Robin Ooi says he’s come to the rescue if you’ve been struggling to make money online. He says he’s put a system together for you that’ll make you a consistent $50 per day and he called it the $50 Per Day System.
I’m not marketing the $50 Per Day System and I’m not in cahoots with Robin and Gerald in any way. I’m just reviewing their product, the $50 Per Day System, with 100% honesty. Seeing how the Internet Marketing industry has been taken over by unscrupulous Internet Marketing gurus who care only about the money they stand to make by pitching crappy Internet Marketing training products, I decided to reveal the crappiness of such products through my unbiased reviews.
I do this to protect my readers from a possible waste of precious time and hard earned money. I also use this opportunity to help as many folks as possible to find a free, high-quality product, which can help them with their Internet Marketing needs.
The $50 Per Day System is an Internet Marketing training product that’s based on a recent outsourcing platform called Source Market. Robin Ooi and Gerald Soh partnered to put this training together partly to drive traffic to their outsourcing services website and partly to draw clients to their paid, personal coaching programs.
Much of the training in the members’ area is on how to make money on Source Market by rendering SEO services, which is entirely possible for folks who know what to take from Robin’s training for its potential usefulness and what to leave for its potential harmfulness.
During the training, Robin gave some potentially useful tips on how to make money on the Source Market platform but also wrongly advised his audience to use methods that were sure to put their businesses at risk of search engine penalty. I wrote about these things in detail within the review below.
There was an upsell ($17.18), a down sell ($10.04), another upsell ($27.50), another down sell ($17.30), yet another upsell ($47.10) and yet another down sell ($37.10).
After that barrage of upsells and down sells, I was eventually granted access to the product I purchased. The members’ area began with a recorded video a bit longer than 56 minutes, which was on a webinar by one of Robin’s colleagues called Gerald. In that recorded webinar video, Gerald bragged about how much he’s made on the Internet. He even told how he bought a jacket for $500. None of that was helpful to anyone.
That video was a means for Gerald to pitch his and his team’s outsourcing services. Throughout the almost one hour-long recorded webinar video, apart from petty pep talks in between, he did nothing but promote his website – Clickingprofits.com – and its services, which were mainly on how to set up what he constantly referred to as “cash machines.”
According to him, those cash machines would be more powerful than regular blogs, and as a result, they would suck in far more money. Why should anybody believe him? As much as I know, he was in cahoots with Cason Bo who sold a crappy product called “Easier Than Fiverr” to me.
Interestingly, Easier Than Fiverr and $50 Per Day are both training programs on how to use the same outsourcing platform called Source Market to make money online. Don’t get it twisted, Source Market is legit, just like Fiverr, but that doesn’t guarantee that training products built about it would be too.
I bought Easier Than Fiverr from Cason Bo and Gerald Soh and discovered how crappy it was. I decided to ask for a refund but never got a response from them. So, I opened a dispute on PayPal, which they still didn’t respond to. Currently, as I write this review on $50 Per Day, PayPal is still expecting their response.
Feel free to read my review on Easier Than Fiverr here.
Below that video was a yellow button with an invitation to join Robin for his “free strategy session.” So, I clicked on it to see where it would lead. It led to a web form that I was all too familiar with. I’ve seen this sort of web form many times before.
Web forms like the one Robin Ooi put in front of me usually come with a lot of time-wasting fields requiring a lot of unnecessary information. They come with text boxes, check boxes and radio buttons to type into or simply click on to provide the required information.
As I expected, I saw the usual radio button and its corresponding lettering that always contradicted the claims of offering a “free strategy session” by this class of Internet Marketers. In my experience, legit, ethical Internet Marketers don’t use these kinds of web forms to suck in their clients. The radio button and its lettering simply indicated that the word “free” had a different meaning in the invitation to join Robin for a free strategy session. See the images below for clarity.
The training was mostly made of videos in which Robin talked a whole lot about SEO (Search Engine Optimization). Some of the things he talked about were theoretical some were practical and would prove useful when rightly applied. But some of the practical ones weren’t detailed enough for newbies to grasp. He emphasized on SEO services over other services on the Source Market platform. Some folks who either don’t like SEO or aren’t good at it will find that very frustrating.
In one of his videos, Robin encouraged his viewers to use an article spinning software to create content for their websites. Thas t’d advice because article-spinning software could get his viewers in trouble. Search engines like Google, Bing and others frown badly at spun articles.
They punish websites that use spun articles with very poor rankings. When that happens, the owner of the offending website would be out of business because driving traffic to their website would be almost as impossible as making water run uphill. Google, for instance, has an algorithm that can tell when a website has spun articles on it by identifying blocks of texts that were created by replacing words with synonyms.
This product has potential to make you money on the Source Market platform, which is still new compared to other outsourcing platforms like Fiverr.com, Freelancer.com, Upwork.com etc. What that means is that if you take advantage of some of the tips this product gives you, you can make money on Source Market before it’s saturated. However, if you swallow everything Robin tells you hook, line and sinker, you can get your online business in trouble.
Also, this product is packed full of upsells. Legitimate internet marketers, in my experience, don’t try and cram another product or service of theirs down your throat at every turn. That’s what Garald Soh and Robin Ooi have done in this product, which is a huge red flag.
What do you think about this product? Sharing your thoughts and experiences with the community by leaving a comment below would be greatly appreciated and might help someone else down the road.
Eugenson is just a regular guy, except he doesn't believe in the security of nine-to-five jobs and loves to launch out on his own, trying to realize his dreams his way and at his time. He's tried to make money online for quite some time now, purchasing product after product, and has been swindled by a lot of cyber-fraudsters masquerading as make-money-online messiahs. He has many passions, some of which include drawing, painting, writing, and watching comic movies. He's on a revenge mission to hit fiendish scammers hard by writing reviews that reveal the truth about their unethical schemes and worthless products. He hopes to stifle their online, bloodsucking businesses by forewarning their potential victims and depriving them of the payments they depend on. You can consider Eugenson a friend who's here to give you objective product reviews, helping you uncover the online vampires and discover genuine opportunities.