Traffic Exchange Primer

Written by F. Terrence Markle


Continued from page 1

The traffic exchanges specify whether or not you can have multiple websites for display. However, you can only display one website at a time if you are permitted to have multiple websites. You can specify how many of your earned and/or purchased credits can be applied to each of your websites.

Most exchanges have a referral program where you can earn credits forrepparttar people that you refer torepparttar 120591 traffic exchange program and their surfing activity. As a bonus, you may receive a certain percentage of their earned credits. Your downline levels may be unlimited or limited depending onrepparttar 120592 traffic exchange structure.

Most traffic exchanges earn money fromrepparttar 120593 "purchase credits" feature they offer and from advertisements. In general, an exchange member can specify whether or not they want to see popups, adult or erotic websites.

Most traffic exchanges have restrictions associated with your use ofrepparttar 120594 exchange. For example, exchanges generally specify whether you can or cannot have: (1) popup windows, (2) message boxes, (3) inappropriate content or adult material, (4) break out of frames, (5) site rotation, (6) URL or domain forwarding and (7) more than one account.

Furthermore,repparttar 120595 traffic exchange may be able to delete your account if: (1) your account is inactive for a given period of time or (2) your website is causing problems forrepparttar 120596 exchange system. Some exchanges let their members sell their earned credits for cash back torepparttar 120597 traffic exchange. The rate of conversion from earned credits to cash is controlled byrepparttar 120598 webmaster ofrepparttar 120599 traffic exchange.

Your website design andrepparttar 120600 time it takes forrepparttar 120601 website to load are very critical when using a traffic exchange. Your webpage will never get viewed if your site takes 15 seconds to load andrepparttar 120602 exchange rotatesrepparttar 120603 websites every 15 seconds. You want to have at least a 10-second viewing window to giverepparttar 120604 surfing exchange member time to respond to your webpage presentation.

Keep your website clean of unnecessary clutter. You want your visitor to make a quick decision whether to ask for more information or pass on your offering.

Make your displayed website short and simple. Do not send your visitors torepparttar 120605 sales page on your main website. Provide a killer headline followed by supporting bullets and ask for their name and email address. Don’t make it complicated.

Putrepparttar 120606 lure onrepparttar 120607 fishing line and give your visitors a chance to say “yes” to your presentation. You need to get your message in front of your visitor quickly. Capture their name and e-mail address. You will have plenty of chances at a later time to market to your list.

Traffic exchanges can bring you a lot of traffic. It will take some work butrepparttar 120608 increase in your own opt--in list will provide constant inspiration. You should considerrepparttar 120609 benefits gained from traffic exchanges if you haverepparttar 120610 time and proper motivation. ======================================= Copyright © F. Terrence Markle – All Rights Reserved F-R-E-E course on building a high-quality targeted list "How To Build Your Own Opt--In Mailing List" at: http://www.QuikSystems.com/OIC/OpInCourse.htm F-R-E-E Ezine on building your targeted list at: http://www.QuikSystems.com/EzineSub.htm =======================================

Copyright © 2004 - F. Terrence Markle has worked for over 20 years with public and private companies. He has an MBA in marketing and finance and has been involved with Internet-related businesses for over 3 years.


Web Analytics - Part 2

Written by Jason OConnor


Continued from page 1

If your website sits on a server in an ISP then you can either requestrepparttar server log files from them and run them through your own software, or you can ask them if they provide an interface for you to review your site statistics online. Most do provide this service. It’s often web based and all you have to do is log onto their site to view them.

Now you’re armed with a lot of good data. But if all your e-marketing initiatives drive traffic to your homepage, how will you know which ones are working and which ones aren’t? If you send out emails to rented lists andrepparttar 120590 call to action are all links that point to your homepage, then you’ll never know which emails are doing better than others. You may get an idea by seeing if your overall traffic increasedrepparttar 120591 day you sent outrepparttar 120592 email or postedrepparttar 120593 banner (even to determine this you’ll need your website stats), but to do it right, you need exact data, andrepparttar 120594 web will provide it for you.

Some sites that you place banners on will offer you click-thru counting services to you. Most email brokers also offer similar services, at a price. But what if they don’t offer tracking information for you? Or worse, what if you don’t trust their reporting?

The solution: Create, implement, utilize and manage your own unique tracking pages.

It’s relatively simple. In every e-marketing campaign you conduct you create and assign a unique html page to it. Thenrepparttar 120595 initiative’s call to action (hyperlink) points to its unique page. Afterrepparttar 120596 campaign is done, you can then go to your website statistics obtained through your website’s server log files, and see how many visits were logged for each unique tracking page.

For example, let’s say you send out an email to a list of 1000 email addresses. Inrepparttar 120597 body ofrepparttar 120598 email there is a call to action link that says, “Click Here to Buy Now”. This link points to a page on your website. But not just any page. It points to a unique tracking page you created earlier to track how many ofrepparttar 120599 1000 people clicked-thru fromrepparttar 120600 email. It’s important that no users can get to this new page in any other way than throughrepparttar 120601 email. Let’s say you namedrepparttar 120602 page email-campaign1.htm. Afterrepparttar 120603 email campaign is done (I like to wait about 2-4 days), you go to your website statistics (the result of parsingrepparttar 120604 server log files through WebTrends or its equivalent) and search forrepparttar 120605 page called email-campaign1.htm. Finally, you viewrepparttar 120606 page visits number. Let’s sayrepparttar 120607 visits to this unique page totaled 200. That number is your click-thru number.

Now you can really start to fill in allrepparttar 120608 relevant data discussed in Part 1. This will enable you to determine how well each campaign is doing and whether you need to make adjustments.

To help manage all these unique pages, keep them all in one sub directory of your site. If you don’t dorepparttar 120609 technical work for your site, you ought to consider giving Part 1 and Part 2 of this series to your technical web person so they can get a better handle on your website vitals.

Until you know how well your website and e-marketing campaigns are doing, measured in visits, leads and sales, you can’t possibly maximize your operation and increase your bottom line. Now you haverepparttar 120610 information to make this happen.

Jason OConnor is President of Oak Web Works - The synthesis of Web marketing, design, and technology. Jason is a Web development expert, e-strategist, and e-marketer who is trying to affect the future of the Internet in a highly positive way

http://www.oakwebworks.com

mailto: jason@oakwebworks.com for a FREE site consultation and to learn how to increase your bottom line by properly leveraging the Web


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