Joel Comm
Joel Comm was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States on May 5th, 1964 and is the Non-Fiction Author. At the age of 60, Joel Comm biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 60 years old, Joel Comm physical status not available right now. We will update Joel Comm's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Joel Comm (born May 5, 1964) is an American author and internet marketer.
Comm is the CEO of InfoMedia, a social media consultancy firm. Comm started earning money from his Internet business ventures after a career as a radio host.
In 1995, he founded WorldVillage, a virtual village that hosts games and trivia competitions.
DealofDay.com, WorldVillage's sister website, was created as a directory of hundreds of retailers' discounts.
Comm founded ClassicGames, a family-friendly multiplayer gaming portal that he sold to Yahoo!in 1997 and was the precursor for Yahoo!
Games. Comm co-authored The AdSense Code, a book about how to increase profits by using Google's AdSense in 2006.The book on year ranked on both the New York Times Best Seller List and the Bloomberg Businessweek bestseller list.
Comm also wrote Twitter Power, a book that teaches how to create a Twitter account, gain a large fanbase, and sell Twitter goods. The Next Internet Millionaire was created and produced by Comm in 2007, the first Internet reality show on television.
Contestants were given the opportunity to win $25,000 or join one of the Comm's company ventures with the intention of making $1 million, based on the NBC show The Apprentice.
Comm made the iFart Mobile, a Fart noises app that makes fart noises in 2008.
It had been downloaded 100,000 times and was ranked first on Apple Inc.'s App Store 14 days after he introduced the app.
Career
Comm began his career as a radio host, where he played guitar, and as a weatherman. He later became a cellphone disc jockey and then moved to internet marketing because he knew he'd be more successful with an online career.
Comm began using the internet in the 1980s, building modems and bulletin boards related to playing computer games. Comm's first website, WorldVillage, was launched in 1995. WorldVillage is a virtual village that was developed by Comm's company InfoMedia. On the children's website, trivia quizzes and games are available. He ran the website solely on internet advertisements. He earned several hundred dollars per day from Google's AdSense, according to Radio Ink. Comm also created DealofDay.com, WorldVillage's sister site, in 1999. DealofDay.com is a website that lists hundreds of discounts. Anytime a visitor refers to a purchaser, the corporation receives money from businesses. In 2003, there were 130,000 users on the network. Comm is the CEO of InfoMedia, a social media consulting firm.
He created ClassicGames, a family-friendly multiplayer gaming portal that sells widely used card games and board games such as bridge, checkers, chess, Euchre, Go, Hearts, Poker, and spades.In 1997, he sold ClassicGames to Yahoo!
The object was valued at $1 million.Yahoo!
Yahoo! began with the acquisition, which was used as a basis for launching the website Yahoo! Games were played in April 1998.Joel Comm invented the show The Next Internet Millionaire with Eric Holmlund in 2007. It was the first internet reality show based on the NBC show The Apprentice. The show was hosted by Comm, pitting 12 contestants against each other for a $25,000 finalist prize and the opportunity to join Comm on a project with the intention of earning $1 million.
iFart Mobile, a best-selling app that he sold on iTunes, was created by Comm in 2008. When started, the app makes a fart noise. It has a "stealth" feature that allows users to schedule a timer for when the app will be released. If the phone's position changes, the iFart "security" function will produce a fart sound. After its first 14 days on Apple Inc.'s App Store, the $0.99 app was ranked first for the first time. It used to be one of the 20 most downloaded iPhone applications ever, and in October 2010, it had 20,000 reviews. VentureBeat reported in December 2008 that the app was earning more than $10,000 per day.