Pay-Per-Click Fraud Exposed--Part II

Written by Dean Phillips


Continued from page 1

Do you honestly think newspaper, magazine, radio or tv advertisers would just sit back and let those media get away with blatantly stealing their money? You know they wouldn't.

Then why do pay-per-click advertisers allow it? I don't knowrepparttar exact answer to that question, but I have my theories: First of all, you're talking about a whole different level of sophistication with pay-per-click advertisers, compared to media advertisers. Many pay-per-click advertisers don't even know how to access or even analyze their log files, so they have no idea how much money is actually being stolen from them.

In addition, some pay-per-click advertisers are making more money than they've ever made before. And rather than upsetrepparttar 120147 apple cart, they'd rather keep quiet and allowrepparttar 120148 vicious cycle of click fraud to continue, so that they can keep cashing those big checks.

I also suspect many advertisers are afraid that if they complain too loudly, they may be penalized inrepparttar 120149 search engines, in regard to their free listings.

If my theories are accurate, silence is one heck of a trade off, if you ask me. Why? Because according to a report on MediaPost, an online study done by Clicklab revealed that fraudulent clicks can account for more than 50 percent of your total clicks.

So, ifrepparttar 120150 goal of pay-per-click search engines is to bring lucrative, targeted traffic to your web site, what arerepparttar 120151 pay-per-click search engines doing aboutrepparttar 120152 click fraud epidemic, to prevent abuse that needlessly drive up your costs and reduce your ROI?

Unfortunately, since so many pay-per-click advertisers are willing to playrepparttar 120153 role of "lambs going to slaughter,"repparttar 120154 pay-per-click companies really don't have to do anything.

Inrepparttar 120155 meantime, your ROI is going to continue to plummet, andrepparttar 120156 pay-per-click companies are going to continue to milk those cash cows (AKA) pay-per-click advertisers, for all they're worth!



Dean Phillips is an Internet marketing expert, writer, publisher and entrepreneur. Questions? Comments? Dean can be reached at mailto: dean@lets-make-money.net

Visit his website at: http://www.lets-make-money.net


Christian Marketing

Written by Phillip A. Ross


Continued from page 1

Nonetheless, some dissonance remained for me. I was not willing to turnrepparttar church over torepparttar 120146 marketing department—denominational, local or parachurch. Something smelled wrong about it, but what was it?

Then it came to me in a flash.

Church members (or visitors) are not customers torepparttar 120147 church, any more than family members (or children) are customers to their respective families. The church is not a business, it's a family. Now, that does not mean that business and marketing principles cannot be successfully and effectively applied to churches. They can! But how they are applied makes allrepparttar 120148 difference inrepparttar 120149 world. There is nothing wrong with name tags and signage, parking and accessibility, friendliness and follow-up in and of themselves. Nor is there anything wrong with new church music.

However,repparttar 120150 church is a service organization, not a sales organization. The purpose ofrepparttar 120151 church is not to serve its members, but to serverepparttar 120152 Lord Jesus Christ. Members are not to berepparttar 120153 objects of service, butrepparttar 120154 vehicles of service. The difference involves a shift in philosophical or theological perspective.

Ifrepparttar 120155 old adage thatrepparttar 120156 "customer is always right" is true, then church members cannot be customers, nor can church visitors be construed as customers. Rather, God isrepparttar 120157 only customer ofrepparttar 120158 church. God isrepparttar 120159 only Person who is always right. And God isrepparttar 120160 One to receiverepparttar 120161 service, whether it's a worship service, a prayer service or service torepparttar 120162 community. It is done forrepparttar 120163 Lord, not primarily or directly for His people. We are to satisfy God, not ourselves or our church visitors.

This insight about church practice comes fromrepparttar 120164 study ofrepparttar 120165 Bible and its use and interpretation throughrepparttar 120166 centuries. The traditional understanding of church practice was thatrepparttar 120167 church is to be God-centered, not people-centered. God isrepparttar 120168 object of our service, not ourselves or each other—nor evenrepparttar 120169 wider community.

With that fundamental insightrepparttar 120170 application of marketing or business principles can indeed be applied torepparttar 120171 activities and practices of churches. But such application must always take a back seat torepparttar 120172 prior concerns of God's Word, historically understood and practiced.

In fact,repparttar 120173 concern for church history is essentially a business marketing principle itself. Businesses keep records, and reports are made from those records. Any business worth its salt will know how it has performed inrepparttar 120174 past, so that it can endeavor to make improvements. And no business will simply abandon its past practices, but will only make well-planned, small, incremental adjustments to its activity or practice. History is a key element for business success, and is an essential element of Christianity.

The essential insight is thatrepparttar 120175 worship and life ofrepparttar 120176 church are not to be centered aroundrepparttar 120177 needs of its members, visitors, orrepparttar 120178 wider community, but around service to God as defined inrepparttar 120179 Bible. The people who attend worship are not themselves to be served. Rather, we worship as a service to God, just as we pray as a service to God, and reach out to a lost world inrepparttar 120180 service of God.

However,repparttar 120181 bulk ofrepparttar 120182 Church Growth Movement and its materials do not reflect this perspective. Rather,repparttar 120183 Church Growth Movement has succumbed to marketing creep. Secular Marketing principles and practices now dominaterepparttar 120184 Church Growth Movement, and have eclipsedrepparttar 120185 biblical call to faithfulness. Faithfulness, not broad community appeal, isrepparttar 120186 highest priority of Christians and their churches.

Christian Marketing services are available.

Phillip A. Ross has more than twenty years of Christian ministry leadership, extensive experience in administration, conflict resolution, writing, design, marketing, public speaking, has been a business owner for several years, and is an author of several books.


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