Warning to the bloggers about Guest posts

Kishor Kumar
Kishor Kumar
from Ghaziabad
6 years ago

A month back I received an email from a person named Jennifer Horton (obviously a fake name). She (probably a HE) asked for sponsored post on my website with a link to their website COUPONSJI. She bargained for the rate at 90% discount roughly. And, even after refusing kept sending requests. In the end I decided to let them publish the post at the measly rate with their link. When I asked for the payment, they said that I will get it ASAP. A week passed, payment wasn't received. I sent a reminder. She said I will receive it 'today'. Not received. Even after 20 days it wasn't received. Then, yesterday, she said that her manager wants a minor change in the article. She wanted me to add an author bio with another link to her website. I refused and I asked for payment to what I have already delivered. She said that she will pay extra for the link (and her extra was Rs 100). Obviously, I refused. Now, she says they will either pay me extra Rs 100 with earlier bargained amount only if I put another link in author bio, or she will not pay at all.

So advise you to beware of doing guest posts with JENNIFER HORTON or COUPONSJI. Those guys will not pay you.

Replies 1 to 10 of 10 Ascending
Niharika Verma
Niharika Verma
from Noida
6 years ago

I received paid post from CouponsJi but luckily I got payment on time. Though they agree on discounted rate. My friend shared about CouponsJi Post Collaboration, I checked few details and said Okay. And There is yes, "He" is behind CouponsJi. Everything went well. There was no one with the mentioned name. But yes, name you mentioned sounds totally fraud.

Arvind Passey
Arvind Passey
from Delhi
6 years ago

Yes, we've all had similar experiences... the right thing to do is to just rewrite the post if it was really good because a good article lives for long. Their link will obviously not be needed because the post is talking about a concept.

pranita deshpande
pranita deshpande
from latur
6 years ago

i have so many of these experiences.

Sourabh Kumar
Sourabh Kumar
from Jaipur
6 years ago

Thank you sir, for the information.

Tirthankar Bose
Tirthankar Bose
from NEW DELHI
6 years ago

Thank you sir for this information

Jitaditya Narzary
Jitaditya Narzary
from Delhi
6 years ago

Just remove the link but keep the article... they will return...

Arvind Passey
from Delhi
6 years ago

Nice idea.

Avinash
Avinash
from Bengaluru
6 years ago

Nice will keep that mind

GAYATHRI
GAYATHRI
from HYDERABAD
6 years ago

Thank you Kishorji helpful for new bloggers like me.

The Sorcerer
The Sorcerer
from Mumbai
6 years ago

When you refuse an offer but they still send requests, you normally ignore them and mark it as spam. One agency used to do the same and patronised further by enlarging some words and using 'caveman' sentence structure. Mark it as spam. It is done. Further, you didn't even take the payment first. At the end of the day, you're a service provider. If you accepted it, you're not ripped off. You are ripped off your payment, which honestly you could have handled the situation by taking the payment first. This part you should know- once a similar situation happened with another blogger. Since she wasn't paid, she posted another one criticising the brand because she wasn't paid. Her readers were angry- not at the agency but towards her. Because she recommended green tea extracts to be safe and natural but in reality, she did so because she got money out of it. Credibility goes down the rabbit hole. I am not saying not to earn. I am saying to check a service's credibility. Many coupon websites are data miners who sell name, email address and location to someone else, usually to SEO fellas who add your email address to a newsletter of a client that paid them to do so. 

Vikash Kumar Bhakta
Vikash Kumar Bhakta
from Raigarh
6 years ago

Thanks for sharing this information.


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