Well today, I got 22,500 air miles for FREE! No work done, nothing spent. This is from BMI which is a well known Airline in the UK (and maybe other places), so it’s 100% legit. 20,000 is enough to get 2 people to Zone 1 for a return flight, which isn’t too bad.
I got 2,500 for just taking a survey, with roughly 6 questions all boxes - no writing. So that was just easy. The other 20,000 came from joining their BMI Credit card. I HAVE to spend £250 in 3 months to get the 20,000 airmiles. This isn’t going to be a problem
I’ll earn 375 extra miles from just spending the £250. The card was approved within minutes and has no annual fee.
Now for those of you who spend 4-5 figures a month on PPC, this can add up to a VERY nice life style; that’s if you like traveling of course. If you spent £10,000 a month on PPC you could have 20,000 miles a month or 240,000 a year. With 20,000 taking you to zone 1, and 24,000 taking you to Zone 2 you could get your self some pretty nice exotic holidays.

Every campaign has a golden keyword, and most campaigns share the keyworwd. This keyword is always targetted and normally has high conversion rates and extremely good ROIs. So what is the golden keyword? Well it’s the product or company name. When some one searches the name, they are looking for that product or company and are highly relevant. With a good negative keyword list, you can easily get 2:1 conversion to clicks etc. So if your promoting XYZ’s bingo, target “XYZ Bingo” rather than online bingo. It will be cheaper and will convert better.
So now Google are releasing software like CRAZY. With Anroid (not my alien) which is a unix based OS (I think) for mobile phones. Now they want to compete head on with Microsoft’s Internet explorer and Mozilla’s wonderful Firefox. Well personally, I don’t think this is a good move for me (because Google do hate me, and this might show in the post) because it’s going to help them keep an eye on me. Google are heading towards a big brother style organisation now. They know your health, address, emails, the works. 
