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How Many Times Can This Work? SponsorMyLoans.com

Written by Josh Catone / February 8, 2008 9:06 AM / 10 Comments

In 2000, Chris Barrett and Luke McCabe paid for their college education by offering their lives up for sponsorship. In 2005, Alex Tew started The Million Dollar Homepage and sold a million bucks worth of ads on a page that was nothing but ads. Last year a web developer tried to sell his name for $250,000 -- he didn't quite make it but still found a buyer for 25 grand. Most recently, Luke Livingston has started Sponsor My Loans in an effort to pay off his student loans -- in $200 monthly increments.

There have been numerous examples of this sort of advertising scheme in the past, where advertising is sold on the premise that the method of advertising is so unique or wacky that it will garner mainstream press attention just for being sold -- and thus make the ads themselves worthwhile. But how long can that keep working?

Apparently, the market is still strong for selling ads based on future press coverage about your ad sales. Livingston has already scored press at TheStreet.com, Young Money Magazine, and The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, and lined up sponsors through May. (He's also gotten press on this blog -- yes, I realize the irony here.)

There appears to be such a market for wacky ads, that a site like Body Billboardz, a marketplace for people willing to sell ad space on their bodies, currently has nearly 50 people willing to sell themselves to corporations.

I'm somewhat amazed that these advertising schemes keep working. And it's hard for me to believe that the ads really garner any sort of return for the companies that place them -- this is about as untargeted as you can get in advertising, and the people visiting these sites are really more interested in marveling at the tremendous luck of the people behind them then at checking out the companies willing to put up the cash for advertising. But as Livingston says in his press release, "Hey, it's worth a shot, right?"

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  • Interesting post, and it's a rather sad commentary on the state of our society.

    As an aside, and not to be picky, but a respected site like this simply should not have a spelling error like 'payed' in the first sentence. 'Paid' is the correct spelling.

    Posted by: James | February 8, 2008 9:41 AM



  • buying and selling body space for corporate ads is as degrading as porn. proverbially speaking.

    p.s. lol @ 1 (good catch... although typo's are the 4th dimension... like you never ;) )

    Posted by: Matt | February 8, 2008 10:20 AM



  • @James: Thanks for the heads up on the typo.

    Posted by: Josh Catone Author Profile Page | February 8, 2008 11:05 AM



  • any sort of return for the company's that place them --

    company's that place them? not companies that place them? hmmm

    Posted by: Barbara | February 8, 2008 12:47 PM



  • It seems I wasn't fully awake when I wrote this... ;)

    Posted by: Josh Catone Author Profile Page | February 8, 2008 1:25 PM



  • From the looks of his site, it seems we ought to be paying Mr. Livingston to go BACK to school.

    Posted by: Bill | February 12, 2008 6:12 PM



  • @Bill why do you say that?

    Posted by: Tim | February 13, 2008 7:06 AM



  • @Tim: Do spelling errors, blurry photographs and dozens of misused semicolons suggest to you that he made the most of this education he'd like us to pay for?

    Posted by: Bill | February 14, 2008 8:46 PM



  • There wasn't a single spelling error on any page, nor did I see any of these blurry photos you speak of, and there are only one or two semicolons out of place. Sounds to me like you're just jealous you didn't think of it first!

    Posted by: Barbara | February 15, 2008 9:14 AM



  • It takes neither talent nor ingenuity to beg for money.

    Posted by: Argh | February 24, 2008 2:23 AM




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