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This year, one of his favorite strategies has been reviewing Amazon products. The program compensates people for creating videos reviewing items that get posted to product listings. He has now been reviewing products since April and has concluded that it's one of the best opportunities that he has seen since he began making money online. You have to submit three trial videos reviewing products. "Just this last month, I got over $4,000 of free products sent to my house to do these review videos," Peterson said.
Persons: Trevin Peterson, Peterson, it's, There's, He's Organizations: Business, YouTube, Amazon Associates, Amazon Locations: Amazon
On the agenda today:But first: Ashley Stewart, a chief tech correspondent, is giving us a behind-the-scenes look at Salesforce's succession crisis. Salesforce's Marc Benioff. Jemal Countess / StringerOver the past week or so, at least six top executives from Salesforce and its subsidiaries announced plans to leave, Ashley Stewart, chief tech correspondent, writes. Company insiders attribute these departures to co-CEO Marc Benioff exerting increasing control over the company, adding that he's driven away his closest lieutenants while dialing up performance pressure on employees. The departures have created a crisis in leadership at Salesforce.
Trevin Peterson says getting your product on the first page of Amazon is important. In 2017, Trevin Peterson, who's now 26, began selling miscellaneous products on Amazon while having a full-time job working for his dad's construction company. And so in the very beginning, you're just targeting your most relevant keywords," Peterson said. Using the competitor product's Amazon Standard Identification Number (ASIN), he can pull up a list of the keywords his competitors are ranking high for. As his product gets more sales and reviews, it will begin to rank higher.
The ecommerce store wasn't wildly successful but he managed to sell about $500 worth of products, he said. He also tried selling call-center software for six months but didn't make a single sale. So Peterson began doing his research and within a few weeks, he was ready to launch his first product: A seatbelt gap filler. "I didn't know I was infringing on anyone's patent, and so I basically closed down that product," Peterson said. Again, it began to do well until Amazon banned selling the product without documents and approvals due to safety issues, he said.
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