Internet Home Cash Point system
David Anderson
The ‘Internet Home Cash-Point System isa part-work course that costs £29.95 per month.
If you’ve been around the block a bit, you’ll find that it’s very similar to Andrew Reynold’s Cash on Demand system.
The basic premise is that you learn the internet marketing techniques and strategies that make fellows like Mr Reynolds very wealth. Namely, selling books, courses, DVDs and CD ROMS through classified ads, websites, search engines, and the like.
Wanting a second opinion on this, I asked Nick Laight from What Really Makes Money what he thought.
As usually, he’s beaten me to it and has already reviewed this! In a comparison between Anderson’s and Reynold’s products, he writes:
Anderson offers a decent general overview of the opportunities available online. You’ll also find the usual starting point of how to find a niche by first identifying your own interests and passions.
This has been done to death elsewhere and I wonder how valuable this really is.
What gives Andrew Reynolds’ Cash On Demand the edge for me is that he aims to reveal how his system works. So he takes you through the business model using specific examples from his own ventures.
Another difference, according to Nick, is that David Anderson looks only at internet marketing. Andrew Reynolds looks at newspaper advertising and other offline techniques.
When you sign up, you’ll get a series of modules every month. If Cash on Demand is anything to go by, these modules continue indefinitely. There’s no end to the course, as such, because there are always new developments and updates.
In summary then, it’s a decent enough course if you want information on how to market your idea or product. But Reynolds is probably the better option if you had to choose.
Beware that with both these biz opps, you’re gaining an education in modern guerrilla marketing. They’re not a ‘business in a box’, where you unpack the information, follow the instructions, set it up and go.