Rebel Yell

Clinical psychologist Bruce Levine explains how health authorities are increasingly listing individualistic behavior as abnormal in the move to pacify the population through mass medication, the education system and television. Levine provides a compelling alternative approach to treating depression that makes lasting change more likely than with symptom-based treatment through medication. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1IwSprOWi8&ref=nf

ClickBank

In the seemingly never endingly expanding subject of business tactics there exist many ways to bring buyers and sellers together. In the food arena there still exist manufacturers who sell to distributors who sell to wholesalers who sell to retailers who sell to consumers. In may other markets that model has had one or two layers taken out of it so that manufacturers sell to end users via their web sites. In fact even in the food arena now you can even go to grower’s markets or farmer’s markets where you, the eater, can buy directly from the grower.

This trend has been under way for quite some time. In fact it’s probably close to 30 years since I first heard the term disintermediation – the reduction in the layers of intermediaries between the original manufacturer and the end consumer of a product.

As new technology develops, enterprising individuals will conceive of ways to use the new tools to do better, cheaper and faster, what was previously done slower and at higher cost. In this ever shrinking world of ours there exists a new way to bring buyers and sellers together via intermediaries – it’s called ClickBank.

The way it works is that someone who has a digital or physical product to sell can enter data about it into a seller account at ClickBank. This data includes the sell price and the percentage commission the vendor is willing to provide the seller and a web site from which the product can be purchased.

This information is then available to those people who are looking to market someone else’s product or service. They may have a list of people who subscribe to their newsletter or they may have the ability to promote or advertise a product to the public at large.

The seller then promotes the chosen product and sales are made from the vendor’s website and the proceeds of the sales are collected by ClickBank. ClickBank records the seller for each transaction then remits the seller’s percentage to the seller and the vendor’s percentage to the vendor less ClickBank’s commission for bringing the two together.

So in this case the vendor is the manufacturer, the seller is the retailer and ClickBank the intermediary.