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Blog Icon Clickbank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies

Posted in ClickBank by Dave on June 27th, 2007

I started with over one year ago and made a few sales withing the first few months of my promoting the products in their marketplace and earned around $60 in affiliate commissions. After noticing their policy regarding requirements on receiving a first paycheck, I started having second thoughts about placing their hoplinks on my websites. Here’s the policy in question…

ClickBank will withhold the first check to be issued from your account until the payable balance contains sales made with 5 or more different credit card numbers, including at least one Visa card, and one MasterCard in order to be eligible to receive a check. PayPal and e-check purchases do not count toward the minimum. It is also required that the check balance reaches the Payment Threshold amount you have chosen in your account. The default Payment Threshold is set to $100, however you can change the Payment Threshold in your account at any time.

It seemed to be a bit unreasonable to require purchases from 5 or more different credit cards, and after reading numerous affiliate blogs with stories about Clickbank sellers using cookies and other techniques to lead buyers to purchase with Paypal or E-Check by making special offers, I began to question clickBank’s effectiveness further, so I began removing all Clickbank links from all of my websites except two which are geared towards making money online. I targeted the sites keywords to lead into the clickBank products, but after a few months of no sales I noticed my balance had begun dropping. Several months later my balance was zeroed, and I read this little bit of information in ClickBanks FAQ….

Accounts with a positive balance but no earnings for an extended period of time are considered dormant. Dormant accounts are subject to a charge of $1 per pay period after 90 days of inactivity, $5 per pay period after 180 days of inactivity, and $15 per pay period after 365 days of inactivity.

Unfortunately, I found this to be quite unfair considering the fact that if I have a site that has been turning their advertisers hits and my visitors were not interested in the amateur looking sites most clickBank advertisers use to peddle their worthless E-Books, my account is not “dormant”, quite possibly it’s the advertisers sales pitch page that is not reaching the customer, yet I am being penalized.

After all the time and effort that was put into earning with ClickBank, my account now sits at zero. My advertising space, time and effort was wasted on their amateur affiliate program. One thing I think most people are tired of are these worthless E-Books offering you secrets to using AdWords and ClickBank to make $10,000 per week from a fully automated system. Everyone recalls last years popular E-book “” and I’m sure everybody is aware of the newest hot E-Book “Day Job Killer” and the ever present “, but the truth is that if as many people who have wasted money on these viral marketing gimmicks, by now the internet would be full of millionaires, but in reality, it isn’t so. I bought “The Rich Jerk” and quite honestly it did not expose any new techniques that any average marketer wasn’t aware of. In fact, “The Rich Jerk” left a bad impression on me when I saw the way the author was making money was by targeting gambling keywords and leading people into casino sites for huge referral fees. The author claimed he made money by placing Poker and Casino ads on big sites that attract college students such as FaceBook and and quite honestly, I would not sleep well at night if I knew I was profiting from people losing money on gambling. I might as well go sell crack on the street corner. “” is no better in it’s borderline black hat SEO techniques the author professes as his key to making such a huge income. Maybe these techniques once worked for these self-appointed “gurus”, but in reality, using those techniques is likely to get a White Hat SEO webmaster’s site thrown into the Google dungeon.

At this point, I’ve decided that ClickBank just isn’t the right program for me and the sleazy nature of the cult of high pressure marketers surrounding the whole ClickBank has me thankful that some of us have integrity and are not out to make a buck at the expense of others.

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13 Responses to 'Clickbank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies'

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  1. Crystal on July 1st, 2007

    Thanks for this informative write-up on ClickBank. I was seriously considering buying some AdWords to drive traffic to my ClickBank affiliate links. I have bought 1 or 2 of those reports of the type you describe and I agree that they don’t always deliver everything they promise.

  2. Dave on July 10th, 2007

    thanks for the comment Crystal. Many webmasters get suckered in with the Clickbank/AdSense game. All those “get rich quick” e-books from supposed gurus are only there to sell you their product. that’s how they’re getting rich. I try to always remember that if something is too good to be true it can’t be true. And if all these gurus were making so much money, they’re surely not going to sell us a book with their secrets in it.

  3. Theodor on July 14th, 2007

    It’s so true, almost all of these internet experts that are also authors of some e-book and pretend they own the “secret” are bogus. BUT, there is very much to learn from their way of promoting their ebook/product, the marketing tactics that they apply, the words and sites they build and so on… because they (the big fishes) are the ones that will get rich ‘over night’ by “making” you buy their e-book/product.

    I haven’t registered to ClickBank yet, I was going to but I read your post so I’ve changed my mind. Thank you for writing this post! I find it very useful.

    I’ve been with RegNow for a couple of years and can’t complain at all. Always paying without delay and without any uncommon policy.
    Have you tried Regnow?

  4. Dave on July 14th, 2007

    Thanks for the comment Theodor. No, I haven’t tried Regnow, but if they have an affiliate part to their program that rewards your for attracting new publishers, feel free to send me your referral link through the “contact author” link, or you can feel free to post your referral link to these comments. I usually try to join an affiliate program through somebody else if there is a reward for it.

    I have been more than disappointed with ClickBank (obviously), their tracking is inferior, the product catalog is snarky and their preformance is poor. For webmasters like myself who work hard on creating original, useful content, maximizing ad space is essential. Most of it is trying to earn a few dollars per day per site, so even losing $58 (as in my case) really stinks, because that money could have paid for a couple of my domain registration renewals.

  5. Jakob on July 24th, 2007

    This is exactly what I expected to find out after reading the title bank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies. Thanks for informative article

  6. Eric on July 31st, 2007

    This is exactly what I expected to find out after reading the title bank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies. Thanks for informative article

  7. Daniel on August 1st, 2007

    I have to say, that I could not agree with you in 100% regarding bank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies, but it’s just my opinion, which could be wrong :)

  8. Bill on September 4th, 2007

    I could not agree more!. Clickbank policy is extremely unfair, and I really don’t believe their policy is legal. Any money that I make promoting any hoplink, is mine, it does not belong to Clickbank!. How dare they impose this silly policy, it’s downright criminal. They don’t give a rat’s ass about public opinion regarding their policies. I don’t know what if anything can be done, other than suggesting that every internet user of Clickbank pack up and stop using them, tell them to stick their policy where the sun doesn’t shine!.

  9. Hayden on October 1st, 2007

    Their policy is just the tip of the iceberg.
    They prefer scam ebook which convert well and pull in the $$$ over good honest products.
    I had a product rejected without a proper explanation, when they continue to allow scams sich as the Free Google Adwords ebook. Scandalous.
    Very unethical indeed.

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  11. Egor on October 29th, 2007

    Hi, I was browsing Internet searching for clickbank affiliate and your blog regarding bank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies came my way. Very interesting! You really do know your thing! I\’m gonna bookmark you and come back in a few to see your new posting! Looking forward to! Cheers!

  12. ExchangeRepublic on February 18th, 2008

    Hello webmaster was searching Google for Free To Join Affiliate Programs and your blog regarding clickbank Marketplace and Unreasonable Policies looks like Clickbank is no the right program for me. Can you recommend the best program to join for anew webmaster?

  13. gepJaytote on April 1st, 2008

    cool site for my mind its very good. Please, send your abuse here!!!

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This is a dofollow blog, however, if you wish to have your comment approved, please use a human name and not something like "free hosting" or "adsense help" in the name field. I will no longer approve comments that are made solely for the purpose of building backlinks at my expense. ~Thanks Dave.







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