Alexanderthegreat
936 posts

Alexanderthegreat
@AffiliateaAlex
Internet Marketer Living in NYC. Check out my Youtube Channel below
nyc شامل ہوئے Ağustos 2024
56 فالونگ68 فالوورز

"Since that last post blew up — a lot of you DMed asking how the student did made $7000 in 4 days.
Here's the exact 3-step system he used:
1. Picked a sweepstakes offer on a CPA network
2. Built a simple free traffic funnel
3. Posted consistently for 4 days
That's it. $7000 later.
This is what I teach inside Exposure Club.
Reply "IN" and I'll send you details."

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@JamesonCamp I use do something similar on plentyoffish website back in the day
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INSANE blackhat funnel to run here
> Make great profile of hot fitness girl with GPT2
> One photo is a collage of “before and after”
> match with overweight guys
> chat it up with them, as they inevitably compliment their body or looks, slowly nudge them towards peptides offer
> $$$$$
> hire and scale
> more $$$$$
Ironically this probably is helping those people
Also - please don’t do this. It’s def not above board.
My brain just looks for funnels and creative loop holes, and it’s fun to chat about
Watch King@watchking69
I been matching with big girls on tinder and selling them peptides Up $11k this week just on reta.
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@LibOrNormal meanwhile he has 2.5 baby mommy's & only see's his kids doing the holidays, when he feels like being a dad for the gram
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@lostbutlucky I miss it when it was called dollar brew or the triangle where you could buy $1 beers from the Chinese store & it was skaters and locals
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A 16-year-old's YouTube channels have 14 million subscribers and zero ads.
Brands pay him $80,000 per video to keep it that way.
Pause at 0:10.
The screen recording opens on what looks like a normal teenage bedroom. A twin XL bed pushed against the wall. A poster of the periodic table above the desk. A pair of Adidas Sambas on the floor. The MacBook is plugged into a 27-inch external monitor that's showing what looks like a Notion-style operations dashboard.
The dashboard has 11 rows. Each row is a channel. Each row has 8 columns - channel name, niche, subscribers, monthly uploads, monthly views, active brand deal, brand deal value, ads enabled.
The "ads enabled" column reads "OFF" across all 11 rows.
The "active brand deal" column reads as follows:
Channel 1 (deep-sea documentaries): Surfshark, $84,000 per video, 1 video/month
Channel 2 (Cold War history): Established Titles, $72,000 per video, 1 video/month
Channel 3 (ancient mysteries): BetterHelp, $94,000 per video, 1 video/month
Channel 4 (military disasters): Squarespace, $68,000 per video, 1 video/month
Channel 5 (space exploration): Brilliant.org, $78,000 per video, 1 video/month
Channel 6 (true crime): MagicMind, $112,000 per video, 1 video/month
The other 5 channels show "PENDING" in the active brand deal column. He's holding them. The math is in the holding.
Last month's invoiced revenue: $340,000.
He could have made more. He's chosen not to.
Here's the play.
The faceless YouTube genre has trained the entire creator economy to think of YouTube as an AdSense game - you build a channel, you turn on monetization, you collect $4-$12 per thousand views, and at scale you clear $80K-$200K a month. The math is real. Operators clear those numbers. The 16-year-old's prior model worked exactly this way for his first 7 months.
Then he ran the actual unit economics.
A channel doing 8 million monthly views in the documentary niche pulls roughly $52,000 in AdSense revenue at standard CPM. The same channel can sell a single 90-second integration to a brand like Surfshark or BetterHelp for $40,000-$95,000 per video. If the channel uploads 1 brand-integrated video per month and turns AdSense off entirely, the brand alone pays more than the AdSense would.
Turning AdSense off does three things that turning it on prevents:
The viewer experience is cleaner. No pre-roll, no mid-roll, no end-roll. Watch time goes up. Retention goes up. The algorithm rewards the channel harder.
The brand integration commands a premium. Brands pay extra for ad-free environments because their integration is the only commercial message in the video. CPM-wise, an 8-second mid-roll might command $25-$50. An exclusive 90-second integration in an ad-free video commands $80,000+.
The channel positions as premium. Once a viewer realizes one of his channels never has ads, they subscribe at higher rates and watch deeper into the catalog. The retention compound creates a moat.
He calls this his "no-ad signal."
Channels that never run AdSense send a signal to viewers that the creator has alternative revenue. The signal is binary - either the channel runs ads or it doesn't - and viewers pattern-match to "premium creator" without ever consciously processing why. Engagement rates on his channels run 31% above the niche average. Subscribers stick around 4x longer than the documentary niche median.
He's the only operator running this play at scale.
The production stack is what you'd expect - Claude Code for scripts, ElevenLabs for voiceover, Higgsfield for B-roll generation in niches where stock footage doesn't exist, Pexels and Storyblocks for everything else, ffmpeg for stitching. He runs the whole pipeline on a single Mac mini in his bedroom that cost him $599. Four channels render in parallel during peak hours. Total stack cost: $310/month.
Each channel's "factory file" - the 4,000-word system prompt that locks the voice, pacing, and structure - took him 4-6 weeks to refine. The brand integrations are written by Claude as part of the script. He's never recorded his own voice. He's never appeared on camera. He's never spoken with a brand representative on the phone.
The brand deals are negotiated entirely through email. The email account is in his older brother's name. His older brother is 23, lives in Pittsburgh, works at a logistics startup, and doesn't know the channels are AdSense-free or that the deals are six figures. The brother takes a flat 4% management fee and assumes the kid is making "decent money for a high schooler."
The kid is making more than his brother's CEO.
His Stripe progression: March $24,000. April $61,000. May $112,000. June $178,000. July $234,000. August $278,000. September $312,000. October $340,000.
Total revenue since March: $1.54M.
His monthly overhead - Mac mini (amortized over 24 months), electricity, Claude API at heavy usage, ElevenLabs, Higgsfield, stock footage subscriptions, Twilio for verification numbers, 11 different YouTube management dashboards - runs $1,940/month. Margin: 99.4%.
He's been recruited by 3 different media holding companies and 1 private equity firm. The highest offer was $14.8M for the 11-channel portfolio. He declined. At current run-rate, the portfolio compounds to a higher acquisition multiple every quarter.
Someone in the replies asked the obvious question - why doesn't he turn on AdSense and stack both revenue streams?
He responded in a quote tweet: "Because the brands know. The minute I turn ads on, the next deal renegotiation drops 40%. The brands are paying premium for exclusivity. If I'm running pre-roll for Liquid I.V., the integration with Liquid Death loses its uniqueness. The premium IS the exclusivity. AdSense is the bait that traps everyone else at $50K/month."
Someone tried to replicate the model. They built 4 faceless channels, grew them to 800K-1.2M subscribers, then turned AdSense off and started pitching brand deals. Their best month was $14,000. They posted a teardown asking what was missing.
He replied: "You pitched as a small channel offering ad-free exclusivity. Brands paid you what they'd pay for ad-free exclusivity at your scale - about $4K per video. The premium kicks in at 1M+ subscribers per channel and at niche dominance. You need to be the #1 channel in your category for the no-ad signal to convert to premium pricing. Until then you're just leaving AdSense money on the table."
The geography matters too. Most of his channels target topics that compound - deep-sea, Cold War, ancient mysteries - categories where catalog views compound for 18-36 months after upload. A single video he uploaded in April is still pulling 200K views/month. Brands pay a premium for placements in evergreen videos because their integration keeps running.
He's 16. He's been doing this since March. He runs the operation between 4pm and 9pm on weekdays, plus most of Saturday morning. His parents think he "edits videos for a YouTube channel." They don't know the channel count, the subscriber count, or the revenue.
His sister told their parents that he's been buying her takeout from DoorDash three times a week and she's worried he's into something illegal.
He's not. He's just running the most profitable monetization play in faceless YouTube history.
Last week he closed his 7th active brand deal - a 6-month exclusive with a sleep supplement company. $84,000 per video for the next 6 videos on his oldest channel. Total contract value: $504,000.
By the time he graduates high school, his 11-channel portfolio will have invoiced $7M-$10M.
Somewhere, a 31-year-old faceless YouTube agency owner with a 6-person team and a $34,000/month payroll is wondering why their AdSense-monetized channels are stuck at $80K/month while a kid with no team is clearing $340K/month from fewer subscribers.
He isn't competing with bigger channels.
He isn't competing with agencies.
He's competing with a 16-year-old who turned off the ads.
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@affprinter did you really do this? or did ai write the guide that you sell
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Not only is @ToshiBet giving away $100,000 with its World Cup Last Man Standing Challenge...
They've just launched Predict6 👀
A brand new FREE World Cup game where you predict the exact scores of 6 matches for a chance to win $5,000 every round.
That's $90,000 in total prizes up for grabs 💰
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This World Cup, football knowledge pays 🏆⚽️
Get involved 👉 toshi.bet/predict

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@Mappy6984 this guy goes around nyc and does this all the time for clout
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@BrunoF566 i never seem a cpa network pay $7 for a lead gen job offer.
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Reddit has much higher purchase intent than TikTok and almost no affiliates are using it.
Someone scrolling TikTok is passive. Someone on Reddit asking “what’s the cheapest home insurance for a first time buyer” is ready to act. That difference in intent is worth significantly more per click.
Car and home insurance lead gen offers on Glitchy pay well above standard CPA because the conversion is a form fill. No purchase. No credit card. Just someone submitting their details for a quote.
Reddit is full of people in that exact mindset. First time homeowner subreddits. Personal finance threads. Car buying communities. People actively searching for the answer your offer provides.
You’re not interrupting anyone. You’re walking into a conversation that already exists. Someone asks which home insurance is worth it for a first time buyer. You reply with genuine advice, mention you recently got a quote through a comparison tool, and drop the link naturally at the end.
It doesn’t read like an ad because it isn’t one. That’s the format Reddit trusts and the reason it converts where a direct promotion would get buried.
Sign up to Glitchy and find the lead gen offer → app.glitchy.com/ref?id=60748
Most affiliates are too busy competing for the same TikTok angles to ever think to do this.
That’s exactly why the opportunity is still there, so why aren’t you taking it?

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