Jason Calacanis Bashes Affiliates During ASW Keynote
At the heart of what might have been an interesting and engaging keynote speech about curation of the internet and creating more value for internet users on February 25th, Jason Calacanis unabashedly called affiliate marketers in the room spammers who were spoiling the internet, while at the same time acting as if he wasn’t really referring to those marketers who were in attendance.
Jason’s speech showed promise as he talked about how early internet communities, such as Usenet, were ruined by over-aggressive marketers who introduced the very first affiliate spam… websites and links that were designed to make the affiliate money and provide very little value to the user. This type of marketing quickly alienated Usenet visitors, and the once vibrant community disappeared overnight. Jason went on to provide other examples of how people are gaming popular communities such as MySpace and Wikipedia with spam, because these communities allow anonymity and are therefore easier for spammers to infiltrate.
At this point, however, Jason turned his attention towards popular blogger/affiliates who publicly report their income, specifically displaying photographs of two affiliate marketers holding up six figure paychecks of affiliate income. Jason had this to say about these two marketers:
“You guys think small. Holding up a six figure check is just pathetic… is that your industry’s biggest success?”
Jason went on to say that he personally thinks that those same people who game search engines and social networks are among the smartest and most resourceful people he had ever met, advising them to “give up your life of crime and holding $100,000 checks… realize that you’re smarter than half the folks working at large internet companies and get to work creating the next Digg, StumbleUpon, Flickr, Google, or Paypal.”
Calacanis further said that affiliate marketers who pursue low effort/high reward models of making money on the internet were poisoning the web with affiliate spam. Of course, everyone is certainly entitled to their own opinion… but Jason’s semi-elitist view was insulting to a number of Affiliate Summit attendees that I spoke after the keynote. I also didn’t feel like Jason’s sour view of the affiliate marketing industry allowed much room for people’s own dreams or desires… I’m sure that many marketers would be thrilled to pull down six figures a year working from home!
All in all, this years keynote speech appeared to be the most memorable and controversial keynote in the history of the Affiliate Summit… it was definitely the talk of every table I sat at throughout the course of the event. While it certainly inspired a strong reaction from attendees, I personally didn’t find much of what Jason said from the stage to be very constructive. But hey… that’s only my opinion.


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Calling out Zac and Jeremy was just wrong. Some people are happy with making 6 figures.
On the other hand, he was right about affiliate spam. There are lots of spammy sites popping us with little or no original content.
Yeah, parts of it were surprising, but there were some good bits about reducing anonymity and curation of the web that provoked some thought.
He was absolutely right in calling them out. His advice is dead on. They are smarter than that.
Sorry Chris I have to agree with some of his comments. There is a lot of spam in it. Especially when you sign up for someones report that is supposedly going to be of some value to you, then get spammed with tons of E-mails trying to sell you crap. Yes there are way too many worthless sites in cyber space also. Anything to try and make a buck I guess but it certainly spoils it for the good guys.
Exactly! And, heaven forbid, you absent-mindly fall for one of those “free product for a survey” scams. It took months to stop getting calls to my home number.
Vicky, i also hate spam as much as u do . they keep on bombarding your mail box with those.
They say that you shouldn’t “opt-out” from spam emails, but you should. Affiliate companies montor those emails. If the affiliate marketing company gets enough opt outs they’ll cancel the spammer’s account.
yep that what I hate most
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I remember this. Lots of people were upset but that what makes Jason so interesting. I don’t think it was meant to be taken that seriously.
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Great read. Please do keep up the good work.
I didnt understand the first part from the post, somebody could explain me please? I found it very usefull and I would like to understand everything clear…Even without the first part, Nice post
Basically it sounds like Jason was purposely stirring the pot to advance his own interests. It definitely isn’t a new strategy to make controversial claims in hopes of being mentioned by others. It’s either that or he is just so full of himself that he has to put down any other successful bloggers/affiliates. Of course a lot of what he said would just fall on deaf ears because the people he was talking to would accept six figures as a spammer.