The good, the bad and the ugly about solo ads vs. affiliate networking...\n\nThere are many\xa0ways to get traffic.\xa0Some of the older ones include fads such as:\n\n \tJoint Venture Giveaways: someone would sign up and have access to multiple giveaways that they could then send to their list. Everyone in the network would be cross-mailing their own lists, offering these giveaways, to attract traffic to their site.\n \tViral Reports: you have a special report (i.e. how to set up a basic WordPress site) and mail it to your list and the link back to your site is included in the report. For each of your subscribers that passes it on and gets a new subscriber to sign up, you could pay them a $1 per new subscriber.\n \tTraffic Exchanges: this operates similarly to the JVG above where there's multiple people in the network. You would join it and then everyone is rotating through viewing multiple sites and each one you view gets you a credit. With these credits, you could then buy banner ads, etc. to drive people back to your site where they would hopefully buy your product.\n \tCo-Registration: you would sign up with several other marketers and basically cross-promote. As subscribers signed up for your list, they were signing up for other lists in the same group as well.\n \tSafe Lists: join an email-based community with several other marketers. It's really just marketers mailing other marketers each day.\n \tRenting/Buying a List: you can choose parameters and order a list from a site like InfoUSA, to market to and pad your own list. Even if they don't opt-in, you can create retargeting ads that follow them around the internet.\n\nAll of the above have either gone "out of style" because they didn't work forever, or because they became illegal under the CAN-SPAM Act.\xa0Now, the major forms of driving new traffic are Solo Ads or Affiliate Networking.\nSolo Ads\nSolo ads are when you pay someone else to mail out your offers to their list. You are paying someone else, who already has an established list, for email leads.\xa0It sounds good in theory. What are the pitfalls?\n\nIt's a great way for the solo ad seller to make money, not necessarily you and probably not you.\xa0They don't have to expend any effort-they are not marketing their own product and they are not having to take the time to research affiliate programs.\n\nNot everyone's lists are created equal. You don't really know where they got the names on their list from. Some are built from questionable traffic sources.\n\nExample: AdFly. The traffic you get from using Ad.Fly is mostly from interstitial ads, the ads that are placed before you can see articles and videos, etc.\xa0It's very untargeted traffic because you can't enter keywords. There is nothing that you have that everyone wants to buy. So, in this case you'd be paying someone to send ads to a list where subscribers aren't even interested in your niche.\n\nYou could be paying $1 per click if your squeeze page is on target and converts at 50%, which is a good conversion rate.\xa0Tip: for a good squeeze page, see our Backup Creator squeeze page.\nYou Win Some, You Lose Some\nOver a 1-year period, Robert purchased $1912 in solo ads. For that $1912, he got 3209 clicks, which resulted in 1059 email opt-ins and $502 in sales.\xa0This appears to be a $1500 loss but you can keep marketing to them (until and if they opt-out) and generate additional sales later.\n\nThe good news is that 3209 new subscribers quickly builds your list-if you have a big list, you'll be excited to send out those emails for potential sales, which is the name of the game in internet marketing. Sales!\nCaveats &\xa0Advice\nThe best solo ad sellers that will bring you success are likely those that don't do it as their only income. They may just be doing it for a time while they are on vacation, have family matters to attend to, or are between projects. Robert's experience with solo ad \u2018only'\n\nYou need to put back about 20% of your business income into ad spending so solo ads aren't the worst thing and you...