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May 17, 2008

 
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Jeremy Palmer: The Million Dollar Man


 




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Harrison Gevirtz: The Yearling


By: Alexandra Wharton

July/August 2007 Issue: Page 80 Print Version Print | Send To a Friend Email | DIGG Digg This

Harrison Gevirtz surfs his Treo during his morning commute, tries to fit in emails with affiliate managers during the day and takes phone calls during dinnertime, much to the chagrin of his family.

This sounds like any hard worker in the performance marketing space, you think. The only difference is that Gevirtz is a freshman. No, he is not a freshman in college, not the next Shawn Fanning (of Napster fame) working out of a dorm room. Gevirtz is a freshman in high school – a 15- year-old wunderkind.

Gevirtz first got exposed to the world of online commerce by selling diamonds and stamps through eBay auctions and Overstock Auctions when he was 12 years old. Mostly he sold items in the hundred-dollar range but once he sold a $4,000 diamond. The experiences were exhilarating but he was not so thrilled with the shipping process – packing material filled his bedroom and the every-other-day trips to the post office were a drag.

Next, Gevirtz built a MySpace help site through a turnkey solution that cost him $12 on the Digital Points forum. He promoted the site through "basic marketing initiatives like directory submissions" and uploaded ads and also created ads that were his own but looked like AdSense ones.

He says it was his "first gallop into affiliate marketing" and he began to bring in some bucks. But because Gevirtz was on a "crummy ad network" he was getting 1/10 of a click and giving them thousands of clicks for $50-60 a day. "It was terrible but I did not know any better."

His interest now piqued, Gevirtz started another resource site that provides code generators like profile tracker and layout generators for users to put graphics on their MySpace pages. He moved to Yahoo Publisher Networks and the ValueClick Networks and started to make a lot more money.

By July and August of 2006, Gevirtz was looking into ways that he could make money off of CPA instead of CPC because he prefers the feeling of fulfilling an acquisition – he doesn't like taking money for a click. Gevirtz says that he once was accused of clicking on his own ads and notes that "you can't be held liable for click fraud if you are doing CPA stuff."


Although he does not want to reveal the specifics, Gevirtz says that nowadays he runs a few interactive websites, including graphic sites, which have thousands of pages of content, and says he specializes in things that target a younger audience. Because he is a teen, he knows what teens find appealing, such as ringtones and clothes.

He makes most of his income from CPA nowadays and he focuses on landing pages, noting that in a few years, "landing pages might be on phones." He says he makes money with paid search and would like to leverage mailing lists to promote offers but acknowledges, "There are so many people like that already."

Last summer, Gevirtz hired developers to work on his next big project, the details of which he is keeping under wraps. He says the site is based on the idea that "content is king" and it will be focused on getting users to create the content. He hopes to have the main version of the site done by this summer. He has a company with 38 employees in India working on it – a company he found "after hours and hours of Googling."

Gevirtz's experience with outsourcing work to a company in India has been very positive – he describes these Indian workers as the most trustworthy people that he has ever worked with – he continually is impressed by their eagerness and how hard they labor to get a job done correctly. He feels good about working with them – not just because they are "respectful and honorable" – but because he literally is "helping them eat." No doubt there have been "minor problems with the language barrier" but they work through it – by communicating both on the phone and through instant messenger.

Gevirtz blogs at his site, CPAShare.com, which he started this past January, but acknowledges that he struggles to come up with topics. He says that one of his goals is to get a user base going and to get a site where other people are blogging so that he can have mixed opinions – "it would be a portal for e-marketers." He would like to drive more traffic to his site and in fact, entitles one of his blog entries "Nobody Reads This F---ing Thing."

A Day in the Life

Not surprisingly, Gevirtz lives at home with his family, in Santa Barbara. He has an older sister, Eloise, who is 22; a little brother, Harland, who's 10; and a 3-year-old sister name Madeline. His California-born father is in finance and his French-born mother is a part-time yoga teacher and full-time mom.

A typical day starts with Gevirtz "waking up 20 minutes later than he should" – he has to get to school by 8:00 a.m. and his mom takes him on the 20-minute drive. His first class is science, followed by a class entitled "careers," then a graphic design class, followed by English. He breaks for lunch, and then it's on to math and the last class of the day, which is "stagecraft." School ends at 2:49 p.m. – "not that [he is] watching the clock," he jokes.

He says he does "pretty well" in school, noting that he doesn't skip class. He says he can't help but feel like he is rotting away and wasting time during the school day because he would rather be uploading his sites, emailing with affiliate managers or working on some aspect of his business. He says he has a pretty good relationship with most of his teachers, although his math teacher does not like the fact that he text-messages in class.

At school, Gevirtz tries to keep his business endeavors on the down-low – he believes his teachers would get irritated and suspicious if they found out about his online dealings. Continued on Page 2...


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