Testimonials, Disclaimers, Disclosure and the Federal Trade Commission

(Reading time: 3 – 5 minutes)

The Federal Trade Commission has issued new guidelines for bloggers governing how testimonials and disclosures are handled. For the most part, it’s a non-issue.

However, because I am an affiliate of several companies, I’m going to make some disclosures, right here and now:


Assume that every link on Website In A Weekend benefits me financially. This means that if I review a book, music, a service, or a product of any kind that I am going to be financially compensated.

The way the FTC guidelines are written, the actual truth is pretty much irrelevant. Consider me paid for everything I do, make your decision accordingly.

Even more, your visiting Website In A Weekend benefits me financially.

In fact, here on Website In A Weekend, everything I do, and everything you do, is expressly designed to funnel as much money into my pocket, as fast as possible.

This means that if you click on a link, any link, assume that I get paid for it.
If you click on an image, any image, assume I get paid for it.

If you buy something from me, there will be no testimonials concerning how effective that product may be. This part of the FTC ruling effectively destroys testimonials. It renders all testimonials suspect, even if they’re true.

If you send me a testimonial, the most I can accept is something like “Dave is a fun guy to work with. He makes me feel good, etc.” Publishing testimonials with claims for specific results puts me at odds with the FTC, as best as I can figure out.

Actually, this good news for me, because I now have even less reason to attempt to acquire testimonials.

Instead, I’m going to continue to give away even more really good free tutorials, and let people sort it out in the comments. It’s taken 9 months, and over 100 tutorials, but Website In A Weekend is now starting to get traction.

For the new version of my upcoming ebook, I’ll simply ask whether you liked reading it or not. Sure, it’s useful, and it might get you long term traffic results, but these guidelines really take the heat off of me. Due to guidelines from FTC, I’m not really allowed to report any specific results, so if you had fun reading it, let me know. If it’s no fun to read, ask for your full refund.

In the end, I don’t think these guidelines are going to change anything at all. Gullible and greedy people will still find a way to get ripped off, then complain about their stupidity.


You can’t con an honest man.

Lest you think this is totally tongue in cheek, please read the following links as well:

  1. Michael Fortin weighs in.
  2. Some questions from Ron Hogan.
  3. In depth examples from The Internet Patrol.
    Some of these examples are amazing. If the FTC is serious, these guidelines will change all of advertising, at least for companies too small to lobby for exemption!
  4. Here’s a spiffy disclosure generator.
  5. [November 7 2009]: John Chow states his (sponsored) disclosure policy. I love this guy! He’s got brass.

By the way, if you found this article useful, send an empty email to wp-weekend.ftc@aweber.com to get more useful tips, tricks, lessons on WordPress, news on security updates, etc. You’ll the get the cutting edge stuff a couple of times per month. It’s spam-free, privacy protected, yadda yadda yadda. You’ll have to confirm to get in; opting out later is an easy click. Just an empty email to wp-weekend.ftc@aweber.com does the trick.

WordPress: the Quiet Revolution Taking the Web by Storm

(Reading time: 2 – 3 minutes)

There are certain enabling technologies which change the way we think, the way we act.

Microsoft. Apple. Netscape. Wikipedia. Google. Facebook. Twitter.

WordPress.

Yes, WordPress!

Microsoft and Apple provided a necessary hardware.

Netscape and Google provided the web as we know it today.

Facebook, Twitter and WordPress are enabling person-to-person communication.

Writing web pages used to be time consuming. Not particularly difficult, but definitely time consuming. Building a website was even more time consuming. Building large, content-driven websites such as the WordPress system cost millions of dollars just a few years ago. Now, you can install WordPress for free using an incredibly inexpensive internet hosting company… of which there are thousands.

The barrier to entry to the internet is almost gone… for both reading… and writing.

WordPress helps fulfill the original promise of the World Wide Web, where knowledge can be shared, modified, extended, criticized, categorized and celebrated. By anyone. By everyone. Easily.

WordPress makes sharing trivial. Want to collaborate? Easy, set up a couple of accounts on a WordPress blog… you’re in business.

Don’t like something? Leave a comment.

Want to know what people think? Ask for feedback, allow comments.

Need a website for your small (or even large) business? Easy. Use WordPress. At least for getting started! If you need more later, your existing WordPress site can be moved when you know exactly what you need.

It’s funny how all those other technologies get the lion’s share of the press and public attention. While the underlying WordPress technology just keeps chugging along, powering more and more sites, serving more and more pages, quietly, without calling attention to itself, just getting the job done.

Here’s my prediction, based on watching the internet evolve for over 15 years: because WordPress enables the web equivalent of email (and usenet) spam, within a very short time, 90% of the publicly available web will consist of spam blogs… powered by WordPress! If that isn’t success, I don’t know what is!

First person to leave a comment telling me what I think half the remaining web pages will serve gets a half hour of free coaching (offer expires August 7).