F1 - Cash in From Canadian Crazy Crash
Formula 1 is a big money business, and there is no reason why you can't get your share...
The Canadian Grand Prix 2008 had a most unusual crash.
It's a race which does tend to produce incident, there are some fairly tight corners.
The 2007 race produced a spectacular crash which many feared had killed the driver, but in fact he was just battered and bruised.
This year the on track incidents were fairly minor skirmishes with various walls.
One incident had brought out the safety car, which slows all the racing cars down so that the track marshalls can clear the track.
Drivers use this opportunity to go to the pit lane to get fuel or tyres.
Unfortunately Lewis Hamilton, new British ace on the scene, did not pay attention to the red lights stopping cars from leaving the pit lane while the safety car passed.
2 drivers in front of Hamilton were duly waiting, but the error by Hamilton meant he drove straight into the back of them, taking both himself and his championship contender out of the race.
So how do you make money from this? Well, you write about the incident to get the traffic from the F1 fans online, and believe me there are lots of them! They lap up information they can find, and are more than happy to be told they can make money from the sport! Then you direct that traffic to a site you profit from - it may be an affiliate site selling shirts, posters or other memorabilia.
It may be a Formula 1 blog that you put adverts on, or it may be to an eBook for sale.
You can do this for all the races on the calendar, and then you can use the same technique during the off season, with the launch of new cars, driver line ups and so on.
There are lots of ways to earn money from the popularity of Formula 1, and the the crash like the one in Canada is a perfect tool to tap into it.
The Canadian Grand Prix 2008 had a most unusual crash.
It's a race which does tend to produce incident, there are some fairly tight corners.
The 2007 race produced a spectacular crash which many feared had killed the driver, but in fact he was just battered and bruised.
This year the on track incidents were fairly minor skirmishes with various walls.
One incident had brought out the safety car, which slows all the racing cars down so that the track marshalls can clear the track.
Drivers use this opportunity to go to the pit lane to get fuel or tyres.
Unfortunately Lewis Hamilton, new British ace on the scene, did not pay attention to the red lights stopping cars from leaving the pit lane while the safety car passed.
2 drivers in front of Hamilton were duly waiting, but the error by Hamilton meant he drove straight into the back of them, taking both himself and his championship contender out of the race.
So how do you make money from this? Well, you write about the incident to get the traffic from the F1 fans online, and believe me there are lots of them! They lap up information they can find, and are more than happy to be told they can make money from the sport! Then you direct that traffic to a site you profit from - it may be an affiliate site selling shirts, posters or other memorabilia.
It may be a Formula 1 blog that you put adverts on, or it may be to an eBook for sale.
You can do this for all the races on the calendar, and then you can use the same technique during the off season, with the launch of new cars, driver line ups and so on.
There are lots of ways to earn money from the popularity of Formula 1, and the the crash like the one in Canada is a perfect tool to tap into it.
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