Archive for July, 2007

Bad role model

launching of NCER

If you read newspaper, Northern Corridor Economic Region is currently the ‘hot term’ in the business section. launched at Alor Setar yesterday (30th July) in an elaborate ceremony by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the north states (Penang, Perlis, Perak, Kedah) is now gov’s latest focus on economy development.

The news is expecially exciting for me as ipohan (come’on, who doesnt want development in their hometown?) so there i was, being excited and cant wait to explore more, searching every news regarding on the project as well as reading our PM’s official speech released online…

TUAN-TUAN DAN PUAN-PUAN YANG SAYA HORMATI SEKALIAN

1. ALHAMDULILLAH, SAYA MERAFAKKAN SYUKUR KE HADRAT ILAHI DI ATAS LIMPAH, KURNIA DAN IZIN-NYA, YANG TELAH MEMBOLEHKAN KITA BERTEMU DAN BERKUMPUL PADA HARI YANG BERSEJARAH INI.

2. HARI INI MERUPAKAN HARI YANG AMAT BERMAKNA BAGI KERAJAAN PERSEKUTUAN DAN JUGA KERAJAAN-KERAJAAN NEGERI PERLIS, KEDAH, PULAU PINANG DAN PERAK. HARI INI MENANDAKAN TITIK PERMULAAN SATU USAHA MURNI UNTUK MENINGKATKAN KEMAJUAN EKONOMI SERTA KESEJAHTERAAN RAKYAT NEGERI-NEGERI UTARA. IA MELAMBANGKAN PERMULAAN SATU IDENTITI YANG AKAN MEMBAWA NAFAS BARU KEPADA USAHA PEMBANGUNAN WILAYAH INI. PADA HARI INI, NEGERI-NEGERI PERLIS, KEDAH, PULAU PINANG DAN PERAK AKAN BERGANDING BAHU BERPADU TENAGA, MENYERLAHKAN KEKUATAN DAN KELEBIHAN MASING-MASING, UNTUK SAMA-SAMA MEMBANGUNKAN WILAYAH EKONOMI KORIDOR UTARAmore.

But then wait! hey, i thought our gov urge us to use PROPER BAHASA MALAYSIA? there are even seminars organized for the purpose! how come our PM, being the leader of our gov, didn’t support his own policy on proper bahasa Malaysia? the logo just seem not right to me.

KORIDOR?

What the heck with the word KORIDOR - is that an English or BM word?

Hmmm… guess we gotta remind our leader’s about their previous policy and make some correction on it. so here’s it…

Kaki Lima Utara

Now that’s the right logo to be used. :)


Soufulow’s comparison game

It’s true that Malaysia politicians (or any of them in the any country) like to play with the comparison game to mis-direct the publics. but hey, it’s not a game only for the politician… it can be a game of bloggers, as well. ;)

So here’s my comparison game, on my country, Malaysia…

Leaders that didn’t keep up their speed with the world

While Malaysia’s Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan thinks that bloggers are mostly liars and jobless women; Hillary Clinton setup blog for her president campaigns.
Hillary blog
(yeah, so much for the liars and jobless women.)


Leaders with zero tolerance

While our nation leaders are extermely sensitive, implement zero tolerance to critics or open debates;
Namewee in trouble
CNN and YouTube are organizing open debates among United States Democrat nominee for president in 2008 elections, and they were requested to answer questions like “How many more soldiers need to die (in Iraq)?” “Would you treat non-religious Americans equally?”.


Look at the crime rates!

While our neighbour, Singapore, are well in control on the crime rate issues (decreasing! according to OSAC report) and Malaysia’s crime rates are ranked medium on the report from the same organisation.

An abandoned - stolen Porsche can be re-stole in Malaysia police station, the crime rates increasing fast (serious gang rape/murder cases here, here, here, here and here… just in 2007) - and what, all the news i read about our PM is his marriage with Jeanne Abdullah, setting up new look for Prime Minister’s Department staff, talk about his muslims brotherhood, and warn Malaysia bloggers to ‘behave’

badawi's new look
(Ta-ta, red make over for our menteri! - photo sourced from NSTonline)

Does our PM really think that the high crime rates has nothing to do with him? it’s only a matter for the police? dont you agree some better actions and concerns have to be taken on our current fucked up public safety?

Are you sick of all these? well, i am. hell sick of it! does anyone give a shit here?


Affiliate: a decent job for Aseans?

Affiliate, what?
Wiki-definition:

Affiliate marketing typically refers to an electronic commerce version of the traditional agent/referral fee sales channel concept. An e-commerce affiliate is a website which links back to an e-commerce site such as Amazon.com.

However, as the e-commerce continues to evolve, e-commerce affiliates are no longer restricted to website owners. bloggers and members of different online community forums can be affiliates as well. Many emerging affiliate programs are now accepting bloggers and individuals, not necessarily webmasters, to be affiliates.

Affiliates can also be referred as publishers. Affiliate marketers don’t necessarily have to be affiliate marketers specifically… read more.

Full time affilate, why?

What’s good about being a full time affiliate?

The best thing about going full time on aff? You don’t wake up at 7am and drive in the jam for one hour to work.

Affiliate network

And no, you don’t punch your card before you leave the office; you don’t need a fake MC to skip work; you don’t need to look at face of the person you dislike; you don’t need to kill your working time by pretending you’re working; you don’t rush for tight lunch hour; you don’t have to attend endless useless meetings; you don’t need to go against your ethics and bring your customers for prostitution; you don’t need to be an ass kisser; you don’t need to stand your dumb manger’s stupidity…

In short, that’s quite a lot of hassles avoided when you turned full time on affiliate business and work for your own.

What’s even better being a full time affiliate as an aseans (or malaysians)?

Earn USD, spend RM (or RMB, or SGD, or Rp… depends on your location).

Majority of the affiliate commissions are paid in USD. at the time of writing, 1USD = RM3.4 (1USD=1.5SGD, = 29.75Thai Baht). in competative market, affiliates are well-reward with lucrative commissions rate: average commission for a single hosting package sales is $80 - $120; satellite TV (Dish or DirecTV) $100 - $140/sale; Forex education package $120 - $250/sale; eBay membership signups $25/lead… top up with the plus from currency exchange, you get the chance to gain extra wealth than the locals.

So is full time affiliate a decent job for Aseans?

Not really. it might be decent for some, but it’s probably a screwed up for the majority to get full time. it’s not easy to be fulltime in affiliate business, especially when you’re starting up alone with limited budget and a home to feed. the scope of the business is 100x wider than a normal brick-n-mortal: sales copy writing, web design, web hosting, spams, web marketing, SEO, pay ads monitoring (probably), web traffic tracking, competitors, continuous learning on latest web trends… it’s hell load of job.

What come worse is that as an Aseans, you’ll probably have to deal with more obstacles…

Trust me, we’re not much accepted…

Make a quick search around merchants with an affiliate program. chances are you don’t see your country name in the address form (that’s an exception for singaporean, though). this includes large affiliate network like ClickBank and RevenueAllies.

Click bank
(see, M is for Maldives Malta Martinique - but not Malaysia.)

Yes, this include PayPal!

And if you’re an eBay seller, you should be aware that PayPal doesn’t accept direct widthdrawal from malaysia bank. you can either sell your PayPal credit to agents, or you better own a singapore bank account.

Language

For most, English is not our mother tongue - that’s a fact. originally, we don’t speak and write the way like american and the english do. or even if you’re grown up with english as your first language - you still dont speak in their slang. that’s an extra HUGE obstacles in doing your job…

(US/UK readers, wanna get a feel on this obstacles? try imagining yourself writing a sales letter or discussing matters with your second language - french, spanish, chinese, japanese… that’s how tough for us.)

Pitching in the right tone

In what tone you should pitch on your products? how do you approach your prospects, who are thousands miles away from you? the truth is that we don’t know the market by all means… what’s Dish Network, what’s DirecTV - who’s the big dave? how does Comcast stack up with HugesNet in term of ISP quality? what’s the latest updates on US structued settlement policy? how foreclosure biz run in the States? is thomas cook (a major travel agent with large aff network) more welcomed in UK or it’s LastMinute? we DON’T know all that first hand… unless you get the chance to stay in the States for a certain period; if not Asians affiliate just gotta ‘guess’ and ‘model’ how others pitch their sales. it’s tough, coz we are most probably pitching on something that we’ve never seen in real life before - extra home work has to be done, and i mean A LOT of it.

Social life

There’re not much of full timer freelance (i mean aff) in the region - i bet it’s more or less the same in Thailand or Taiwan. the fact is when you decide to go fulltime on aff, chances are you have to go against all your friends and family’s opinion. if you’re lucky (like me ;) ), you’ll get their undestanding and support; if you’re not, be ready for some sour face that think you’re being lazy or you’re producing porns online.

Is it decent for me?

So after being one full year in full time affiliate business (i resigned and started at August 2006), i have to say i’m doing good with what i’m up to now. i get more free times with my parents (and my dog!); i get to travel more; i can have DotA games all night as long as i want; and i am doing okay financially. cant complain…

But what matters now is the sense of purpose… i dont feel like i’m part of my surroundings, i spent roughly 12 - 14 hours a day online, and i am losing my network from the ‘real world’ fast - which makes me considering getting back a day job… give and take, i guess.

I’ll update you the decision on my 2nd year anniversary, alright?
(to be continued one year later) :)