Brief Summary
This video explores the claim that one can earn $40 every 30 minutes using Google Translate and CPA Grip by translating and promoting offers to different countries. It involves signing up for CPA Grip, selecting high-paying offers from countries like Italy, translating the offer using Google Translate, and promoting the link via traffic ad websites. The video details the process and shares the results of a 3-day trial, revealing the challenges and ultimate lack of earnings.
- The method involves using CPA Grip to find offers, Google Translate to translate them, and traffic ad websites to promote them.
- The experiment failed to generate any income due to link issues and low traffic.
- The video concludes with a recommendation to avoid this method, citing too many unanswered questions and effort required.
Intro: Making Money with Google Translate?
The video introduces the concept of making $40 every 30 minutes by using Google Translate with CPA marketing. Many people claim to make up to $2,000 a week by translating offers into different languages and promoting them. The video aims to test this method, which is supposedly free and available worldwide, to determine if it actually works.
Setting Up Google Translate and CPA Grip
The initial steps involve navigating to translate.google.com, a free tool for translating text between languages. The video then guides viewers through creating a free account on CPA Grip by registering with basic information. It emphasizes the importance of setting up payment methods in the payment center, where options include Payeer, global bank transfer (US only), and PayPal, with a minimum payout threshold of $50.
Finding High-Paying Offers
The video explains that CPA Grip provides links to various offers for promotion. To maximize earnings, the strategy involves translating these offers into different languages, targeting countries with higher payouts. The presenter demonstrates how to sort offers by payout to identify the most lucrative ones, noting that countries like Spain and France generally offer higher payouts compared to the United States.
Selecting and Translating an Offer
The video highlights the importance of selecting the right offer, noting that iPhone-related offers have been successful for many. It shows how to find an iPhone 14 offer in Italy paying $17.11 per sign-up. The presenter copies the offer title and uses Google Translate to translate it into English to understand the offer's content, ensuring it is appropriate for promotion.
Promoting the Offer with Traffic ad Bar
The video addresses the challenge of promoting the offer to a relevant audience. It introduces traffic ad bar, a website that promises to deliver up to 1,22 visitors to a website every 3 days. The presenter explains how to shorten the CPA Grip link using a free link shortener like Bitly before posting it on traffic ad bar. The process includes creating an ad with an Italian title and description translated using Google Translate, targeting the ad specifically to Italy.
The 3-Day Trial and Its Challenges
After a 3-day waiting period, the presenter checks the results. On the first day, it was discovered that Bitly had blocked the shortened URL, deeming it potentially harmful. Further investigation revealed that the original CPA Grip link was redirecting to a rental assistance website instead of the intended iPhone offer. This issue persisted even with links from other YouTube videos claiming success with this method.
Final Results and Conclusion
To salvage the experiment, the presenter switched to promoting a rental assistance offer available on CPA Grip for the United States. However, Bitly also blocked the direct link to this offer. Eventually, a direct link to the rental assistance website with an affiliate ID was used, which worked on traffic ad bar. Despite these efforts, the ad only received 10 views, resulting in zero conversions and no earnings. The presenter concludes that this method is not worth the time and effort, citing too many unanswered questions and potential issues with link redirection and ad blocking.