Triond.com – Get Paid for Content

Triond.comIf you are producing content and are lost as to where to post it to earn some dough then hop on to triond.com.

Triond is a middleman company that links your submitted content to buys who visit their site or the sites of their affiliates. Content creators including artists, writers, audio/video producers, etc. register an account, submit their work to triond.com and once it is approved Triond posts it on the site they deem most appropriate, either on their networks or an affiliate’s network. From then on, you will receive 50% of the monthly ad revenue generated by your content. Monthly payments will be sent by check, Western Union money transfer, or directly to your PayPal account. The coolest part of this site is the wide variety of content they accept. Accepted content includes content in any subject, any language, writing, videos, pictures, podcasts, original recorded mucis, and the list goes on. On Triond.com you can view you content history, number of times it has been viewed, how much cash it has generated, and your income information.

Triond.com In Their Own Words

“Triond is a comprehensive publishing service that enables users to publish quality content of any type while maximizing its revenue-generating potential.

The Triond vision is to support quality user-generated content online by allowing authors to earn royalties for publishing their work on the Web.”

Why Triond.com It Might Be A Killer

This is a free service so it seems that the content provider looses nothing in this exchange. Sounds like a sweet idea but the mystery is how much cash can be earned by ad revenue, and if their content is up for sale. If authors only have a chance to earn through ad revenue they are probably missing out on actually selling their content to buyers. The content is very interesting and deserves to earn more than monthly royalties.

Some Questions About Triond.com

On the website is it not clear if the content provider can continue to submit their work to other sites or publishers. Also, it is not clear if the published content is up for sale or not. The “affiliate” networks is a vague term that doesn’t actually mean anything to people who are working hard and want to know where their material could end up. Triond.com

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