asked in
Authoring & Writing Content
Updated

[ANSWERED & CLOSED]

I'm about to make a purchase through an amazon link on another WA members blog. Must I make sure that my cart is empty before I click t

That would be a question for Amazon. Though it is a good question and it is good to increase your knowledge of Amazon, it would be better to ask them. Then, perhaps you could write a blog post about it here.

I agree, Anita. Since amazon is a very common program used by WA members, I suspected someone here knew this off hand. If I've not gotten an answer by midday tomorrow, I'll do just that. The last time I spoke with them I found that they didn't mince words, but laid it all out. One way or another we will have and share the answer here.

If we are investing big chunks of our time in promoting products through amazon, it is only sensible to understand how the process works when visitors buy through our links.

That's correct. I hope you will share the answers you get with us. It would be really nice.

Great question Sftat! Must the shopping cart be empty when shopping on Amazon for affiliate credit??

Hi Francia,

I could be sending a lot of customers to amazon, yet getting no credit if they already have items in the cart - or - I could be getting extra commission if there are already items in the cart, and they buy after linking in from my site. It would be nice to know for my business and for others business when I link in from some other site...

I hope someone here has experience with this - I would love to know how it works...

Steve

Thanks, David, but this is about purchase related to friends or family. I already know that policy, and this is not the issue.

Interesting question.
I would imagine that one has nothing to do with the other, generally
Unless...(refer below)
Also, about that item in your cart...you can't (or not supposed to) use your own link to purchase from Amazon.
Is this why the question originated in the first place...?

Definitely not. As I stated in this question, I'm getting ready to purchase an item through a link on a post by another WA member on their site.

I learned about amazon blocking use of my own links by me, friends, family etc. long ago. This is a step further in my amazon education. While I appreciate you sharing what you imagine about this David, I'm looking for actual knowledge about the policy.

Since amazon generally gives themselves the benefit of the doubt, I assumed that they would block commission if:
-The buyer had already clicked another affiliate link earlier that day (double commission payout - I don't think so),
-The buyer went to smile.amazon.com to direct part of the proceeds to the charity of their choice, or
-The buyer was returning to a link they had used multiple times before to enter amazon from the same affiliate site (this is amazon policy, stated to other members and shared here).

Given these policies or assumptions, I had reason to doubt that a link would count if the buyer was already in the purchase process, such as having other items in the cart. If this isn't the case, where does amazon draw the line: commission on all items placed in the cart for x minutes after clicking the link, but not items there already? Commission on all items purchased in the time window, no matter when they went into the cart?

My past interactions with amazon do not suggest to me that the policy will be generous to affiliates.

Thanks,
Steve

Ok.Oh, I see. That's completely different from what I thought you meant. My apologies. Let's hope someone with more experience and Amazon clarifies this for you.

David

See more comments

Does amazon require an empty cart for credit? [answered]

Does amazon require an empty cart for credit? [answered]

asked in
Authoring & Writing Content
Updated

[ANSWERED & CLOSED]

I'm about to make a purchase through an amazon link on another WA members blog. Must I make sure that my cart is empty before I click t

That would be a question for Amazon. Though it is a good question and it is good to increase your knowledge of Amazon, it would be better to ask them. Then, perhaps you could write a blog post about it here.

I agree, Anita. Since amazon is a very common program used by WA members, I suspected someone here knew this off hand. If I've not gotten an answer by midday tomorrow, I'll do just that. The last time I spoke with them I found that they didn't mince words, but laid it all out. One way or another we will have and share the answer here.

If we are investing big chunks of our time in promoting products through amazon, it is only sensible to understand how the process works when visitors buy through our links.

That's correct. I hope you will share the answers you get with us. It would be really nice.

Great question Sftat! Must the shopping cart be empty when shopping on Amazon for affiliate credit??

Hi Francia,

I could be sending a lot of customers to amazon, yet getting no credit if they already have items in the cart - or - I could be getting extra commission if there are already items in the cart, and they buy after linking in from my site. It would be nice to know for my business and for others business when I link in from some other site...

I hope someone here has experience with this - I would love to know how it works...

Steve

Thanks, David, but this is about purchase related to friends or family. I already know that policy, and this is not the issue.

Interesting question.
I would imagine that one has nothing to do with the other, generally
Unless...(refer below)
Also, about that item in your cart...you can't (or not supposed to) use your own link to purchase from Amazon.
Is this why the question originated in the first place...?

Definitely not. As I stated in this question, I'm getting ready to purchase an item through a link on a post by another WA member on their site.

I learned about amazon blocking use of my own links by me, friends, family etc. long ago. This is a step further in my amazon education. While I appreciate you sharing what you imagine about this David, I'm looking for actual knowledge about the policy.

Since amazon generally gives themselves the benefit of the doubt, I assumed that they would block commission if:
-The buyer had already clicked another affiliate link earlier that day (double commission payout - I don't think so),
-The buyer went to smile.amazon.com to direct part of the proceeds to the charity of their choice, or
-The buyer was returning to a link they had used multiple times before to enter amazon from the same affiliate site (this is amazon policy, stated to other members and shared here).

Given these policies or assumptions, I had reason to doubt that a link would count if the buyer was already in the purchase process, such as having other items in the cart. If this isn't the case, where does amazon draw the line: commission on all items placed in the cart for x minutes after clicking the link, but not items there already? Commission on all items purchased in the time window, no matter when they went into the cart?

My past interactions with amazon do not suggest to me that the policy will be generous to affiliates.

Thanks,
Steve

Ok.Oh, I see. That's completely different from what I thought you meant. My apologies. Let's hope someone with more experience and Amazon clarifies this for you.

David

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asked in
Keyword, Niche and Market Research
Updated

ANSWERED: BoTipton answered this in a comment on his recent WA blog post:

Answer:[

Thanks for letting us know. This is good information to have.

Anita

My pleasure Anita. Here is an example where we used this advice in a guest blog published on my site this morning:

https://failsafeisolation.com/fly-long-haul-like-a-million-miler

I appreciate Pernilla's writing, and Bo's advice on engaging titles as well as the SEO solution we applied in this post.

If anyone has ideas to improve it further, they will be appreciated!
Steve

Looks good. Thank you for offering this as an example.

If you want feedback, you should use the system we have here through SiteComments to get and give comments and feedback to others. Kyle and Carson set this up to make it fair for everyone.

Yes, they both work well enough that I do use them. This link is offered as an example, not as a plea for feedback. It does work for both, however.

I would have missed a great deal of exceptional feedback and input if I limited myself to Site Comments, Site Feedback and Kyles give and take thread. They all work and I use them all, but opportunities for feedback and input are many, and I welcome them all. WA is no place for those with thin skin or who wear blinders.

Fair or not, often people using these tit-for-tat trading systems are in a hurry to give the minimum and move on. That's ok, as they still often add value. That said, often I get the best input, comments and feedback from people in my networks, people I know or people with other motivations, so I'm very happy to get it from every quarter. Just like the feedback you offered on a WA blog I wrote recently. It is all fair, if we welcome it, and offer ours to others.

That's true. Some people try to get around the system by asking in their blogs for comments or feedback when they are too busy to return the favor. I will check yours out though because you have done the same for me, even without my asking.

I try to not give feedback or make comments when I am in a bad mood or when I am trying to get something else done, though. I don't think it would be fair at those times.

You have a great day, Steve!

I do like the way you used subtitles in this Post. I particularly like the use of "20 Ways.." in your subtitle. I would have been tempted to use that as the main title because people generally respond well to the use of numbers in the headline.

Have you considered using a headline analyzer? Here is a good one to use:

http://www.aminstitute.com/headline/index.htm

I forget now who write the article that included this analyzer. I find it comes in handy. I would also use it for subtitles.

I hope that you find this information helpful!

Anita

I will definitely check out headline analyzers if we don't get the engagement we are looking for. I like the one I used, and it follows exactly on some of Bo's suggestions, as well as my perceptions of target reader interests.

I do appreciate your input on " 20 Tips & tricks ..." as my impression was just the opposite. Even though many highly ranked sites dealing with long-haul flying DO use numbers, including some as high as 26, I tend to hesitate when the number is over 10, as some are scared off by the large number. They can think that the approach might be too complicated or too much work. That said, your feedback aligns with Pernilla's thinking on the subheading, which is instructive to me. Thanks for wading in on it. I always appreciate feedback if it is constructive, even the unsolicited feedback that many hate.

Thanks,
Steve

The following links should be able to help you to write better headlines. The first is a blog by botipton which discusses ways to improve your headlines to attract readers. The second is a post about a headline analyzing tool that I find to be very helpful when writing good headlines.

I still believe that you can write a great headline with the keyword in the headline rather than the s I hope that you find these helpful going forward. Let me know how it turns out. I would love to know!

Anita

Thanks Anita,

I appreciate the info, and I have enjoyed all of the title advice Bo has offered in his posts. The headline analyzer I've not seen before, and it is interesting.

Unfortunately, I'm not in need of help writing engaging headlines - I've been doing that for decades. SEO is the challenge. If I can get my site ranking well with a subtitle keyword, or simply include a powerful keyword inside an engaging title, that would be great if I can still get to page one on google.

Failing that, I'm trying to see if adding a subtitle primarily for viewer engagement will work without messing up keyword SEO.

Steve

I am sorry that I misunderstood. I'm afraid I cannot offer any insight there. Have you tried approaching Bo on this? I'm sure he could probably offer an answer that would work for you.

Not to imply that someone else can't. I know there are a lot of people here who probably know.

In the meantime, enjoy your day!

No worries, Anita. Yes, Bo is a good choice. I tried him on one of his posts a week ago, but that query got missed, so I tried again yesterday. He actually responded to it, and I just found it - it helps a lot. Bo and Jovo seem particularly strong on this convergence between SEO and Viewer engagement with strong titles.

I'll keep this question open a bit longer to see if anything more floats to the top. If not, I'll copy Bo's response here for anyone else following this question.
Thanks,
Steve

That is great! Thank you for letting me know you are going to post that. I'll keep an eye open for it so I can learn along with you!''Have a great evening!

OK I just posted the answer from Bo in this edited question.
See the edited question answer...

I wouldn't worry about distinguishing my post from others too much. you can capitalize on someone else's good SEO as in this example. "Many people could have been alive today if they had this product" Yours could be: "Many people can stay alive by using this product: Live longer!"

David

OK, David, I think I get your point. If I do a search using a few generic, high SEO search terms, I can simply see what strong titles get listed by google, and tweak them?

While I'd still like to better understand how the tail or subtitle impact SEO, this seems like a powerful strategy. Thanks a heap for it. Google is there, so why not use what's working now?

Thanks a heap for this,
Steve

See more comments

How do subtitles affect seo? [answered]

How do subtitles affect seo? [answered]

asked in
Keyword, Niche and Market Research
Updated

ANSWERED: BoTipton answered this in a comment on his recent WA blog post:

Answer:[

Thanks for letting us know. This is good information to have.

Anita

My pleasure Anita. Here is an example where we used this advice in a guest blog published on my site this morning:

https://failsafeisolation.com/fly-long-haul-like-a-million-miler

I appreciate Pernilla's writing, and Bo's advice on engaging titles as well as the SEO solution we applied in this post.

If anyone has ideas to improve it further, they will be appreciated!
Steve

Looks good. Thank you for offering this as an example.

If you want feedback, you should use the system we have here through SiteComments to get and give comments and feedback to others. Kyle and Carson set this up to make it fair for everyone.

Yes, they both work well enough that I do use them. This link is offered as an example, not as a plea for feedback. It does work for both, however.

I would have missed a great deal of exceptional feedback and input if I limited myself to Site Comments, Site Feedback and Kyles give and take thread. They all work and I use them all, but opportunities for feedback and input are many, and I welcome them all. WA is no place for those with thin skin or who wear blinders.

Fair or not, often people using these tit-for-tat trading systems are in a hurry to give the minimum and move on. That's ok, as they still often add value. That said, often I get the best input, comments and feedback from people in my networks, people I know or people with other motivations, so I'm very happy to get it from every quarter. Just like the feedback you offered on a WA blog I wrote recently. It is all fair, if we welcome it, and offer ours to others.

That's true. Some people try to get around the system by asking in their blogs for comments or feedback when they are too busy to return the favor. I will check yours out though because you have done the same for me, even without my asking.

I try to not give feedback or make comments when I am in a bad mood or when I am trying to get something else done, though. I don't think it would be fair at those times.

You have a great day, Steve!

I do like the way you used subtitles in this Post. I particularly like the use of "20 Ways.." in your subtitle. I would have been tempted to use that as the main title because people generally respond well to the use of numbers in the headline.

Have you considered using a headline analyzer? Here is a good one to use:

http://www.aminstitute.com/headline/index.htm

I forget now who write the article that included this analyzer. I find it comes in handy. I would also use it for subtitles.

I hope that you find this information helpful!

Anita

I will definitely check out headline analyzers if we don't get the engagement we are looking for. I like the one I used, and it follows exactly on some of Bo's suggestions, as well as my perceptions of target reader interests.

I do appreciate your input on " 20 Tips & tricks ..." as my impression was just the opposite. Even though many highly ranked sites dealing with long-haul flying DO use numbers, including some as high as 26, I tend to hesitate when the number is over 10, as some are scared off by the large number. They can think that the approach might be too complicated or too much work. That said, your feedback aligns with Pernilla's thinking on the subheading, which is instructive to me. Thanks for wading in on it. I always appreciate feedback if it is constructive, even the unsolicited feedback that many hate.

Thanks,
Steve

The following links should be able to help you to write better headlines. The first is a blog by botipton which discusses ways to improve your headlines to attract readers. The second is a post about a headline analyzing tool that I find to be very helpful when writing good headlines.

I still believe that you can write a great headline with the keyword in the headline rather than the s I hope that you find these helpful going forward. Let me know how it turns out. I would love to know!

Anita

Thanks Anita,

I appreciate the info, and I have enjoyed all of the title advice Bo has offered in his posts. The headline analyzer I've not seen before, and it is interesting.

Unfortunately, I'm not in need of help writing engaging headlines - I've been doing that for decades. SEO is the challenge. If I can get my site ranking well with a subtitle keyword, or simply include a powerful keyword inside an engaging title, that would be great if I can still get to page one on google.

Failing that, I'm trying to see if adding a subtitle primarily for viewer engagement will work without messing up keyword SEO.

Steve

I am sorry that I misunderstood. I'm afraid I cannot offer any insight there. Have you tried approaching Bo on this? I'm sure he could probably offer an answer that would work for you.

Not to imply that someone else can't. I know there are a lot of people here who probably know.

In the meantime, enjoy your day!

No worries, Anita. Yes, Bo is a good choice. I tried him on one of his posts a week ago, but that query got missed, so I tried again yesterday. He actually responded to it, and I just found it - it helps a lot. Bo and Jovo seem particularly strong on this convergence between SEO and Viewer engagement with strong titles.

I'll keep this question open a bit longer to see if anything more floats to the top. If not, I'll copy Bo's response here for anyone else following this question.
Thanks,
Steve

That is great! Thank you for letting me know you are going to post that. I'll keep an eye open for it so I can learn along with you!''Have a great evening!

OK I just posted the answer from Bo in this edited question.
See the edited question answer...

I wouldn't worry about distinguishing my post from others too much. you can capitalize on someone else's good SEO as in this example. "Many people could have been alive today if they had this product" Yours could be: "Many people can stay alive by using this product: Live longer!"

David

OK, David, I think I get your point. If I do a search using a few generic, high SEO search terms, I can simply see what strong titles get listed by google, and tweak them?

While I'd still like to better understand how the tail or subtitle impact SEO, this seems like a powerful strategy. Thanks a heap for it. Google is there, so why not use what's working now?

Thanks a heap for this,
Steve

See more comments

asked in
Authoring & Writing Content
Updated

Question answered - Thanks Trish...

I'm just beginning to exchange guest blog posts with other WA members, and it's going well. This is more training than promotion, a

I think the owner of the site can reply. If you invite a guest blogger that means you trust them and share their views, or rather, they share yours...
Of course if the opinions differ,you should point out it's your opinion, not the author's.
But it's also good if there appear different points of view.:)

I think Patsy C has you covered, but I wanted to say hello! I hoe you've worked this out and that all is going well for you.

Anita

Thanks Anita,
Going great - more work and fun than I can imagine... Site is ranking on keywords, and my social media presence is growing. The only limitation now is ME, and my time. Fun but BUSY.

Hope all is strong and growing in your business. Thanks for checking in.
Cheers,
Steve

Things are going well for me and my business. I am ranked on kkeywords and my social media presence is growing as well. ThanThanks for asking!

Hello Stephen, I think PatsyC has you covered.

|Hi Stephen,

I think they can still reply. If they go to that post and click on reply for the one needing a comment. Did you check it out to see if that can be done? otherwise it doesnt make sense.

I just did a search and found this tutorial... There may be something in it, otherwise if you do a search in the bar you will find other posts about guest blogging.

Thanks Patsy,

Actually, I tried that tutorial before asking the question - turns out that while the tutorial is well written, her guidance is all on her site, and the site is no longer active - a real shame. Not sure what to do about that, as it is a dead end for people using that training. Can it be flagged for removal, or possibly she can otherwise provide the details?

Anyway, Trish answered this for me, so I'm good. This turned out to be a non-problem... Just applying common sense that hadn't yet awakened this morning :-)

That's awesome, I'm going to read how she was able to help so I can learn from this too :)

I went back to that link I left you, and the link she had lead to a website and not where it was suppose to. It should be removed for sure!

It turns out as I first stated that she should be able to leave a comment. I read Trish's information.

Happy it all worked out :)

Hey Stephen,

The guest blocker could/should make a habit to return their published post(s) and respond to all comments. You shouldn't need to be logged into the site to do that.

Searching the internet for, say, "how to handle guest blogger's post comments" (without the quotation marks, of course) should offer you a few posts on tips as to how to handle this.

Hope this helps you.

Thanks Trish...
She is willing to respond promptly, but doesn't seem to have access to do so as a user with 'contributor' role site access. Should her role be 'author'?

Of course she could reply by putting in a fresh site comment like any user, without going through the dashboard - is that typical?

OK - I think that's what you were implying...
I'm almost awake now :-)

Thanks a heap - sooner or later even the obvious stuff becomes clear!

If your author can comment on your posts on your website, she should be able to reply to comments on her published post on your website.

If someone cannot comment on your website ... it MIGHT be a theme issue or a browser issue. No one needs to have access in order to reply to comments.

You might also gain an advantage reading through the tutorial that Patsy shared with you.

Hope this helps you.

UPDATE:
Looks like you resolved this before I could complete my Reply. LOL! Not to worry Stephen ... takes me a bit to absorb stuff too, so you are NOT alone. Glad you now understand :-))

That's the first thing I mentioned, that she should still be able to reply. I didn't get why she wouldn't be able to.

Glad it's all sorted out!

That tutorial ended kinda of a mess. I went back and her comment link ended up going to a website. I left a comment there pointing that out to her. That tutorial should not be there.

Good idea Patsy. I couldn't find a tutorial which was why I suggested what I did. LOL ... so we BOTH helped out in the end. T'anks!

See more comments

What is the best way to reply to guest blog comments? closed

What is the best way to reply to guest blog comments? closed

asked in
Authoring & Writing Content
Updated

Question answered - Thanks Trish...

I'm just beginning to exchange guest blog posts with other WA members, and it's going well. This is more training than promotion, a

I think the owner of the site can reply. If you invite a guest blogger that means you trust them and share their views, or rather, they share yours...
Of course if the opinions differ,you should point out it's your opinion, not the author's.
But it's also good if there appear different points of view.:)

I think Patsy C has you covered, but I wanted to say hello! I hoe you've worked this out and that all is going well for you.

Anita

Thanks Anita,
Going great - more work and fun than I can imagine... Site is ranking on keywords, and my social media presence is growing. The only limitation now is ME, and my time. Fun but BUSY.

Hope all is strong and growing in your business. Thanks for checking in.
Cheers,
Steve

Things are going well for me and my business. I am ranked on kkeywords and my social media presence is growing as well. ThanThanks for asking!

Hello Stephen, I think PatsyC has you covered.

|Hi Stephen,

I think they can still reply. If they go to that post and click on reply for the one needing a comment. Did you check it out to see if that can be done? otherwise it doesnt make sense.

I just did a search and found this tutorial... There may be something in it, otherwise if you do a search in the bar you will find other posts about guest blogging.

Thanks Patsy,

Actually, I tried that tutorial before asking the question - turns out that while the tutorial is well written, her guidance is all on her site, and the site is no longer active - a real shame. Not sure what to do about that, as it is a dead end for people using that training. Can it be flagged for removal, or possibly she can otherwise provide the details?

Anyway, Trish answered this for me, so I'm good. This turned out to be a non-problem... Just applying common sense that hadn't yet awakened this morning :-)

That's awesome, I'm going to read how she was able to help so I can learn from this too :)

I went back to that link I left you, and the link she had lead to a website and not where it was suppose to. It should be removed for sure!

It turns out as I first stated that she should be able to leave a comment. I read Trish's information.

Happy it all worked out :)

Hey Stephen,

The guest blocker could/should make a habit to return their published post(s) and respond to all comments. You shouldn't need to be logged into the site to do that.

Searching the internet for, say, "how to handle guest blogger's post comments" (without the quotation marks, of course) should offer you a few posts on tips as to how to handle this.

Hope this helps you.

Thanks Trish...
She is willing to respond promptly, but doesn't seem to have access to do so as a user with 'contributor' role site access. Should her role be 'author'?

Of course she could reply by putting in a fresh site comment like any user, without going through the dashboard - is that typical?

OK - I think that's what you were implying...
I'm almost awake now :-)

Thanks a heap - sooner or later even the obvious stuff becomes clear!

If your author can comment on your posts on your website, she should be able to reply to comments on her published post on your website.

If someone cannot comment on your website ... it MIGHT be a theme issue or a browser issue. No one needs to have access in order to reply to comments.

You might also gain an advantage reading through the tutorial that Patsy shared with you.

Hope this helps you.

UPDATE:
Looks like you resolved this before I could complete my Reply. LOL! Not to worry Stephen ... takes me a bit to absorb stuff too, so you are NOT alone. Glad you now understand :-))

That's the first thing I mentioned, that she should still be able to reply. I didn't get why she wouldn't be able to.

Glad it's all sorted out!

That tutorial ended kinda of a mess. I went back and her comment link ended up going to a website. I left a comment there pointing that out to her. That tutorial should not be there.

Good idea Patsy. I couldn't find a tutorial which was why I suggested what I did. LOL ... so we BOTH helped out in the end. T'anks!

See more comments

asked in
The Wealthy Affiliate Platform
Updated

Good morning Kyle,

I was interacting on a WA post Paul Goodman did, and it was pulled as spam. This post:
https://my.wealthyaffiliate.com/paulgoodwin/blog/it-is-gett

In one of the early stages of the course Kyle mentioned that even when you give a negative review people can still subscribe to it because their mind is made up. From that stand point it could have been regarded as spam. You have been around much longer than me. so I wonder whether I qualify to answer you.

Of course you do, Gifty,
We all bring our personal experience, perspective and ability to WA from the first day we are here; everyone is qualified to support everyone else - that's what makes it so great to be part of the system, here.

Yes, and thanks for your perspective. In fact, it was a negative review of another system that acquainted me with WA and brought me here. However, that negative review was a clear use of long-tail keywords to advertise WA. I didn't know about long tail keywords back then, but I still knew it was an ad.

This post seemed different than that, but as I think about it, some ad copy was included in the post as an example... That might explain the reason it was tagged - understandable in my opinion, but not a good way to flag spam - the post was not spam IMHO.
Cheers,
Steve

See more comments

What makes a wa post mentioning bitcoin spam?

What makes a wa post mentioning bitcoin spam?

asked in
The Wealthy Affiliate Platform
Updated

Good morning Kyle,

I was interacting on a WA post Paul Goodman did, and it was pulled as spam. This post:
https://my.wealthyaffiliate.com/paulgoodwin/blog/it-is-gett

In one of the early stages of the course Kyle mentioned that even when you give a negative review people can still subscribe to it because their mind is made up. From that stand point it could have been regarded as spam. You have been around much longer than me. so I wonder whether I qualify to answer you.

Of course you do, Gifty,
We all bring our personal experience, perspective and ability to WA from the first day we are here; everyone is qualified to support everyone else - that's what makes it so great to be part of the system, here.

Yes, and thanks for your perspective. In fact, it was a negative review of another system that acquainted me with WA and brought me here. However, that negative review was a clear use of long-tail keywords to advertise WA. I didn't know about long tail keywords back then, but I still knew it was an ad.

This post seemed different than that, but as I think about it, some ad copy was included in the post as an example... That might explain the reason it was tagged - understandable in my opinion, but not a good way to flag spam - the post was not spam IMHO.
Cheers,
Steve

See more comments

asked in
The Wealthy Affiliate Platform
Updated

I was told by email and on my dashboard half an hour ago that I had a profile message (response to my message hours ago) but it isn't on the profile message board. Anyone else

no problem here

OK for me.

Hey, Steve! It seems to be working fine to me as well! But I’ll be aware and come and leave you a comment if I find something unusual!

the system is working ok for me, sometimes people delete their comments, maybe unlikely in your profile though...maybe refresh the page and who knows, if it is a glitch it will show up later.

Does wa have a systems glitch, now?

Does wa have a systems glitch, now?

asked in
The Wealthy Affiliate Platform
Updated

I was told by email and on my dashboard half an hour ago that I had a profile message (response to my message hours ago) but it isn't on the profile message board. Anyone else

no problem here

OK for me.

Hey, Steve! It seems to be working fine to me as well! But I’ll be aware and come and leave you a comment if I find something unusual!

the system is working ok for me, sometimes people delete their comments, maybe unlikely in your profile though...maybe refresh the page and who knows, if it is a glitch it will show up later.

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