Wednesday, June 18, 2025

4 Affiliate Programs That Don’t Work in Pakistan

 


Affiliate marketing is one of the best ways to earn money online without investment, especially if you're into blogging, YouTube, or digital marketing. You can write about products, make videos and sell them and take your commission. But if you're from Pakistan, you’ve probably run into this frustrating issues; some of the biggest affiliate platforms just don’t work here.

I’ve been there. You spend hours researching a program, sign up, get excited about promoting products and then you find that, Your application has been rejected or worse. In my starting period i got rejected by many affiliate market just because; In Pakistan they don't support payment method, you never get paid because the platform doesn’t support payments to Pakistani banks. And it hilarious .

Today, let’s talk about it. Here are four major affiliate marketing programs that don’t work in Pakistan or are just too much of a headache. 

1. Amazon Associates (U.S.)

Amazon is probably the first name that comes to mind when you think of affiliate marketing. But for Pakistanis, it’s a challenge. 

  • Problem: Amazon doesn't support direct payments to Pakistani bank accounts.

  • Workaround: You can use Payoneer, but many users still face account bans payment delay, or payment vanish from their account without withdraw.

  • Extra Issue: Your also needs a traffic from those countries Amazon supports otherwise, commissions are super low.

👎 Conslusion: It can work with effort, but it's unreliable and risky for long-term income. So, As a Pakistani i dont support Amazon Affiliate account. 

2. CJ Affiliate 

CJ is another big player with big brands. It’s great but not for Pakistani. 

  • Problem: Very limited support for Pakistani users. You never got selected. 

  • Why? They often reject new applications from Pakistan during the approval process.

  • Payment Issues: Even if accepted, payouts are a pain and often delayed.

👎 Conclusion: Not worth the hassle for beginners or small creators.

3. Rakuten Advertising

Rakuten is a Japanese e-commerce giant and runs an affiliate network with major brands like Walmart and Best Buy. Its a very big market but not for Pakistani. 

  • Problem: New registrations from Pakistan are often blocked or rejected. 

  • Tech Block: Some users even report IP bans.

  • Payment Trouble: Very limited payout options, especially for Pakistan. 

👎 Conclusion: Unless you’re living abroad or have a foreign entity, this one’s mostly off the table. For most people in Pakistan, this affiliate program isn’t really an option , unless you live in another country or have a company based outside Pakistan. 

4. ShareASale

ShareASale offers thousands of products from different merchants, but not all dreams come true here either. Just because you have a green passport. 

  • Problem: It’s hard to get verified from Pakistan.

  • Why? Strict documentation, including U.S. tax forms and valid ID, are often hard to fulfill for local affiliates.

  • Payouts: Not well integrated for Pakistani banks or services.

👎 Conclusion: Too complicated for most. Look for alternatives.

Final Thoughts

Affiliate marketing is still 100% possible in Pakistan, but you need to choose your platforms wisely. Choose those affiliate market that smoothly run in Pakistan. Don’t get discouraged if one program doesn’t work. There are plenty of alternatives that do support Pakistani creators, bloggers, and marketers.

If you're just starting out, with beginner-friendly platforms like Digistore24 or Fiverr Affiliates. Once you’re more experienced, you can try the bigger names with workarounds.

Got questions or want help picking the right affiliate program? Drop a comment or reach out — always i'm here for you. 

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

4 Ways How I Earn 500$ Montly Using ChatGPT (That You Can Try Too)

 


Hey there!
Today, I just wanted to share something cool that’s been working for me that helps me to earn money using ChatGPT. I'm not talking about to get rich quick and easily,  it’s not something like that. It’s actually been a fun and creative journey, and if you’re even a little curious and have little knowledege about AI or content creation, you’ll probably love trying it too.

I wanted to share with you 4 ways I personally used to make money with ChatGPT, and yes, they actually work. 



1. Write Blogs With ChatGPT (Just Add Your Personal Touch)

Okay, let me be real: ChatGPT is amazing at writing blog posts. But here’s the thing, if you just copy-paste what it gives you it can be detect, because today after launching ChatGPT they also launched ChatGPT and AI detector. That can't be detect 100% but it makes you in trouble. 

What I do instead is use ChatGPT as a brainstorming and writing partner. It helps me get over writer’s block, gives me SEO-friendly outlines, and even helps with catchy titles. Then I go in, tweak the tone, add my personal experience (like I’m doing here), maybe throw in a funny story or a relatable moment.  I’ve got a blog that connects with people and ranks on Google.

Once the blog is ready, I publish it on platforms like Blogger and WordPress, my personal site, or client blogs. I monetize through affiliate links, sponsored posts, or even freelance writing gigs that come in because people liked my work.

Pro tip: Use ChatGPT to generate ideas for trending topics. You’ll never run out of content to write but don't copy paste it. 


2. Use ChatGPT for Images and Video Making

So here’s something cool: ChatGPT can help you create video scripts and generate images, especially if you connect it with tools like DALL·E or Canva.

I usually start by asking ChatGPT for a script idea based on a trending topic. It gives me a base script, and then I fine-tune it for YouTube Shorts or Instagram Reels. I also use its suggestions for text overlays and visuals. If you’ve used tools like Pictory or InVideo, you’ll know how much a solid script can make your video pop.

And when it comes to images, ChatGPT helps me describe exactly what I want, and then I generate AI images using tools like DALL·E or Midjourney. These are gold for thumbnails, blog banners, and social media posts.

Trust me — combining visuals and storytelling powered by ChatGPT has helped me grow my audience and land clients who need content like this.



3. Make Animated 3D Videos With ChatGPT

Yes, this one sounds technical, but it’s easier than you think.

I got into creating simple 3D animations using tools like Blender and Vyond, and with ChatGPT’s help, I was able to speed up the whole process. I ask it for storyboards, dialogues, animation flow, even technical help with Blender scripts when I’m stuck.

One of my side hustles now is selling short explainer videos on Fiverr and Upwork — and they don’t look amateur anymore, thanks to AI assistance.

If you’re into animation or storytelling, combining ChatGPT with free or low-cost animation tools is a game-changer.


4. My Bonus Way: Use ChatGPT for Freelancing and Coaching

This one’s personal and surprisingly powerful that helps me in various ways to earn. 

Once I got comfortable with ChatGPT, I started offering freelance services like content writing, script writing, and AI-assisted editing. Clients are curious about AI, and many are open to content that’s enhanced with it. I’m upfront that I use ChatGPT to speed things up, and they love it because I deliver faster and still maintain quality.

On top of that, I began offering coaching sessions — helping people learn how to use ChatGPT for their own businesses. It started as helping friends, then turned into paid workshops and one-on-one calls.

It’s rewarding, fun, and a great way to position yourself as a go-to person in a growing niche.


Final Thoughts

If you're just starting out, don't stress about being perfect. I wasn’t. I just experimented, had fun, and learned as I went. ChatGPT isn’t magic, We human made it So, ChatGPT is not special you are. It just helps bring your ideas to life faster.

Whether you’re a writer, designer, animator, or just curious about making money online, I truly believe you can find your groove with ChatGPT. Start small, stay consistent, and who knows — this might become your next big thing.

Got questions or want to share your experience? Drop a comment — I’d love to hear how you’re using AI to earn!

Author: Sehar Irfan




Monday, June 16, 2025

4 Top Difficulties I Faced When Starting My Blogging Journey

 


Starting a blog sounds exciting and it definitely is but it's not always smooth sailing. When I first began my blogging journey, I faced several unexpected challenges that almost made me quit. its a super challenging for me to start this blogging journey. And i think its more difficult when you have zero experience in it and nobody have to guide you. If you're just starting out or thinking about launching your own blog, here are the top 4 difficulties I faced and how I overcame them.

1. Choosing the Right Niche

One of the hardest parts was figuring out what to blog about. I wanted something profitable, but also something I enjoyed. I wasted weeks jumping between ideas — fitness one day, tech the next. 

You can adopt different niche but it has its own difficulties. You can't balance it at first and when you are new in it is more difficult. Niche is the first step for me to start this journey. 

What I learned:
Pick a niche that’s a balance of 

  • What you're interested in

  • What people search for or what's in the trending

  • What has products or services you can promote

Start focused. You can expand later.


2. Getting Traffic (No One Was Reading!)

I thought I'd publish a blog and people would just show up. Wrong. To built a traffic on your blog post is not a piece of cake. I quickly realized traffic doesn’t magically appear — you need to earn it. 

You dont have to be disheartened, when you dont get the traffic. Every beginner faces challenges. Its a journey that you have to face with tolerance. 

What I did:

  • Learned basic SEO (Search Engine Optimization)

  • Shared my posts on social media (Pinterest, Facebook groups)

  • Used catchy titles with numbers or how-to tips

Be patient. Real traffic takes time, but consistency wins.


3. Buying a Domain Was a Headache

At first, I thought buying a domain would be quick and simple. But once I started, it became more confusing and expensive, especially as a beginner. 

What made it stressful:

  • Most of the good names were already taken

  • I didn’t know if I should choose .com, .online, or something else

  • Different sites showed different prices, and some tried to upsell me things I didn’t understand

What helped me:

  • Using free beginner-friendly sites like Blogger (Goggle) and Wordpress

  • Watching domain buying tutorials on YouTube if you want to buy domain. 

  • As a beginner you have to start with free website.  

  • Choosing a short, simple name and moving forward instead of overthinking it

You don’t need the perfect name to succeed. What really matters is the content you put on your blog.

4. Fear of Writing the "Perfect" Post

The thing i fare most and spent too much time trying to make every blog post perfect. This stopped me from publishing regularly. I realized I was letting fear hold me back. Its a difficult journey instead of giving up i choose you keep learning and moving forward.

What changed my mindset:

  • I told myself: "Done is better than perfect"

  • I focused on helping readers, not impressing them

  • I allowed my writing to improve naturally over time

  • Use pictures in your blog

Your first posts won't be perfect — and that’s okay. You’ll get better one day. 


✍️ Final Thoughts

Blogging is a not a journey its a challenge and like any challenging journey, the first steps are always hardest. But every challenge taught me something. If you're starting out, just remember: start messy, stay consistent, and never stop learning.

If I can do it, so can you.


💡 Want to know how I turned blogging into income? Stay tuned with me, my next post is all about affiliate marketing for beginners. 


Tuesday, June 10, 2025

4 Best Alternatives of ChatGPT

 

ChatGPT Down? Don't Panic! Your Go-To AI Alternatives Are Here



It's happened again. You log in, eager to harness the power of AI for your latest project, only to be met with an error message or frustratingly slow responses. Yes, ChatGPT, the beloved AI chatbot we all rely on, is experiencing an outage today (June 10, 2025), with reports of elevated error rates and latency affecting users globally.

While it's frustrating when our favorite tools are unavailable, the good news is the AI landscape has evolved significantly. There are now powerful and reliable alternatives that can pick up the slack and keep your productivity flowing. So, if your "AI buddy" ChatGPT is on a coffee break, here are the best four alternatives to jump to:

1. Google Gemini: The Google Ecosystem Powerhouse

If you're deeply entrenched in the Google ecosystem, Google Gemini (formerly Google Bard) is your ideal alternative. Gemini seamlessly integrates with your existing Google apps like Gmail, Google Docs, and Drive, making it incredibly efficient for tasks that involve your Google workspace. Need to summarize an email thread, draft a response, or brainstorm ideas based on a document in your Drive? Gemini can do it all, leveraging real-time information from Google Search and offering multimodal capabilities (understanding and generating text and images).

2. Claude (by Anthropic): For Nuance and Long-Form Content

For those who value natural, nuanced, and even empathetic AI responses, Claude by Anthropic is a fantastic choice. Claude excels at handling complex, long-form content and intricate instructions. Professionals often gravitate towards Claude for its ability to provide clear, structured, and data-driven outputs. It's also known for its ethical AI development, and features like "Artifacts" allow you to even code small applications directly within the chatbot interface.

3. Microsoft Copilot: Your Integrated Productivity Partner

Working within the Microsoft universe? Then Microsoft Copilot is your secret weapon. Deeply embedded within Microsoft products like Windows, Edge, Word, Excel, and Teams, Copilot is designed to boost your productivity right where you work. It leverages the power of GPT-4 and the Bing search engine, providing up-to-date information with clear citations. Plus, Copilot can generate images and offers flexible response styles (Creative, Balanced, Precise) to suit various tasks.

4. Perplexity AI: The Research and Fact-Checking Ace

If your immediate need is to gather information, conduct research, or fact-check with verifiable sources, Perplexity AI is a game-changer. It operates more like an AI-powered search engine combined with a conversational assistant, providing concise summaries and, crucially, citing its sources directly from the web. It's an invaluable tool for students, researchers, journalists, and anyone who needs reliable, referenced information quickly. The availability of a free version makes it even more accessible.


1. Google Gemini

  • "Seamlessly integrates with your existing Google apps like Gmail, Google Docs, and Drive..."
    • "What like": How it helps draft emails in Gmail, summarize meeting notes from Google Meet directly into Docs, or analyze data in Google Sheets.
    • Source example: "Gemini in Google Workspace will allow users to draft and refine text directly within Gmail, Docs, and other apps." (Source: Google Blog or official Workspace announcements)
  • "...leveraging real-time information from Google Search..."
    • "What like": Explaining that it can answer questions about current events or recent research, unlike some models trained on older datasets.
    • Source example: "Gemini's integration with Google Search provides access to real-time, up-to-date information." (Source: Google's official Gemini product page)
  • "...offering multimodal capabilities (understanding and generating text and images)."
    • "What like": Give examples like "describe an image to me" or "generate an image based on this text prompt."
    • Source example: "Gemini is designed to be natively multimodal, capable of understanding and operating across text, images, audio, and video." (Source: DeepMind or Google AI research papers/blogs)

2. Claude (by Anthropic)

  • "...excels at handling complex, long-form content and intricate instructions."
    • "What like": Its ability to summarize entire books, process lengthy legal documents, or follow multi-step creative briefs.
    • Source example: "Claude can process and understand incredibly long contexts, making it suitable for summarizing large documents or extended conversations." (Source: Anthropic's official Claude documentation or whitepapers)
  • "...known for its ethical AI development, prioritizing principles like harmlessness, honesty, and helpfulness."
    • "What like": You could elaborate on how it avoids generating harmful or biased content, and strives for transparent reasoning.
    • Source example: "Anthropic's core mission is to build safe and beneficial AI, adhering to principles of harmlessness, honesty, and helpfulness." (Source: Anthropic's 'Constitutional AI' research papers or 'About Us' page)
  • "...features like 'Artifacts' allow you to even code small applications directly within the chatbot interface."
    • "What like": This means you can get a simple web page, a Python script, or a small data visualization generated and displayed within your chat session with Claude.
    • Source example: "Claude's 'Artifacts' workspace provides a dedicated space where users can create, edit, and interact with code snippets, text documents, or simple web pages generated by the AI." (Source: Tech review site like TechCrunch or The Verge, or Anthropic's product updates if publicly available)

3. Microsoft Copilot

  • "Deeply embedded within Microsoft products like Windows, Edge, Word, Excel, and Teams..."
    • "What like": Specific examples include using it to rewrite paragraphs in Word, analyze data trends in Excel spreadsheets, or summarize missed meetings in Teams.
    • Source example: "Microsoft Copilot is integrated across Microsoft 365 apps, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams, enhancing productivity directly within your workflow." (Source: Microsoft 365 Copilot official page or press releases)
  • "...leverages the power of GPT-4 and the Bing search engine..."
    • "What like": This means it benefits from OpenAI's advanced language model for understanding and generation, combined with Bing for up-to-the-minute information.
    • Source example: "Microsoft Copilot is powered by OpenAI's latest models, GPT-4, and combines it with the search capabilities of Bing." (Source: Microsoft AI blog or investor call transcripts)
  • "...can generate images and offers flexible response styles (Creative, Balanced, Precise) to suit various tasks."
    • "What like": Users can prompt it to create an image for a presentation slide, or tell it to give a "precise" answer for a factual query versus a "creative" one for brainstorming.
    • Source example: "Copilot offers capabilities for image generation through DALL-E 3 and provides different conversation styles to tailor AI responses." (Source: Microsoft Learn documentation or Copilot interface descriptions)

4. Perplexity AI

  • "...operates more like an AI-powered search engine combined with a conversational assistant, providing concise summaries and, crucially, citing its sources directly from the web."
    • "What like": Instead of just giving an answer, Perplexity provides numbered citations (like footnotes) within its response that link directly to the web pages it pulled the information from.
    • Source example: "Perplexity AI distinguishes itself by providing direct links to its sources, allowing users to verify the information presented." (Source: Perplexity AI's official website 'How it Works' section or tech reviews focusing on its unique features)
  • "...invaluable tool for students, researchers, journalists..."
    • "What like": For a student doing a report, it's easy to get cited info; for a journalist, quick background checks; for a researcher, a faster way to find relevant papers.
    • Source example: (This is more a general observation but can be supported by user testimonials or articles highlighting its utility in these fields).



Don't Let Outages Halt Your Progress

While temporary outages for popular services like ChatGPT can be a minor inconvenience, they serve as a good reminder to diversify your AI toolkit. Having a few reliable alternatives in your back pocket ensures that your workflow remains uninterrupted, no matter what challenges arise. So, the next time ChatGPT decides to take an unexpected break, you'll be well-equipped to keep your ideas flowing and your tasks completed.

Sources Used:

For the "ChatGPT Down" Scenario (Source 1):

For Google Gemini (Sources 2.1 - 2.4):

  • Source 2.1 & 2.3: Google Workspace. AI Tools for Business | Google Workspace. https://workspace.google.com/solutions/ai/ and Google. Google AI Plans and Features. https://one.google.com/about/google-ai-plans/
    • How I got this info: These are official Google pages detailing Gemini's integration with Google Workspace apps (Gmail, Docs, Drive) and its general capabilities and features, including its multimodal aspects and productivity enhancements.
  • Source 2.2: Google. Gemini in Chrome — AI assistance, right in your browser. https://gemini.google/overview/gemini-in-chrome/
    • How I got this info: This official Google page specifically details how Gemini functions within the Chrome browser, highlighting features like summarization and in-browser assistance.
  • Source 2.4: Google Store. Gemini Live on Google Pixel | Real-Time AI at Your Fingertips. https://store.google.com/intl/en/ideas/gemini-ai-assistant/
    • How I got this info: This page, while focused on Pixel, also describes Gemini's broader capabilities like understanding images, files, and YouTube videos, and its integration with Google apps for various tasks.

For Claude (Sources 3.1 - 3.4):

  • Source 3.1: Davydov Consulting. (2025, January 21). Claude AI Review: Unveiling Its Features and Performance. https://www.davydovconsulting.com/post/claude-ai-review-unveiling-its-features-and-performance
    • How I got this info: This review provides details on Claude's strengths in long-context understanding, complex reasoning, and its suitability for business and academic content.
  • Source 3.2: IBM. What Is Claude AI?. https://www.ibm.com/think/topics/claude-ai
    • How I got this info: This IBM article extensively covers Claude's capabilities, its "Constitutional AI" philosophy for ethical alignment, and its large context window for processing long documents. It also mentions its multimodal nature (text, audio, visual inputs).
  • Source 3.3: SmythOS. Claude AI: Transforming Conversational AI. https://smythos.com/developers/agent-integrations/claude-ai/
    • How I got this info: This source further elaborates on Claude's core features like text generation, sentiment analysis, and its ability to understand nuances, supporting the claims of natural and empathetic responses.
  • Source 3.4: Built In. What Is Claude AI?. https://builtin.com/articles/claude-ai
    • How I got this info: This article reinforces Claude's larger context window compared to GPT-4, its performance on benchmarks, and its data privacy approach (not retaining user data for training), which aligns with the "ethical AI" aspect.

For Microsoft Copilot (Sources 4.1 - 4.4):

For Perplexity AI (Sources 5.1 - 5.4):

  • Source 5.1: Perplexity Help Center. How does Perplexity work?. https://www.perplexity.ai/help-center/en/articles/10352895-how-does-perplexity-work
    • How I got this info: This official help center article directly explains Perplexity's core functionality: real-time internet search, summarization, and, most importantly, the provision of numbered footnotes for sources. It also mentions using advanced LLMs.
  • Source 5.2: Coursera. What Is Perplexity AI?. https://www.coursera.org/articles/what-is-perplexity-ai
    • How I got this info: This Coursera article highlights Perplexity's role as a "research partner," its integration of web searching with AI, and its unique ability to provide source citations directly in the response. It also confirms the use of various LLMs.
  • Source 5.3: Latenode. What is Perplexity AI? Best Ways to Use It + How It Works. https://latenode.com/blog/what-is-perplexity-ai-best-ways-to-use-it-how-it-works
    • How I got this info: This blog post reinforces Perplexity's focus on direct, citation-backed answers and its real-time search capabilities.
  • Source 5.4: MeetJamie.ai. What Is Perplexity AI? How It Works & How to Use It. https://www.meetjamie.ai/blog/what-is-perplexity-ai
    • How I got this info: This article further details Perplexity's NLP for understanding questions, its constant learning, and the benefit of "Focus" features for specific site searching, reinforcing its strength as a research tool.


Sunday, June 1, 2025

4 Things That Happen When You Start Your Corporate Journey

 

🎯 What Really Happens When You Start Your Corporate Journey: 4 Eye-Openers (And Tips to Thrive)


📖 The Story Begins...

I still remember my first day in the corporate world like it was yesterday.

Pressed shalwar kameez its an Pakistani dress (because I didn't know how to pick one), a nervous smile, and a mind buzzing with a lot of  hopes and expectations. I thought it would be all about hard work, promotions, learning new tools, and cool projects.

But as I stepped into that glass building with my shiny new ID card, I realized—this wasn’t college anymore. There were no welcome kits for life lessons. Just silent hallways, unread emails, unfamiliar faces, and a calendar that filled up way too fast.

No one really tells you how different it feels until you're in it. So here are 4 things I learned the hard way—and the 4 tips I wish someone had given me on Day 1.


1. Reality Hits Harder Than the Offer Letter

Your offer letter might’ve promised growth, projects, and learning. And while those things do happen, the pace and nature of work can feel overwhelming at first. Real-life tasks don’t come with an answer key. There’s ambiguity, pressure, and a learning curve you weren’t fully prepared for.

💡 Tip: Be patient with yourself. You're not expected to know everything—what matters is your willingness to learn and ask questions.


2. Office Politics Aren’t a Myth

No matter how “cool” the company culture is, you’ll eventually witness (or get pulled into) subtle politics—favoritism, silent competition, or the classic blame game. Navigating this is tricky, especially when you're new. Its not college anymore. Find a difference between colleagues and friend. 

💡 Tip: Observe more than you speak. Build alliances, but keep professionalism at the core. Being neutral and competent often earns long-term respect.


3. Networking > Talent (Sometimes)

Sad but true: knowing the right people often accelerates your visibility faster than just being good at your job. Your ability to build connections across teams and departments can be a game-changer. Show people who you are. 

💡 Tip: Don’t just eat lunch at your desk. Join team events, talk to folks outside your team, and keep showing up. Presence matters.


4. Self-Doubt Creeps In

Impostor syndrome is real. You’ll question if you belong, especially when others seem more confident or experienced. This internal battle is a part of the journey—and it often signals that you're growing.

💡 Tip: Track your wins, no matter how small. Completed a task with zero errors? Survived a tough call? Celebrate that. Confidence is built one moment at a time.


🧠 Final Thoughts: Your Corporate Journey Is Yours Alone

You’re not alone if you feel overwhelmed, invisible, or unsure of your path. These are growing pains, not signs of failure.

So give yourself the space to adapt, stumble, and rise. Speak up when you're ready, stay curious, and don't trade your authenticity for approval.

The corporate world is fast, but you're not here to just keep up—you’re here to make your mark. And you will.


📚 References

4 Affiliate Programs That Don’t Work in Pakistan

  Affiliate marketing is one of the best ways to earn money online without investment, especially if you're into blogging, YouTube, or d...