As per your request, we’ve decided to look into Project Payday once more. This time, we sent in Secret Agent Cheryl to do our dirty work.
It’s been about a year and a half since I wrote my first Project Payday review. Since then, it has grown to be quite popular. In fact, it’s the fifth most popular post here at I’ve Tried That. I have since been called a number of names for not actively trying the program, but still offering my opinion on it. Well, we decided to take a deeper look into the program. To do so, we brought in Cheryl to act as a secret agent for I’ve Tried That. Her article is a brief look into what you receive when you sign up for Project Payday. Cheryl has agreed to do a followup post later on with more details on her specific earnings. Stay tuned.
A Look into Project Payday
When I was offered the opportunity to try Project PayDay, I figured why not? I had nothing to lose, right? So many people had commented on the original blog entry that they were making money through PPD, there had to be something to it.
I signed up on 01/07/2009 and paid the $34.95 fee to join. I was provided with a login and password to access Project Payday’s training site with resource materials. Throughout the signup process and training I was offered the opportunity to purchase additional materials such as step-by-step video tutorials or reference books for additional charges (usually $19.95 or more), but I opted to take the traditional route.
So, what is Project Payday?
Project PayDay (PPD) is a resource for finding out how to make money by working those “Click Here for a Free iPod” or “You Can Win a Free Wii” banner ads you see everywhere. PPD teaches you how to make money by becoming a paid referral for someone who wants that iPod or that Wii, and eventually becoming someone who pays for those referrals and cashes in on the profits from these free items.
The instruction manual is clear and concise, with videos peppered throughout to make some concepts more clear. Project Payday has a 3-step process, called “methods” that claim to get you making money quickly and keep you making money.
Method 1 is where everyone starts. The manual explains that to get started making money, you must participate in a referral forum. It gives you several to choose from, and even shows you what to do to start managing trades and “going green” to earn money right away. You log in to the forum, find someone who is “buying” referral opportunities (Buyer) and selling your services. You set up a trade agreement with the Buyer through the built-in trade manager, and then they give you their referral link. You use the link to log in to the site and complete enough offers or credits to “go green” or show up on the Buyer’s list as a qualified referral. Say the Buyer wants to get a $400 television from one of these sites. If they need just 4 qualified referrals, they could pay 4 people $25 each to sign up and become a qualified referral, and they’ve just paid $100 for a $400 TV. This is where you make money – you offer to be a referral, go on the site, sign up and complete the offers required. Once you have met the requirements, you let the Buyer know, and they verify it with the site, then pay you the asking price for the referral.
Sounds easy, right? There is a catch. In order to become a qualified referrer, you must sign up a certain number of offers. There are many to choose from, including makeup, pantyhose, credit reporting services, money making services, jewelry, coffee and more. Some of the offers are free to try, while others can cost from $1 – $50 or more, depending on what you are purchasing. This is usually an introductory offer, and must be cancelled within 7 days in order to keep recurring monthly fees or dues from being charged to your credit card. These fees can range from $7.95 – $79.95 or more per month.
The trick is, you can’t cancel too quickly, or you might end up “going red” and being forced to return any money you’ve earned back to the Buyer. If you sign up for the trial offer and cancel it a day or two later, you risk losing your referral pay. Most Buyers recommend cancelling on day 6 of a trial offer, just to be safe.
It sounds simple enough: earn money just to go on a site and be a referral. Just remember that nearly every referral fee will cost you something, whether it’s a trial fee, a membership fee, or the like. And if you don’t keep meticulous records of your transactions, you can end up paying through the nose when those monthly dues and fees start piling up. A $25 referral fee on a site could end up costing you $5, $10, even the whole $25 or more.
You also can’t just stay at Method 1 forever and continue to make money. Every site has numerous offers, but all sites have virtually the same offers. In addition, some offers are actually the same company. For instance, there might be six different credit report offers on one site, but they are all the same company. Try to sign up for two or three of them and you’ll get rejected for duplication. At that point you might as well move on to Method 2.
Method 2 builds on Method 1. You’ve already signed up for several sites to “go green” and earned cash. Now you become the Buyer, buying greens from people who are working Method 1. You pay them to complete offers for you, usually a small percentage of the amount of the product or money you are receiving from the referral site. For instance, you want a $500 PayPal cash payout. If that payout requires 10 referrals, and you pay $20 per referral, then you’re paying $200 for a $500 payout, for a profit of $300. Not too bad. Just one of those a week will net you about $1200 per month in extra income.
Method 3 builds from Method 2. You go from buying referrals for cash to buying referrals for other items like electronics, which you can then sell. This method is described by Project PayDay as somewhat more lucrative than the other methods, since electronics may have a higher profit margin per referral than cash.
The Bottom Line
Project Payday itself is an information source. You find out where to go to make the money, and what to do once you get there. Once you’ve gotten comfortable with Method 1 and 2, PPD even provides a mentor or two that can help you increase your income.
PPD also keeps in regular contact with you, e-mailing once or twice a week with “special offers” just like the ones you’ve been signing up for. These are generally offers such as a $1.97 trial offer on how to make money on eBay, and PPD refunds the trial fee back to you. Of course, there is no mention of the exorbitant monthly fees that program charges (for which PPD most certainly receives a kickback).
Money can be made with Project Payday, but the work is tedious, time-consuming, detail-intensive and risky. You must provide personal information (including your phone number), thus increasing your spam e-mails, junk mail and phone calls. You must also provide credit card information to sites that may not be strictly legitimate. Failure to note the details of the offers and keep track of orders and cancellations can result in significant financial losses.
I have been working the PPD program for the last 3 weeks and will report what actually happened in my next article, including how much money I made. Yes! I did make money.
Interested? Click here for more information on Project Payday.
Cheryl is a writer in Southwest Florida.
You can read her blog at: http://www.cliopatra.net/














20 Responses
Well done! This is a wonderful outline of Project Payday. Yes, the “Project Payday” product is a information resource, and the methods outlined do work.
You are so right, the work is “tedious, time-consuming, detail-intensive.” Its defiantly not a get rice quick scheme. You must be detailed oriented, patient, and focused if you want to achieve any short or long term success.
Over the last 14 months I have made close to $30,000 using the Project Payday techniques. So its work for me.
I’m looking forward to your next installment. Did you trade with me?
Method 2 is trading green for greeen with other referals.
Once you have plenty of green sites you move to method 3 which is paying referrals to claim cash or product.
I’ve tried PPD off and on. It’s too complicated for me. I’ve ended up stuck w/ product and paying fees after being 1 day late canceling. It is a good way to make a quick $100 bucks, but I’m not organized enough to do it everyday. Way to many offers to try to keep track of.
Hi Steve!
Just got through reading your “Deeper… P.P-D.” And I very much appreciated its excellent informative content. It was precisely what I was looking for,to help me make an informed decision on whether or not to get involved with them. However, I do have a question for you regarding one aspect of their program which you neglected to mention.
As you can probably imagine, a significant number of us money-seekers, regardless of whatever else we may or may not be trying out presently, I think we always keep one eye peeled for a “better opportunity.” So if and when we find it, how hard is it to drop P.P-D. and move on to something else without getting burned? I mean, is it relatively easy, just as labor intensive as it is to keep it going, or worse?
Thanks in advance.
AL2525
Hey guys, thanks for giving ol PPD another look! Agreed, it’s tedious, a bit risky, and there are better options out there…but most people can say the same about their Day Jobs! lol…
Thanks again.
~David~
I wanted to respond to AL2525 comment from February 25th. AL – PPD is a drop-in sort of program. You can log in to the forums and work whenever you want. If you’re in the middle of a couple of trades there may be some wait time involved, but it’s not as if someone is looking over your shoulder to make sure you do everything just so. But once you get in, the push is to keep moving forweard with the steps. You can make very little money with Method 1.
TO CHERYL:
Thanks for the input, but more specifically what I want to know is, once you are already involved with the program up to your neck, say the 3rd. level, is one able to just drop it suddenly & walk away altogether, BUT without getting penalized for the “early withdrawal?”
AL.
Sure, you can drop out whenever you want. You’re building your own business, essentially. If you want to quit, you can quit anytime.
You can quit in Method 1 if you decided it wasn’t for you.
You can quit pretty much when ever you want. Just make sure you don’t have any offers that haven’t been canceled, or that you don’t owe any one $$ for going green…
TO CHERYL:
Thanks again Cheryl, but Mosoi148 gave me the PRECISE answer I was looking to find. But thanks for trying (twice) anyway.
AL.
TO MOSOI148:
All I can say is thank you. That was the answer to the RIGHT question I was asking.
AL.
This whole payday scheme is a scam including this site. This is just another site which pretends NOT to like something then one day they were enlightened and now the scam was sent from heaven.
What a pack of morons.
I’vetriedthat.com …shame on you.
I take it you didn’t really read through the entire post. Cheryl writes that she did make money, but found it hardly worthwhile. I don’t understand how you interpreted that as us claiming ‘Project Payday was sent from heaven’ but, it’s not. It’s hardly worth an effort.
i love this site. thank you so much for your hard work on presenting so much info to folks.
i tried ppd and it wasn’t for me. way too tedious and i just never felt right about signing up for several trials and then cancelling. felt like it wasn’t in “good faith.”
cheryl did a great job on portraying exactly how the “program” works! thanks!
deb
Where is the update that was suppoesd to follow?
@ Dave – http://www.ivetriedthat.com/2009/03/05/can-you-make-money-with-project-payday/
Hello:
Got to add my 2 cents on this one. I too joined through an affiliate offer from Java coffee. I don’t remember how much I paid but got some coffee at a discounted price. Of course, it was a reaccuring, auto ship deal. I canceled before the trial date was up and low and behold, the next month I received another shipment and was charged $ 49.95 for 5 pounds of coffee. I contacted the company and was given the runaround about getting a refund. They finall agreed to take it back and credit my card. I had to pay a return postage fee and a restocking fee. In the end I got about $ 10.00 of my $ 49.95 back. As far as Project Payday it self goes, I was sent an offer by one of their member right after joining “to help me get started making money” I was promised $ 50.00 just to sign up for one of a hand full of offers which I could either keep or quit. I thought cool a fast $ 50.00 from the start. When I went to check out the offers, it was going to cost me a min. of $ 50.00 off the top which I could cancel if I wanted to after the fact. None of the offers were anything I was interested in to start with. I did not do it as I did not want to take the chance of not being able to get my money back. I proceded to get emailed 5 or more times a day by this guy wanting to know why I had not compleated any of the offers yet. I told him I wasn’t spending $ 50.00 or more to make $ 50.00. I have never had anything to do with them since. I felt it was a highly dishonest way of making money. I can not believe that this is in any way legal. Are people making money with this program, I’m sure they are. I could also go out and sell drugs and make money too but I’m not going to……
What happened to the followup post?
This seems like one of those blogs that “pretends” to give a review but all they’re really doing is promoting their affiliate link for the product they’re reviewing.
Is everyone a crook these days?
Layne-
Try searching next time before calling us crooks.
http://www.ivetriedthat.com/2009/03/05/can-you-make-money-with-project-payday/
I read all the articles that were posted at the end of the second one, after saying it was hardly worth the effort there is a link that takes you to the ppd site. Layne I would have to agree with you this place is promoting the site they are trying to discredit lol……..HORRAY FOR IDIOTS THAT THINK SO LITTLE OF PEOPLE….
Oh please.
Yes we still linked to the site. Why? Because despite not earning much, we still made money from it. Some people are interested in making money regardless of the effort you have to put in.
Get a grip.