Generate Viral Website Traffic Using The Power Of Multilevel MarketingWritten by Terence Tan
Ever received one of those irritating chain letter scams where they asked you to place your name at bottom of 10 names and remove top one?Next you are supposed to send a buck to top name? Then you are supposed to forward e-mail with your name at bottom to 10 other friends who are supposed to do same.The idea is that for a small investment of a buck, when your name rises to top of list, millions of people will be sending you a buck? Pretty scammy, possibly might work (never tried it myself) but probably illegal in many countries! Anyway, if we take out money bit, it does seem to be a possible way to get your ad out to a lot of people. If instead of ten names, we have ten ads for web sites, potential for getting some serious web site traffic is undeniable.
| | A Novel Free-For All Traffic Generation IdeaWritten by Terence Tan
Almost anyone who has tried submitting to free-for-all sites will say that they are no longer worth effort as a traffic generating tool. Automated FFA submissions to "millions" of sites are also not that useful as most of these sites are only ever "visited" by automated submission scripts and not by human eyes. The only thing these auto submission tools achieve is to get your e-mail address bombarded with "confirmation" e-mail from FFA page owners. Many unsuspecting users who submitted their personal e-mail address to these submission tools have suffered incredible frustrations because of "spam" they receive. (Technically they are confirmatory e-mail that submitters agreed to receive.) However. one previous "victim" of confirmatory "spam" managed to turn tables around with a very ingenious twist to process. He basically submitted his web site using FFA auto submission tools and agreed to get "millions" of confirmatory email...but submitted an e-mail address that led to an autoresponder that replied back to these emails with a "thank you for your offer which I'm considering...please have a look at my web site in meantime" type e-mail.
|