everyone loves free stuff, and PR agencies give out free stuff for better exposure and as a marketing technique. When I had my website up I used to do product reviews relevant to the topic of my website and get free products constantly for review. All I would have to do is use the product as directed and write up a review for that specific product.
It is fun and easy! After you write the review you get to keep the product. And no, you don\’t have to write a good review in order to keep it. You should be honest in all of your reviews.
So, if you have a blog about blogging, let\’s say you could review services and products for bloggers, blogs and more and be able to keep those products you get for free! Free products are a wonderful thing. You can even save the review products you get for free for the holidays (if they are in decent shape) and give them out as gifts. Not too shabby since you didn\’t have to pay for them!
All Free Sample products contain listings of free items in many different product categories, with great new free samples added all the time. Choose from many free product samples including candy, health and beauty products, food, make up and cosmetics, perfume and cologne, baby products, diet pills and many more categories are available.
Companies distribute free product samples to give consumers the opportunity to try their latest and greatest product lines. My Savings makes it easy for consumers to try before they buy, by linking them to the best real brand name free samples available. Free sample products creates an impressive guideline mark to the company‘s goods and general awareness about the product qualities and improvements. So you can take advantage of the hundreds of free stuff and freebies offers available on the Internet from promotional printed accessories.
Print4Half.Com ‘s customers can use our online tools to design their own free products from scratch. There are thousands of professionally designed custom printed free product templates to choose from. Choose images from our image bank or upload your own logos or photos for them. If you have your own template design for logo printed free sample products you have the option of uploading it to the print4half design team for quick spec approval. Our prominent categories of free products include Free Mouse Pads and Free Drink ware.
ARIEL
Mar
17
Free Ps3, Free Wii, Free Xbox 360 - No Credit Card or Referrals Required!
Filed Under Online Business | Leave a Comment
mark asked:
What are freebie sites? How do they work?
Freebie sites can afford to give expensive items like a Free PS3, a Free Wii, or a Free XBox 360 because advertisers, loaded with cash, pay them to do so! You’re never asked to pay for your gift…ever! However, in order for freebie sites to get something small in return, all they ask of you is to try the advertiser out for a bit. For example, there are tons of people who tried out Video Professor or Blockbuster (totally legit/popular companies) by signing up for their services. A lot of freebie participants have stayed with these big-name companies after their trial and continue to love their services, while others have chosen not to do so. Either path you choose, you are allowed and you will get credit. After all, advertisers pay freebie companies, who in turn reward you, to encourage you to join!
Many offers range from $3-7 for the trial period. These “pocket change” costs usually cover shipping and processing fees. However, there are also many totally…totally free offers too! On every freebie site these costs and the crediting time is mentioned so you can choose whatever you like (from lists up to 20-100 offers). This is step 2. Step 1 is simply signing up for the freebie site.
In the last step, the member then gets a couple of buddies to do the same process (as outlined in the “hot and cool freebies” section to the right) and they get credit when they do a simple “offer” (i.e. spend like 5-10 minutes signing up to an advertiser). For every person that tries an advertiser out, the advertisers pay freebie companies around $50-60… put it this money together and the freebie site buys your gift FOR you! Tax and shipping included.
Of course, at first glance anyone will think this is a scam or an illegitimate pyramid scheme. As a matter of truth, that’s what everyone else assumes before they understand how this system works and why it still exists - it’s perfectly legal and pretty darn easy to benefit off! This is a new form of marketing called “incentive viral marketing” - where companies reward you for trying them out. Think of the gift you receive as “cashback” or a rebate, if you like, from the advertiser TO you.
So, now that you understand how it works you might want to get started. To do that, just go to Google, enter the item you want and add “free” to the query. You’ll find hundreds of freebie sites. Pick one and then enjoy earning gifts/making money.
How can I start getting free stuff?
Visit the sites mentioned above to get started from legit freebie sites.
Want some Transcendent Innovations Proof?
Check out just three of the thousands of proof pictures. More available on the sites above.
Free Playstation 3 Proof
Free Playstation 3 Proof - Taken cash in lieu of 3 Free PS3 bundles (each worth $620).
Free Wii Proof
Free Wii Proof - Taken cash/cheque instead of a Free Wii bundle (worth $390)
MUCH more pictures, in greater detail are available too. You gotta understand that freebie sites are legit, and these pictures PROVE IT SO!
DAN
What are freebie sites? How do they work?
Freebie sites can afford to give expensive items like a Free PS3, a Free Wii, or a Free XBox 360 because advertisers, loaded with cash, pay them to do so! You’re never asked to pay for your gift…ever! However, in order for freebie sites to get something small in return, all they ask of you is to try the advertiser out for a bit. For example, there are tons of people who tried out Video Professor or Blockbuster (totally legit/popular companies) by signing up for their services. A lot of freebie participants have stayed with these big-name companies after their trial and continue to love their services, while others have chosen not to do so. Either path you choose, you are allowed and you will get credit. After all, advertisers pay freebie companies, who in turn reward you, to encourage you to join!
Many offers range from $3-7 for the trial period. These “pocket change” costs usually cover shipping and processing fees. However, there are also many totally…totally free offers too! On every freebie site these costs and the crediting time is mentioned so you can choose whatever you like (from lists up to 20-100 offers). This is step 2. Step 1 is simply signing up for the freebie site.
In the last step, the member then gets a couple of buddies to do the same process (as outlined in the “hot and cool freebies” section to the right) and they get credit when they do a simple “offer” (i.e. spend like 5-10 minutes signing up to an advertiser). For every person that tries an advertiser out, the advertisers pay freebie companies around $50-60… put it this money together and the freebie site buys your gift FOR you! Tax and shipping included.
Of course, at first glance anyone will think this is a scam or an illegitimate pyramid scheme. As a matter of truth, that’s what everyone else assumes before they understand how this system works and why it still exists - it’s perfectly legal and pretty darn easy to benefit off! This is a new form of marketing called “incentive viral marketing” - where companies reward you for trying them out. Think of the gift you receive as “cashback” or a rebate, if you like, from the advertiser TO you.
So, now that you understand how it works you might want to get started. To do that, just go to Google, enter the item you want and add “free” to the query. You’ll find hundreds of freebie sites. Pick one and then enjoy earning gifts/making money.
How can I start getting free stuff?
Visit the sites mentioned above to get started from legit freebie sites.
Want some Transcendent Innovations Proof?
Check out just three of the thousands of proof pictures. More available on the sites above.
Free Playstation 3 Proof
Free Playstation 3 Proof - Taken cash in lieu of 3 Free PS3 bundles (each worth $620).
Free Wii Proof
Free Wii Proof - Taken cash/cheque instead of a Free Wii bundle (worth $390)
MUCH more pictures, in greater detail are available too. You gotta understand that freebie sites are legit, and these pictures PROVE IT SO!
DAN
Nov
9
Isaac Chiriboga asked:
There may be “no free lunch” in life, but there are whole lot of free snacks and appetizers to be had if you know where to look. And Secret #1, the very first thing you need to know, is this: Not too many people read the free offers completely, and even fewer think them through critically.
Since you’re reading this article, we already know a few things about you. You have a computer (or access to one), you know how to read, you like bargains, you know how to find your way around the Internet and so forth. You also know what you want and don’t want, so telling you “how to get free stuff” will take a lot fewer words (toward the end of the article) than telling you
(1) What’s really going on in Freebie Land, and
(2) How to protect yourself against frauds and scams.
The fact is, if you use your head, you will actually get some things you need, at very low or no cost.
“Whoa!” you say. “What’s this ‘low cost’ stuff? Free is free, isn’t it?”
Good question, and you’re already up to Secret #2. Even with honest offers from reputable businesses, there may be a nominal shipping and/or handling charge. The item itself is “free” but the transaction is not. This is often the definition you will find in both print ads and online “freebie” sites, and if the value of the item exceeds the shipping cost (hopefully by a good margin) then you are still on the winning side of the deal.
Of course, well-run businesses don’t give things away without expecting something in return. Secret #3 is here to remind you that, whether you see it right away or not, there is something of value that the freebie giver gets in the transaction.
“S/H” charges and “consumables”
For a Free Vegas Poker Chip offer, for example, that “something of value” may be the difference between their unit cost (poker chip, envelope, handling time, postage, etc.) and the “nominal” shipping/handling fee of, say, $4.95. (Marketing studies have shown that consumers’ resistance to these fees kicks in at around $5 or so.) If the cost for getting one order to one customer is $2, then there’s $3 profit in every “free” chip.
There is a very popular business strategy that works well for manufacturers of inkjet printers. It’s popular, but most people do not know about it, so it comes to you now as Secret #4, the “free with purchase” strategy. When a printer is “bundled” with a computer system, the fact is that it really is “free” in the sense that you would pay the same for the system if you declined the printer. But why would Lexmark or Hewlett-Packard give you a free printer when you buy that new PC?
The printer manufacturers literally “give them away” because there is a much healthier markup on ink. Until the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) stepped in a few years ago, some manufacturers were making their printers incompatible with any ink cartridges but their own. Determining that it was a classic case of “restraint of trade,” the FTC managed to persuade inkjet printer makers to cease and desist on that part of the strategy.
You are the “item” of value
With the advent of the Internet came a whole new way of collecting information on consumers, information that is immediately useful for the seller on a case-by-case basis, and perhaps even more valuable as part of a database. Even free offers that require only an e-mail address are getting something of real value, a guaranteed-legitimate address from someone who likes bargains.
Secret #5, then, reveals what the true “value proposition” is for the freebie givers: You. That’s right, you - at least, as much of you as can be gleaned from a sign-up form. This brings another factor into the equation, which is just how broadly you want your personal information scattered across the cyber-landscape. You can get some basic anonymity with a Hotmail or Gmail account, but if you need to provide a shipping address - or credit card info for the “S/H” - then you’re literally asking for more spam, junk postal mail, even telemarketers. Sure, some claim that your information is “secure,” and some even mean it. Still …
Your info is very valuable. The more than businesses know about you, the more they can target specific sales pitches to you for things you actually buy. Now, this is a relatively free economy we have in the U.S., and information transfer makes all of the e-commerce and cyber-convenience work. Secret #6 is that you cannot avail yourself of all the freebies if you are not willing to give up some personal data. The amount and frequency of that will have to be your decision.
And now, what to do
Perhaps the least-known secret (our Secret #7) is that, while individual businesses have an incentive to inform you about their real or not-so-real freebies, they have zero incentive to tell you about any others. This means that comprehensive freebie sites, this one included, are not going to be well-funded Fortune 500 operations, as “Big Business” sees no “daylight” in the deal.
Therefore, the task of investigating, cataloging, describing and compiling lists of free offers falls to consumer groups, non-profits, community bulletin boards and individuals who believe in helping others. Some have tried to turn free-offer sites into cash machines, but as we enter the second decade of widespread Internet use no one has come up with any model for doing so.
So it really is rather a community effort, a low-level, bottom-up, grassroots kind of activity - which is Secret #8. There’s no Bill Gates, no Dell or Apple, behind freebie websites. They are usually operated as “labors of love,” often requiring the support of grateful readers to stay operating. And that brings us to Secret #9: Slow down.
Bottom line advice
The first thing you need to do, when you’re working at light speed and surfing the Web and finding some free offers that sound enticing, is slow down. Read things carefully. Think things through. Calculate comparative values (giving up info vs. getting a certain item). Don’t make rash decisions.
You know how to use Google and other search engines. You know how to write e-mails and ask questions. You know how to find freebie sites - you’re here, aren’t you? There are no “secret” freebie sites out there giving away cars and houses and cash. That’s not the help you need, and those aren’t the secrets you’re missing.
It’s all about using your head. Now that you now a bit about how the freebie sites work, and how some “free offers” really aren’t, using your head shouldn’t be a secret at all. But since we only got to #9, we’ll make it official: Secret #10 for “getting free stuff online” is, “Use your head.”
You’ll be glad you did!
MARCELINO
There may be “no free lunch” in life, but there are whole lot of free snacks and appetizers to be had if you know where to look. And Secret #1, the very first thing you need to know, is this: Not too many people read the free offers completely, and even fewer think them through critically.
Since you’re reading this article, we already know a few things about you. You have a computer (or access to one), you know how to read, you like bargains, you know how to find your way around the Internet and so forth. You also know what you want and don’t want, so telling you “how to get free stuff” will take a lot fewer words (toward the end of the article) than telling you
(1) What’s really going on in Freebie Land, and
(2) How to protect yourself against frauds and scams.
The fact is, if you use your head, you will actually get some things you need, at very low or no cost.
“Whoa!” you say. “What’s this ‘low cost’ stuff? Free is free, isn’t it?”
Good question, and you’re already up to Secret #2. Even with honest offers from reputable businesses, there may be a nominal shipping and/or handling charge. The item itself is “free” but the transaction is not. This is often the definition you will find in both print ads and online “freebie” sites, and if the value of the item exceeds the shipping cost (hopefully by a good margin) then you are still on the winning side of the deal.
Of course, well-run businesses don’t give things away without expecting something in return. Secret #3 is here to remind you that, whether you see it right away or not, there is something of value that the freebie giver gets in the transaction.
“S/H” charges and “consumables”
For a Free Vegas Poker Chip offer, for example, that “something of value” may be the difference between their unit cost (poker chip, envelope, handling time, postage, etc.) and the “nominal” shipping/handling fee of, say, $4.95. (Marketing studies have shown that consumers’ resistance to these fees kicks in at around $5 or so.) If the cost for getting one order to one customer is $2, then there’s $3 profit in every “free” chip.
There is a very popular business strategy that works well for manufacturers of inkjet printers. It’s popular, but most people do not know about it, so it comes to you now as Secret #4, the “free with purchase” strategy. When a printer is “bundled” with a computer system, the fact is that it really is “free” in the sense that you would pay the same for the system if you declined the printer. But why would Lexmark or Hewlett-Packard give you a free printer when you buy that new PC?
The printer manufacturers literally “give them away” because there is a much healthier markup on ink. Until the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) stepped in a few years ago, some manufacturers were making their printers incompatible with any ink cartridges but their own. Determining that it was a classic case of “restraint of trade,” the FTC managed to persuade inkjet printer makers to cease and desist on that part of the strategy.
You are the “item” of value
With the advent of the Internet came a whole new way of collecting information on consumers, information that is immediately useful for the seller on a case-by-case basis, and perhaps even more valuable as part of a database. Even free offers that require only an e-mail address are getting something of real value, a guaranteed-legitimate address from someone who likes bargains.
Secret #5, then, reveals what the true “value proposition” is for the freebie givers: You. That’s right, you - at least, as much of you as can be gleaned from a sign-up form. This brings another factor into the equation, which is just how broadly you want your personal information scattered across the cyber-landscape. You can get some basic anonymity with a Hotmail or Gmail account, but if you need to provide a shipping address - or credit card info for the “S/H” - then you’re literally asking for more spam, junk postal mail, even telemarketers. Sure, some claim that your information is “secure,” and some even mean it. Still …
Your info is very valuable. The more than businesses know about you, the more they can target specific sales pitches to you for things you actually buy. Now, this is a relatively free economy we have in the U.S., and information transfer makes all of the e-commerce and cyber-convenience work. Secret #6 is that you cannot avail yourself of all the freebies if you are not willing to give up some personal data. The amount and frequency of that will have to be your decision.
And now, what to do
Perhaps the least-known secret (our Secret #7) is that, while individual businesses have an incentive to inform you about their real or not-so-real freebies, they have zero incentive to tell you about any others. This means that comprehensive freebie sites, this one included, are not going to be well-funded Fortune 500 operations, as “Big Business” sees no “daylight” in the deal.
Therefore, the task of investigating, cataloging, describing and compiling lists of free offers falls to consumer groups, non-profits, community bulletin boards and individuals who believe in helping others. Some have tried to turn free-offer sites into cash machines, but as we enter the second decade of widespread Internet use no one has come up with any model for doing so.
So it really is rather a community effort, a low-level, bottom-up, grassroots kind of activity - which is Secret #8. There’s no Bill Gates, no Dell or Apple, behind freebie websites. They are usually operated as “labors of love,” often requiring the support of grateful readers to stay operating. And that brings us to Secret #9: Slow down.
Bottom line advice
The first thing you need to do, when you’re working at light speed and surfing the Web and finding some free offers that sound enticing, is slow down. Read things carefully. Think things through. Calculate comparative values (giving up info vs. getting a certain item). Don’t make rash decisions.
You know how to use Google and other search engines. You know how to write e-mails and ask questions. You know how to find freebie sites - you’re here, aren’t you? There are no “secret” freebie sites out there giving away cars and houses and cash. That’s not the help you need, and those aren’t the secrets you’re missing.
It’s all about using your head. Now that you now a bit about how the freebie sites work, and how some “free offers” really aren’t, using your head shouldn’t be a secret at all. But since we only got to #9, we’ll make it official: Secret #10 for “getting free stuff online” is, “Use your head.”
You’ll be glad you did!
MARCELINO


