Thursday, June 18, 2009

Ero-Advertising Review...Getting Started

Ero-Advertising Review 1:
Getting Started With Ero-Advertising.

After Google Adsense banned one of my celebrity blogs with a claim of inappropriate content, I had to look for other solutions. Since when does a celebrity photo blogs that may have ummm...a few paparazzi beach shots every now, constitutes getting banned? In the wake of that, I decided to publish a bit more racy content on the blog. Ero-Advertising is one of the options I came across. Ero-Advertising most certainly would not be an option for an all-ages site and would classify as an "Adult Publisher."

- The Sign-Up...Very easy and painless. Not much info is needed besides your name, email and address.

- The Payment Options: PayPal, EPassPorte and bank Transfers... I'm sold, I entered my PayPal email.

- The Ads... You have an option to create AdSpaces, which are either fixed advertisement spaces or you can set fixed price per period for advertisers to buy. The Types of Ad spaces are endless: Text Advertisements, Banner Advertisements, Video Advertisements and more, with numerous size options. This definitely was a plus for me.

- The Pay...I tested it out for 7 days on pages with low impressions, all fixed advertisement. I haven't had advertisers buy ads due to just setting that option today. Based on the clicks, which I've been getting between 01 to 03 cents per click. Money can definitely be made by placing ads on high traffic pages. Not to mention, when advertisers buy spaces, the earning can only get better.

I'm giving this a shot and I will have updates. I recommend trying Ero-Advertising for yourself.

Click Here to Try Ero-Advertising
Real Time Account Activation

Ero-advertising

Link Bucks: Getting Started... Is it a Scam?

Link Bucks Review 1:
Getting Started With Link Bucks... Is it a Scam?

On my quest to generate some more cash for my websites and blogs, I came across Link Bucks. Their slogan "Make money when people leave your website!" caught my attention immediately. Why is that? Well seeing that link-exchanges and blogrolls are a major part of my websites and blogs, to cash in on exiting visitors seemed like a logical option. I honestly did not question if it was a scam, more-so than whether their implementation on my site would affect my regular visitors adversely, with annoying pop-under, and misleading redirects. Based on past experiences of exit pop ups, I questioned whether it would be worth it.

To my surprise, I was very happy with the flexibility Link Bucks gives to customize links. Three options are available: Creating a "Single Link," "Multiple Links" and a "Full Page Script." Which can be customized to your liking using an extremely user friendly dashboard. All three allows a webmaster to define Frequency Cap of redirects, (Which comes in handy for say, Picture galleries on your site), Target Options (to open the redirected link in another page).

Redirects are either Intermission Pages or a Top Banner, with 2 types of target ads...Clean which is safe for all ages, and Adult Ads...

"Intermission Ads" 1$/2000 clicks
"Top Banner Ads": 1$/4250 clicks
"Popup Ads": 1$/2500 clicks

So far I've been using Intermission Ads, and the CPM seems accurate, I will keep you posted.

Click the Link Below to give it a try...



Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Top 10 ways to make more money with Google Adsense

Top 10 ways to make more money with Google Adsense

There are some simple tips that you can use to make more money from your websites. If you have an existing website, doing one or all of the following should results in an increase in your Adsense income, literally overnight:-

1. Build more pages
2. Change the standard Adsense link to match those on your site
3. Resist the tempation to change the "text" colour to anything other than black!
4. Don't have borders or coloured backgrounds, unless it matches your page (just put FFFFFF as your colour choice for the border)
5. Do choose a URL colour that doesn't stand out - grey or dark blue seem to work for some people
6. Opt out of the “onsite advertiser sign up” - all this does is place the words “Advertise on this site” on your pages, making it even more obvious that this is an advert and not part of the text. You can do this by going to “my account” and editing your subscription to this service.
7. Don't waste time with banner ads
8. Have more than one Adsense ad on each page - use the new text link adverts at the top of your site, a box ad near the top of your page and a further ad near the bottom of your page
9. Make the Adsense ads blend with your page, they should look as if they are part of the text.
10. Do sign up to free information from people (e.g. Michael Cheney and William Charlwood). They offer free courses to help promote their products, but this alone can be invaluable information.


This article was submitted by Jennifer Carter, author of Home Internet Businesses Blog

Jen started her own home internet businesses in 2005 and writes articles to share her experiences in building an online business. http://pr-gb.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=4612

Monday, August 6, 2007

Who Owns The Black Internet?

One collection of high-profile African American-related domains is valued at over $20 million.

Columbus, OH - Who owns the Black internet? This is a seemingly easy question that anyone might be able to answer by simply doing a bit of research. But the implications of the question reach beyond simply a major corporation that might have under its umbrella a plethora of black owned websites or businesses at its beck and call. A much smaller and more far-reaching company has been buying up websites with the word “black” included in its domain address or some other term denoting its Afrocentric focus. This means that ownership falls into the hands of two black entrepreneurs.

Dante Lee and William Moss, founders of Diversity City Media and HBCU Connect - marketing firms that help companies target black consumers - have purchased a host of names (see list below) they hope will give them the edge on the Black internet.

For the past 8 years, Lee and Moss have been honing in on new names and established names to register or buyout. Their quest has already locked out numerous potential businesses from claiming the domain names. This strategic move ensures that black websites are owned and promoted by people of color.

Black internet real estate is an important commodity. Lee and Moss realized the value of these names and have now cornered the market. Their most recent acquisitions are HBCU.com, BlackSpeakers.com, BlackNovels.com, and BlackHistory.com, all of which are high profile domains. Their objective is to control how African Americans use the internet - basically, to ensure that the black experience is expressed from the black perspective, rather than through the lens of mainstream media.

Many of their high-profile domains, such as BlackNews.com, are already in use as popular online destinations. Others, such as BlackNovels.com are used to generate revenue through affiliate programs. They hold domains such as eDiversity.com for potential re-branding opportunities in the future.

Lee and Moss (who recently formed Lee Moss Media) both run companies that together generate over $1 million a year. Their plan is to build an empire that will create jobs and other opportunities for those in the African American community, allowing them to create a new empire for people of color.

"I know our companies are worth a lot, but these domains we own are worth even more," Lee says. "For instance, we own BlackNovels.com, AfricanAmericanNovels.com, StreetNovels.com, HipHopNovels.com, UrbanNovels.com, and StreetFiction.com. The street novel industry is quickly approaching the billion dollar mark, and one day someone will want to pay a lot for these domains."

Not only is the move a great way to reclaim the Black internet, but a strategic investment that allows Lee and Moss to decide who will be the voice of African Americans.

Below is a partial list of high-profile domains that they own:

Domains Currently In Use:
BlackNews.com
BlackPR.com
BlackJobs.com
BlackStudents.com
BlackExperts.com
BlackSpeakers.com
HBCU.com (currently branded as HBCUconnect.com)
BlackHistory.com (launching in September 2007)

Book-Related Domains:
BlackNovels.com
HipHopNovels.com
AfricanAmericanNovels.com
StreetNovels.com
StreetFiction.com
BlackBookReview.com
HispanicNovels.com

PR-Related Domains:
DiversityPR.com
MulticulturalPR.com
UrbanPR.com
GospelPR.com
HipHopPR.com
AfricanAmericanPR.com
EthnicPR.com
LatinoPR.com
MinorityPR.com
BlackPublicists.com
BlackPublicity.com
BlackPublicRelations.com
BlackPressReleases.com

Marketing-Related Domains:
AfricanAmericanMarketing.com
UrbanMarketing.com
HBCUmarkting.com
GLBTmarketing.com
eDiversity.com
eMulticultural.com
BlackHR.com

Consumer-Related Domains:
BlackConsumer.com
BlackConsumers.com
BlackBuyingPower.com

Education-Related Domains:
HBCU.com
HBCU.net
HBCU.TV

News-Related Domains:
BlackNews.com
BlackNews.net
BlackNews.org
BlackNews.TV
MinorityNews.com
HBCUnews.com

PRESS CONTACT:
Dante Lee
Diversity City Media
614-595-6063
dante@diversitycity.com
www.diversitycity.com

Domain names dominate Internet real estate

BY EMILY PICKRELL | emily.pickrell@newsday.com
August 6, 2007 - NewsDay.com


It may surprise you to find out that the Brooklyn Bridge is indeed for sale, at least virtually.

A visit to brooklynbridge.org lists it as a domain address offered for sale in the virtual real estate market, available for an unspecified price.

Several Long Island addresses are also up for grabs.

Al Triolo of Commack owns LI.com and said he has received a $500,000 bid through broker Sedo.com, a domain name broker that lists li.com as its most desirable of the 8 million addresses in its portfolio.



What makes names valuable Although this may sound like a lot of cash for an online address, other two-letter domains have sold at six-digit price tags, including et.com for $225,000 and ol.com for $125,000, according to Domain Industry News Magazine.

"Two-letter domains are very, very valuable," said Jeremiah Johnston, chief operating officer of Sedo.com, who explained that domain names that are short and easy to remember tend to draw the highest prices. "People who have the real key, generic terms essentially own a valuable piece of real estate."

Desirable domain site names can translate into big business, and catchy geographic sites are high on the list of such addresses - such as huntington.com - because they easily attract new site visitors.

But don't assume that address has anything to do with the Town of Huntington.

Instead, a Midwestern bank, Huntington Bank, owns it - and there's little chance that will change.

"We are proud of our Web site," said Jeri Grier-Ball, a spokeswoman for Huntington Bancshares, Inc., of Columbus, Ohio. "Pelatiah Huntington established this bank in 1866, and we were among the first banks to launch online banking and an online site in 1996."

Geographic domains "are very popular in general," said Sedo's Johnston. "They're a fantastic domain name, because they are not capable of being trademarked. They are completely up for grabs."

Variations on a theme

Since the popularization of the Internet in the 1990s, individuals have been able to register domain addresses for a relatively small fee, typically about $8 a year, resulting in widespread investment in potentially desirable addresses, including community names and geographic locations.

In the 1990s, the state of New York recommended a standard for official town domain addresses, and although some towns adhered to the specifications, others registered shorter names. Huntington's official Web site can be found at town.huntington.ny.us, for example, while Islip's site is www.isliptown.org.

Huntington's address comes up in the fourth position on a Google search for "Huntington" and first place on a search for "Huntington, New York." Islip's address comes up second on a search for "Islip," right after a site dedicated to the Long Island MacArthur Airport in Islip.

"We used the standard state naming convention to register our domain name," said Joan Cergol, a spokeswoman for Huntington Supervisor Frank Petrone. "We've never found a reason to change it because we've never had a problem with people accessing our site."

Investors who bought up several names with the hopes of selling them at a profit "were very smart, because those are going to be very valuable," said David Reid, owner of NYLI Web Technologies Inc., a Bohemia company that offers domain registration. "As the Internet gets even bigger, those people are going to be happier and happier that they have that Web site name."


The domain of business

A number of related businesses, such as associatedcities .com, now promote this virtual real estate and assist domain site owners who have the rights to a particular city, such as newyorkcity.com, in promoting the value of the domain name through site construction and advertising.

Entrepreneurs still look for ways to build up value in new local real estate, such as a local businessman who is trying to promote the value of ".li" Web sites as a Long Island resource.

Some speculators hoped that local organizations might purchase location Web sites, said Moke McGowan, president of the Long Island Convention and Visitors Bureau.

"When Web sites first came out, there were individuals who bought up tons of URL names and held on to them in hopes of selling them to folks like ourselves," said McGowan.

Instead, the Long Island Convention and Visitors Bureau has looked for less expensive domain names that could be part of a larger marketing strategy, while still being quickly identifiable via a Web search. One example: discover longisland.com, which the board purchased for $300.

"We've never tried to register town names; there's no reason for us to do that," McGowan said. "It's not the domain name that's going to be the major attraction. The whole search engine optimization and key words are associated with a Web site, and that tells the search engine where to go."

As for Triolo, he says he's thinking long and hard about the offer.

"I bought li.com with the idea of developing a portal, but I never had the opportunity to develop that," said Triolo, who says he bought the domain about five years ago, but never developed a Web site with content, instead renting out space on the site to local advertisers.

"LI.com is the most wanted domain of the Sedo domain sites. I average about three to five offers a day for the site. If the offer comes that I'm happy with, I'm done."

MONDAY FOCUS

Getting a handle online

Official municipality sites on the Internet have the option of using domain suffixes for their Web sites:

".gov" - reserved exclusively for governments within the United States

".us" - once limited to governmental entities, has been opened up to U.S. citizens, residents or organizations or foreign entities with a presence in the United States.

Municipalities can also choose to use ".org" and ".com"

The World's First Domain Name Barter Trading Portal

Online Domain Name Swapping Marketplace Launches on the 4th of July 2007.

Penang Island, Malaysia (PRWEB) July 24, 2007
-- Swapnames.com is the industry's free and safe marketplace for everyone to literally trade their domain names or websites in return for other, more valuable domain names.

With SwapNames, domain owners can now actively search out domains of interest, offer their own domains to swap, as well as receive swap offers from other domain owners. Additionally, the site acts as a domain name marketplace where users have the option of buying or selling valuable e-properties. All listings on SwapNames have both a fixed selling price and a trade value, which creates valuable exposure to easily market and sell or trade domains.

Presently, there are no open, 'free-for-all' marketplaces just for domain name barter trading. All other domain name marketplaces are either auction houses or 'for sale listing' sites. With the launch of SwapNames, the domain name industry now has its very own true-blue barter trading portal.

The idea for SwapNames was inspired by a man named Kyle MacDonald who traded one red paperclip for a different item, and continued trading his items until, 14 trades later, he owned a house. SwapNames' founder Koay Al Vin, after reading about the One Red Paperclip project, immediately related the idea to the hundreds of domain names he had invested in.

"Most of my lesser quality domain names could not be sold, and were left undeveloped and gathering 'digital dust'. I could not properly monetize the names, and renewal dates were drawing nearer!" said Koay. "Because of the circumstances, I had to actively search out fellow domain owners to barter trade my names with theirs. Today, every domainer in the same boat can actively 'trade-up' their domains and that is an extra alternative instead of just letting their domains expire," he added.

"I knew that this industry was really in need of a platform for people to swap their existing domains. Now, everyone can diversify their portfolio of domains the way Kyle MacDonald did, but this time it will be for virtual pieces of properties: domain names."

About SwapNames

Swapnames.com (http://www.swapnames.com) was founded by a Malaysian-based domain investor and entrepreneur, Koay Al Vin.

With a little help from a kind angel investor and some money made from a domain name sale, Koay hired a talented programming team from India to chase his vision. He dreams of a totally new marketplace where domain name 'trade-ups' could potentially be among the mainstream tools for domain investors.

SwapNames, Inc was incorporated in Delaware, USA and operates from a tiny, but beautiful, island in Malaysia called Penang.

One other virtual property founded also by Koay is DNHour.com (http://www.dnhour.com), another industry's first. It is a DIGG-style domain industry news portal.

Network Communications, Inc. Signs Multi-Year Adwords Deal with Google

RISMEDIA, August 7, 2007 –Network Communications, Inc. (NCI), a publisher of printed and online real estate information, has announced a three-year partnership with Google to offer AdWords™ and other local products from Google to the real estate industry. The signed deal makes NCI the first company in the real estate marketplace that Google has partnered with in this way and will help drive more quality traffic to NCI advertisers’ sites, the company says.

“We are excited to offer our advertisers the opportunity to expand their online presence through Google AdWords,” says Glenn Goad, executive vice president, Consumer Strategy for NCI, Inc. “Real estate sources today have multiplied. The model for how consumers search for and sell homes continues to change and the Internet has been a driving force behind this evolution. Our partnership with Google allows us to provide even more highly effective and targeted online real estate marketing services and products to our customers.”

Goad adds, “NCI is committed to partnering with the most established, market-leading companies that strategically complement our current offerings. Google’s leadership in search and online advertising, combined with our leading real estate portal and expertise in local real estate advertising will deliver top online services to our advertisers.”

NCI offers its customers a wealth of real estate information, found both in print and online. The company distributes over 13 million magazines every month to consumers who are looking to buy, sell rent or renovate a home. NCI’s network of more than a dozen online distribution partners delivers more than 50 million unique visitors monthly. With over 20 established brands including The Real Estate Book, Apartment Finder, New Home Finder and Unique Homes, NCI is the number one provider of online and print real estate leads in North America.

Google AdWords is currently used by hundreds of thousands of businesses worldwide to gain new customers in a cost-effective way. With the Google AdWords advertising program, NCI customers can advertise themselves on the top Web property in all major global markets. This gives businesses full control over their budgets, allowing them to stop or pause their campaign, monitor their spending or change their advertising messages at any time.

For more information, visit www.livingchoices.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Please send them to realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.