Using Your Floodle.
I discovered Floodle today while reading one of my favorite marketing blogs. At first look, it is a handy dandy resource for eBooks, Top 10 lists, etc. Pop-advice, if you will. Some sample features include 101 recipes for the deep fryer, Caring for your Pet Hamster, The Big Book of Puppy Names, Credit repair, and my personal favorite (if you know me you'll get this,) Miracle Vinegar. But I'm not mentioning the site because it's just a great collection of free information.
What isn't readily apparent when you visit the site for the first time, is that the owner is only posting things that he finds for sale on eBay. But he is posting them for free! He is like the Robin Hood of eBay - pointing to and providing for free information that unscrupulous hacks are charging the uninitiated a lot of money for. I wouldn't mind this so much if the sellers were also the people who had written the material. But they're usually not - they are finding content readily available for free online and then posting it for sale on eBay. Do you follow?
That's not to say Mr. Floodle is a saint. Many of these articles he himself has purchased from eBay. His payoff is advertising revenue - you'll see that the site has ads. But I really admire his model and concept, and have added the site to my favorites, as I suggest you do as well. There is some great reference material here that many schmucks are paying through the nose for. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have 65 Tried & Trusted Amish Recipes to get through before lunch.
1 Comments:
Interesting site/idea... too bad about all the dead links though, I was actually quite interested in all the CIA's dirty tricks.
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