Tuesday, July 31, 2007

LinkWorth: The Good

There are a number of link broker sites out there: the good, the bad, and the ugly. I'm not going to name the ones I don't like for a number of reasons, but I will tell you about one that I have been with for several years and that I am very happy with and that is LinkWorth.com.

There are a lot of reasons why I not only like LinkWorth, but also have been very loyal to them. When I was contacted directly by an advertiser after they canceled text ads on our sites, I was surprised that they wanted to do this to get a discount by bypassing LinkWorth. I promptly reported them to LinkWorth and told the former advertiser that I would never take their business, no matter how much they offered us.

I did this because LinkWorth provides a good service and charges about 30% for the text ad fee. This is not a small amount, but the other sites I have seen generally charge about 50%, or 30% of the "wholesale" price. I consider both of these to be excessive, although to be fair LinkWorth does take 50% of the fees when they take care of the marketing and placing of text ads. I have not tried the full service option but it may be worth it.

Once your site is set up in LinkWorth, you can add code to your site which allows the adding and removing of text ads on your site to be automated. If you've ever added and removed links as advertisers change, you know that can take some time and be a headache if you have a lot of sites.

LinkWorth also allows you to buy text ads on other sites and has different types of advertising options. And as a publisher you can also provide a number of options for advertisers.

We have been with LinkWorth for a number of years and also run Google AdSense on most of our sites. Over the past few years the income from AdSense has decreased, but the LinkWorth income has increased and we are now exceeding the most we have ever made with AdSense on a monthly basis.

If you have a web site or a blog and are not not offering text ads on your site, you are missing out on a great additional revenue stream.

[Note: This is not a paid post and it does not contain any paid text link ads. Some links may be affiliate links and can be easily circumvented if you wish. If you want to confirm that I really feel this way, please feel to comment. I really do like LinkWorth...]

Friday, July 20, 2007

MLS Listings Portal for Sellers and Investors

Ibuydeeds.net Debuts as MLS Listings Portal for Sellers and Investors

Creative financing listings for residential and commercial properties are often hard to find, there are very few companies which specialize in just this particular market.

Ocala, FL (PRWEB) June 26, 2007 -- Ibuydeeds.net has created MLS listings portal for sellers and investors who want to sell their owner financed mortgages residential and commercial cash flow notes.Owner financing is a popular creative option to traditional mortgages and is still a growing niche market within the real estate market

This concept of owner financing has been popular for centuries and in the 1980's made resurgence as home sellers increased their potential home buyer customer base by offering an alternative to traditional mortgages. It is estimated that 40% of homes in the United States are owned free and clear and that about half are seller financed..

Owner Financed/Seller Financed properties can be difficult to locate especially since there are no real MLS for these types of listings other than the for sale by owner sites. There are sites which may offer free listings but many do not offer and include the additional ad enhancements such as photo uploads of the property and the free flyer and webpage you will get with your listing at Ibuydeeds.net

Ibuydeeds.net has categorized the listings in two categories, they are owner financed, and lease option. The creation of a simplified MLS upload listing process for home sellers and investors to create full color downloadable flyers with up to seven photos of the property allowed for upload. In addition to creating a webpage for your listing and web address to send potential buyers to in additional advertisements for the property.

If home sellers and investors have difficulty creating the ad, they can send in the details and color photos through fax or mail and Ibuydeeds.net will create their advertisement at no additional charge for the client.

Once the client has found a buyer for their mortgage note , if the seller created the mortgage note to complete a sale and really would prefer to sell their note for a lump sum. Ibuydeeds.net can find a buyer for their newly created mortgage note.

Ibuydeeds.net has created a massive search engine of mortgage note companies, private investors, free resources, and articles on one website. It is a complete resource page for the novice and the investor to find the tools on how to create and market your mortgage note for top dollar.

Contact:
Anna Cruz
www.ibuydeeds.net
352-861-9095

#=##

Press Contact: ANNA CRUZ
Company Name: IBUYDeeds
Phone: 352-861-9095
Website:
http://www.ibuydeeds.net

Domain Renewal Scam Charges 10 Times Normal Fee

We just got this spam and in looking at what they do, it does not appear to be another domain transfer scam, but a "service" to help you remember to renew your domain name (as if registrars don't already send many reminders!).

But at $69.95 they charge almost 10 times what a basic renewal fee would be. If you get a spam from them, please report it to your domain registrar, the spammer's ISP, and ICANN. The domain below will redirect you to their main domain at
http://www.domainrenewal-online.com.
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Domain Renewal [mailto:reminder@domainrenewalonline.com]
Sent: Friday, July 20, 2007 6:23 AM
To: Domain Renewal
Subject: www.mobileone.info

domain renewal
 
It is time to renew your domain name www.mobileone.info
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Your domain name www.mobileone.info will expire within 90 days. You may renew your domain automatically with Domain Renewal. Click on the link in this e-mail to renew the domain for another year. You should renew your domain as soon as possible in order for it to continue to be registered in your name.
 
Click here if you wish to renew your domain
-->
http://www.domainrenewalonline.com/for.php?d=mobileone.info
 
As soon as we have received your payment, you will receive a confirmation that your domain has been renewed.
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Services and information about Domain Renewal
Domain Renewal maintains domain addresses, and registers and consults companies in  relation to Internet domain ownership. We inform businesses about which domains are  registered, and remind them if a domain is due to expire, or when it is time to renew a domain. If you want Domain Renewal to extend the domain for you, we ask you to click on the link in  this e-mail. If you do not wish to use your domain after the due date for renewal, you may  disregard this e-mail. When Domain Renewal extends your domain no information will be  changed in the “Whois” information section. The domain will be extended for 1 year. You will  therefore continue with your current supplier. You may also request your Internet Service  Provider to renew the domain for you. If you have any further questions please do not hesitate to contact our customer service centre by sending an e-mail to
support@domainrenewalonline.com
domain renewal

Monday, July 16, 2007

Nielsen More Impressed With Time Than Pages

Word To Nielsen: Brand Matters Less Than You Think

by Mark Simon, Monday, July 16, 2007
POOR GOOGLE. JUST WHEN IT looked secure as the great Web colossus, Nielsen/NetRatings changed all the rules.

Last Tuesday, Nielsen/NetRatings, "a global leader in Internet media and market research" (the company's words), announced a key change to its Top Web Brands rankings. Dropping the page view as its chief criterion, Nielsen is now focused far more on the time visitors spend on the site ("total minutes") to measure site engagement.

And for good reason. With the proliferation of Ajax technology -- around in various forms for over a decade, but now something of a new Web norm -- visitors can have deep online experiences without leaving a single page. A gamer can conduct hours of online play, and a rich media consumer can watch endless amounts of video, without ever clicking a link. The more you can do on one page, the less jumping from one page to the next becomes a relevant measurement of brand affinity -- which is why Nielsen has made time spent, not the number of pages looked at, into the new key metric of a Web brand's popularity. That's bad news for search engines, and for Google in particular. The search engine business is one of quickly farming users out to millions of other sites as efficiently as possible, a service that's rich in page views but poor in time spent with the engine. It's a page view play, not an engagement one, which is why Tuesday saw Google drop from Nielsen's No. 1 Web brand down to No. 5.

Is Nielsen's new ranking approach the right move? Yes and no. As a way to understand the value of Web brands, time spent is certainly a metric that's gotten short shrift until now. Even without considering Ajax, it makes sense that users would spend more time on the sites they like more. Which is why time spent on the site is a crucial factor in determining brand affinity.

But what Nielsen is missing lies in what it's looking to rank -- the "Top Web Brands." That's a ranking of brand equity rating. But on the Internet, brand equity only goes halfway for making brands valuable. It's not how powerful your brand is that matters; it's how you leverage that brand to interact with customers.

A large brand affinity relies on striking a common ground among a wide section of the population; millions of people like Coke and Mickey Mouse, and so Coca Cola and Disney are masters of brand equity. But in today's media universe, where the plethora of choice means that everyone is looking for personally tailored results, the keys to winning financially don't just lie in brand equity alone.

Brand attracts the customers, as brand is the packaging that allows users to understand a product and, afterwards, to evangelize it to friends. But in the end, it's personally tailored results that will get users to stick. A good brand pulls people in; a personalized product keeps them coming back.

That, for example, is the genius of the iPod. The little white device is the most popular piece of fashion equipment around, which is a brand experience. But the iPod's function is to deliver whatever specific music its users care to hear -- which is a customized experience. Ditto e-Bay and Amazon, the brands considered the best places for everyone to find whatever they want, and which visitors use to find the specific items they're looking to buy.

The converse is also true. Take MySpace's recent challenges from Facebook. MySpace has fashioned itself into the Web's biggest meet-and-greet; Facebook, meanwhile, has become the place for current and aspiring yuppies to meet the like-minded. By offering a more focused experience, Facebook, the smaller brand, has been able to pose problems for its broad-appeal competitor with the larger brand.

Of course, it's that combination of brand appeal with targeted service that makes for the best of search engines. Everyone who goes to Google.com gets pretty much the same experience: they search for an item and they find it. That makes Google an easily explained, easily packaged brand. But at the same time, the individual results will change from search to search -- or, in Google's ultimate vision, from searcher to searcher. Google (or any good engine) can pull its users in with the brand, and make them into loyal customers with personally tailored results.

Which is why Google remains the king of the Web. It may not be the most treasured brand, and it may not be the place where users spend the most time. But for combining a huge brand following with targeted results, no other business on the Web -- and perhaps no other business in history -- can match it.

Of course Google won't stay on top forever. But for the foreseeable future, its users will be coming back to it for much, much longer than the duration of a page view.

Post your response to the public Search Insider blog.

Mark Simon is vice president of industry relations at Did-it, an agency for search engine marketing and auctioned media management based in New York. You can reach Mark at msimon@did-it.com. 

Search Insider for Monday, July 16, 2007:
http://publications.mediapost.com/

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If this issue was forwarded to you and you would like to begin receiving a copy of your own, please visit our site - www.mediapost.com - and become a complimentary member.
For advertising opportunities see our online media kit.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We welcome and appreciate forwarding of our newsletters in their entirety or in part with proper attribution.
(c) 2007 MediaPost Communications, 1140 Broadway, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001


[We've been using Ajax for years. We think it works much better than Comet.

And visitors spending a lot of time one one page is nothing new either. Framed sites and Flash sites are old news.

So page views may not be a great to measure site usage, but neither is time spent on a site. Who knows what the user is doing during that 15 minutes on a single page? More likely than not, with a curve adjusted for age, they could easily be:

Talking on one or more phones
Watching Youtube videos in another window
Using IM or chat
Watching as they defragging their hard drive
Napping
Watching TV
Talking to someone
Eating lunch
Reading some form of ancient printed material in it's original form
Petting a cat/dog/ferret/bunny/raccoon/Bengal/snake or other pet

And many other things that I don't do or have not seen others do (Just as well).

Since you can't tell what the user is doing, the amount of time spent cannot be very accurate, can it? So why move away from the page views? Perhaps because of bots, spiders, and off-line web viewers. I guess for me, the measure should be of BOTH metrics. How many pages and how much time spent also. I suspect that with a fair amount of data collected you could even start to have a number of "profiles" into which most of the visitors could be classified. ]

Monday, July 02, 2007

Apple iPhone Search Activity "Nuts!"

Searches for Apple iPhone Spike in Weeks Prior to Launch

June 29, 2007 - comScore, a leader in measuring the digital world, today released a study on US search activity related to the Apple iPhone, revealing that Americans have conducted an average of 274,000 iPhone-related searches per week since the beginning of the year.  iPhone-related search activity is defined as all searches containing any derivation of the term "iPhone."

January iPhone Announcement and June Advertising Campaign Cause Spikes in US Search Activity

Product-specific search activity can provide an important gauge of consumer demand.  comScore's study of iPhone-related search activity since the beginning of the year revealed some interesting insights into consumer demand and interest surrounding the iPhone.

When the product was first announced by Apple CEO Steve Jobs at Macworld on January 9, iPhone-related search activity jumped to more than 1.1 million searches during the week ending January 14.  From February through May, the number of weekly searches ranged between 80,000 and 200,000, which still represented very high levels of search activity for an individual product.  By comparison, even during the post-announcement period the number of iPhone-related searches was comparable with the number of searches for Motorola's "Razr," a well-established and popular cell phone already available to consumers.

As Apple's major iPhone advertising campaign touched off in June, search activity once again spiked with 704,000 iPhone-related searches for the week ending June 10, followed by 727,000 during the week ending June 17, and finally peaking with 1.2 million for the week ending June 24.

"The iPhone launch is likely to be one of the biggest product launches in history, and the activity we're seeing online clearly reflects widespread consumer interest," said James Lamberti, senior vice president of search solutions at comScore.  "This study also helps underscore the significant role search plays in both online and offline retail, since many of those researching the product online will be lining up at the bricks-and-mortar retailers to purchase their new iPhones."

iPhone Searchers Interested in Price, Release Date

Through June 24, nearly 6.9 million searches were conducted that included the term "iPhone."  Of those searches conducted, more than half (3.7 million) were for "iPhone," while nearly one in ten (638,000) were for "Apple iPhone." The most common related topics were price ("iPhone Price" with 217,000 searches and "Apple iPhone Price" with 57,000 searches) and release date ("iPhone Release Date" with 87,000 searches and "Apple iPhone Release Date" with 26,000 searches).

Top Click-Thru Destinations from iPhone-Related Searches
Week Ending Jan. 7, 2007 - Week Ending Jun. 24, 2007
Total U.S. - Home/Work/University Locations
Source: comScore qSearch

Search Term                     Searches(000)   Share of Searches
Total iPhone-Related Searches   6,860           100.0%
iPhone                          3,722            54.3%
Apple iPhone                      638            9.3%
iPhone Price                      217            3.2%
iPhone Release Date                     87               1.3%
Apple iPhone Price                     57                0.8%
iPhones                            41           0.6%
iPhone Cingular                        36                0.5%
New Apple iPhone                34               0.5%
Apple iPhone Mobile Phone       26               0.4%
Apple iPhone Release Date         26             0.4%

iPhone-Related Searches Generate 2 Million Click-Thrus to Apple.com

iPhone-related searches generated more than 7.8 million click-thrus to Web sites since the beginning of the year, led by Apple.com with 2.3 million.  Other top click-thru destinations include top gadget blogs Engadget.com (288,000 click-thrus) and Gizmodo.com (272,000 click-thrus).  Meanwhile, the Web sites for AT&T and Cingular, which have the exclusive carrier rights to the iPhone, generated 151,000 and 124,000 click-thrus, respectively.

Top Click-Thru Destinations from iPhone-Related Searches
Week Ending Jan. 7, 2007 - Week Ending Jun. 24, 2007
Total U.S. - Home/Work/University Locations
Source: comScore qSearch

Web Domain      Click-Thrus (000)       Share of Click-Thrus

Total iPhone-Related
Search Click-Thrus      7,873           100.0%
Apple.com                  2,363                30.0%
Engadget.com                 288                3.7%
Gizmodo.com                  272                3.5%
Blogspot.com            217             2.8%
Google.com                 199          2.5%
ATT.com            151          1.9%
Cingular.com                124         1.6%
YouTube.com                113          1.4%
EverythingiPhone.com   89               1.1%
CNET.com                 85             1.1%

Added Mr.  Lamberti, "In a previous study conducted by comScore, we found that product-related searches in the consumer electronics category can result in conversion rates as high as 25 percent within 90 days of the search - when one examines buying that occurs across all channels.  Achieving such a high conversion rate may ultimately prove difficult with a new product, but if that assumption were to hold true it could yield as much as $1 billion in search-driven iPhone sales when factoring in the $500 to $600 price tag."

About comScore
comScore, Inc. is a global leader in measuring the digital world.  This capability is based on a massive, global cross-section of more than 2 million consumers who have given comScore permission to confidentially capture their browsing and transaction behavior, including online and offline purchasing.  comScore panelists also participate in survey research that captures and integrates their attitudes and intentions.

Through its proprietary technology, comScore measures what matters across a broad spectrum of behavior and attitudes.  comScore analysts apply this deep knowledge of customers and competitors to help clients design powerful marketing strategies and tactics that deliver superior ROI.  comScore services are used by more than 700 clients, including global leaders such as AOL, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Verizon, Best Buy, The Newspaper Association of America, Tribune Interactive, ESPN, Fox Sports, NestlĂ©, MBNA, Starcom USA, Universal McCann, the United States Postal Service, Merck and Expedia.  For more information, please visit www.comscore.com.

#.#.#

Marketing | directories | Search | search-engines | search engines | seo | Search Engine Optimization