Categories: News

HoboTraveler.com Refuses Advertisers, Free Rooms, Free Tours, Because of Unethical Influence on Travel Writers

Andy Lee Graham, CEO of the Hobo Traveler travel lifestyle social network, has decided to stop accepting any form of advertisements. The site will be monetized by patrons, donations, premium fees, and products manufactured under the HoboTraveler.com brand.

Bangkok, Thailand, August 26, 2019 –(PR.com)– After 19 years in business, Andy Lee Graham, CEO and Founder of HoboTraveler.com, has claimed complete freedom from the influence of advertisers.

Hobo Traveler is now 100% free of advertisers or any influence that would induce a travel writer to skew the truth or lie. There will be no free rooms, tours, or discounts accepted. Hobo Traveler�s goal is to promote, explain, and live a great lifestyle, and advertisers corrupt that mission.

A Commitment to Honesty

Hobo Traveler will give its members the pros and cons of the places it reviews. That makes advertisers angry. They want bubble-headed fluff “reviews” that say everything is wonderful, and that kind of content provides no value to travelers. How can travelers decide what places to visit and what places to avoid if they’re being told everything is wonderful everywhere? So Hobo Traveler is removing the influence of untrustworthy advertisers from its site. Graham doesn’t want his members, travel writers or staff to be associated with advertisers. This also means Hobo Traveler will not be using Google Adsense, which chooses advertisements for websites.

Tired of the Lies

Graham says he’s tired of lying travel writers, and tired of seeing his readers get fooled into recommending liars who are offering bad deals. He wants to give Hobo Traveler’s members information they can trust from writers they can trust.

Sometimes, You Can’t Even Tell They’re Ads

Graham says a lot of articles in publications that travelers read are actually advertisements the publication is paid to run, and on a daily basis he receives offers from people who want to pay to place content on the Hobo Traveler website. This deceives readers, and Hobo Traveler will not accept paid content.

Website Advertising Can Be Obnoxious

Advertisements block readers from getting to the content they want to read, and can lead them to websites they’d rather not visit. Hobo Traveler members can expect to be free of these obstacles and misdirections.

A Culture Based on Fake Recommendations for Pay

In addition to offers to buy placement on Hobo Traveler, Graham says he regularly receives offers to pay him to put his name on an article somebody else wrote, or to endorse brands that contact him for that purpose. Readers who click on the ads often end up being pestered with unwanted email solicitations. “The goal is to encourage spontaneous, poorly thought out decisions, where the consumer does not feel they are spending money,” Graham says. In the age of the smartphone it’s easier than ever to make an impulse purchase you’ll regret — with a credit card number that might not be ethically used.

Learning From Experience

Graham says he has accepted free lodging from hotels about seven times in 21 years. Hotel owners expect to be compensated for this with articles and videos that are entirely positive, all pros and no cons. “The free room is payment to guarantee a travel writer lies,” Graham says, and most writers are happy to accept that arrangement. Those writers also often get free food, products to “review” that they’re allowed to keep, and other enticements.

The Right Way to Do It

Graham says travel writers and video producers shouldn’t disclose the reason for their visit until after it’s over, to ensure they’re treated the same as any other traveler. They owe their readers the truth, and if they’ve done their work “on the quiet” they don’t owe anything to anybody else.

So How Will HoboTraveler.com Make Money Without Ads?

Graham plans to produce revenue in several ways:

1. Voluntary monthly subscriptions. Hobo Traveler members can opt to donate anything from $1 to $100 each month to the site.
2. Premium services including travel consultation through email correspondence with Graham, and tours led by Graham.
3. Hobo Traveler charges a one-time $25 fee to verify that a member is a real person. This verification process assures members that they’re getting advice and ideas from travelers like them, not from somebody who is trying to scam them.
4. Sales of products designed and/or produced by Graham, and Hobo Traveler branded merchandise.

HoboTraveler Travel Lifestyle Social Network:
https://www.hobotraveler.com/

HoboTraveler YouTube channel: Andy Lee Graham with 20,000+ subscribers to go to: https://www.youtube.com/user/HoboTraveler

Contact info:
Andy Lee Graham
Email: andy at hobotraveler.com
USA telephone: +1-260-624-4414
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