Internet Taxes: State Governments Want You to Become Their Tax Collector

Internet taxesStarting with New York, there’s a movement to force those with affiliate programs to collect taxes on products sold and remit the taxes to the state. This can apply even if your business is based elsewhere.

Why is this happening? The state governments are broke and looking for ways to increase their revenues during the recession. This means targeting other revenue streams. Currently, there are about a half dozen states (including California) that want to turn you into a tax collector.

So, in addition to collecting sales taxes sold on stuff sold to residents in your own state, you’ll get the additional ‘joy’ of collecting for other states too.

For now, some online retailers that fall within the New York law (because of the amount they sell to New York customers) have simply discontinued their affiliate programs for New York residents. That’s a temporary fix.

This type of nonsense will continue until the governments figure out a unified system to collect taxes online and disburse the funds at the federal, state, and local level. The issue isn’t going away. There’s simply too much money at stake that greedy politicians want to get their hands on and cause you a headache in the process.

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FTC: What is the Federal Trade Commission Doing to Internet Marketing?

FTC testimonialsFor good or bad, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission under the Obama administration is going to take a more pro-consumer stance than we’ve seen in years. What’s that mean to your business?

With little understanding of how social media works, the FTC will be looking at its prior success in cracking down on deceptive business practices both in franchising and multilevel (MLM)/network marketing.

Here’s where I see things headed…

1. Affiliates will be required to disclose financial compensation is involved when they promote a particular product or service in exchange for a commission. In particular, this is going to affect “review” sites, blogger “recommendations,” Facebook posts, and even Tweets that contain affiliate links. This is going to be particularly troublesome for Twitter because of the 140-character limit.

2. Anyone who receives a complimentary review copy and writes or blogs a recommendation will need to disclose the “freebie” to the reader. That means no more positive spinning buzz for a $2,000 info product as a favor to a friend who gave you a free review copy pre-launch.

3. Testimonials are going to need verification for accuracy and, if the results are atypical, there will need to be a prominent disclaimer to that effect plus a disclosure as to what are typical results. For example, if Joe Smith claims he made $10,000 the first month using your biz opp product, you better (a) verify Smith’s claim is accurate, (b) let the reader know if those results are atypical, and (c) disclose what the typical purchaser really earns.

4. If there are expert endorsements, there will likely be a requirement that the endorsement is backed by generally accepted scientific proof (not some wild theory from Dr. Ima Quack who earned her doctorate from the correspondence school New Age University of Alternative Reality Living while institutionalized as a psychiatric patient). Bogus testimonials aren’t going to cut it, particular when your offer relates to earning money or health issues.

5. In lawsuits and actions by state attorneys general, all of the above will be taken into account when making charges of fraudulent and deceptive trade practices against Internet marketers. That’s in addition to what the FTC and FDA will do at the federal level.

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Profit: 2 Simple Ways to Increase the Money You Make On The Internet

Internet profitsI spoke last month at Eric Louviere’s MemberSnap event in Austin. It was easy to see who really ‘gets it’ when it comes to online marketing. As Eric pointed out, if you’ve got a good product or service you’re selling online, if you’re not making as much as you want, it pretty much boils down to traffic and conversion.

1. Increase the traffic to your offer.
2. Boost the conversion rates.

Instead of doing this, most online marketers focus on the latest get-rich-quick or black hat method of gaming the system for a fast buck. Jacks-of-all-trades instead of mastering one.

I’ve yet to meet a long-term successful marketer who has mastered everything necessary to run an online business. Focus on your core strengths and outsource everything else instead of trying to (poorly) reinvent the wheel.

Good at product creation but lousy at web design? Do the former and outsource the latter. It is insanity to devote your time to designing sites when your skills lie elsewhere. Hate customer service but love setting up profitable pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns? Why do both? Spend that time on PPC and get some people-friendly independent contractors to handle your customer service.

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