May 5

Now you can have a fierce samurai warrior protect your links and ward off those leeching scumbags who are taking money out of your pocket … introducing …

Samurai Stealth Cloaker

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I just bought the Samurai Stealth Cloaker, So far so good. I have been looking for a solution like this for awhile and have wasted enough time with other solutions and stuff I made myself. This is everything I wanted and more in one nice bundle.

Apr 27

Came across a site today, www.freebusinessprinter.com where you can Receive a Free High Performance Color Printer or Copier for your Business. All you need to do is submit a simple application and if chosen, you can get a free Xerox Phaser 8560 printer.

What You Get:

* Xerox Phaser™ 8560 printer
* Free service and support for three years
* Free delivery of the printer

Program Qualifications:

* Print 2000 pages per month
* Three-year partnership
* Return the printer at any time—NO RISK!

Apr 8

New Service for those affiliates who have multiple accounts out there and give their Social Security Number out. With some many affiliate networks coming and going I would recommend getting a subscription to LifeLock. Visit them at: www.lifelock.com.

If your like me, I am parternered with over 50+ netwoks and only work closely with a few. I was checking up on a few the other day and was surprised to see that they where out of business. I even had one email me back after inquiring about a payment I have’t received and got "I don’t know what you are talking about. We have been out of the affiliate business for months. Your account should have been inactive." Funny thing is, I can still login and pull offers. I get a bit worried now, as new affiliate networks are springing up all over and look professional but are run out of the country.

Just be careful. A good review site Life-Lock-Review.com has non-bias opinions about LifeLock as well as other users opinions and comments.

Apr 4

Hey I stumbled upon a site a few weeks back and wanted to share with my fellow readers. Its Alert Deals http://www.alertdeals.com. It’s a great site for those looking for hot deals. You do have to check back often, as most deals seem to either sell out, expire, or placed on backorder. There is a broad range of stuff alerted on. I like how it explains how to use a certain promo code and stack coupons to make the deal sweeter and lighter on my wallet :)

Some stuff that was recent that caught my eye where:
- Sharp AQUOS Special Savings up to 50% off for Employee friends and family (had to use certain pass codes to enter site)
- $50 off PER NIGHT at Expedia.com (This was a really hot deal for me. Saved $150 on a 3 night trip to Chicago)
- Beach Sexy Triangle string bikini set for $5.99 (The wife really liked this :) also got Free VS Cotton Panty and Angels Secret Embrace Matte Hiphugger or Thong.)

So all and all, a great site for hot deals. So add this to your bookmarks and keep an eye on this site.

Mar 6

Associate Programs Newsletter #8

CONTENTS:

1. “Second generation” AShoppingGuide
2. New way to start your own affiliate program
3. Amazon.com now has 3.1 million customers
4. Pyramid scheme payout
5. OzEmail Buddy similar to ICQ
6. Anyone want to buy a web site?
7. What’s your web address worth?
8. A good one - not for foreigners

=====================================
1. “Second generation” AShoppingGuide
=====================================

I reckon it’s time to take a fresh look at AShoppingGuide - whether you’re a merchant looking for a place to get publicity or a webmaster looking for an good associate program.

AShoppingGuide has an attractive, easy to navigate layout, and Richard Hauf is pretty clever at attracting visitors to it.

The “second generation” AShoppingGuide will debut tomorrow, or maybe on Monday - I’ve been given two different dates. The updated site features “online communities” built around “revamped shopping channels”.

Who needs another shopping mall to add to the thousands? Whoa! Richard insists that the site is a “shopping directory”, not a shopping mall. “Unlike many cybermalls, we do not generate revenue for our site by selling shopping cart programs, credit card processing services, or web hosting to our merchants,” Richard says.

Also, it doesn’t trap visitors in frames. “Once a visitor clicks through to our merchants’ site, they are then customers of the merchants’ site and no longer ours.”

The part I like best is the completely revamped affiliate program, which offers commissions of $US7.50, $US75 and $US150, and real-time statistics. (A banner says payouts go as high as $100, but the site says $150, so I’ll believe what the site says.)

Richard says that affiliate models based on a per click-thru basis are difficult to administer and leave themselves vulnerable to fraud. (More about that in the newsletter next week.) So he now offers commissions based on a percentage. You earn 15% (or 20% if you design a banner which AShoppingGuide uses).

AShoppingGuide sells merchant listings in the directory. A basic listing costs $US50 a year, one with frills costs $US500, and the top of the range listing is $US1000 a year so “there is a tremendous income potential for our affiliate sites”.

Why would a merchant want to buy a listing in AShoppingGuide?

Richard says that, unlike many cybermalls, AShoppingGuide does not rely on free advertising to promote the site, rather most of the merchant fee is used for paid advertising for the site. “In fact, we currently purchase over 250,000 paid banner impressions PER MONTH for AShoppingGuide through select advertising channels.”

As well as that, I’ve noticed how Richard is very skilled at getting publicity for the directory by intelligent participation in popular mailing lists. Remember the name ShopSafeMall? That’s what AShopping Guide used to be called a few months ago. You’ve probably seen the name popping up in LinkExchange Digest, I-Sales, and all sorts of other places around the Internet.

It’s that clever combination of paid advertising and cunning free marketing which makes AShoppingGuide well worth considering for a merchant. With merchant “lease fees” as cheap as about $1 a week, “many of our merchants achieve cost per click-through rates (CTR’s) from AShoppingGuide site that are less than $0.01 per click through!”

That is a very strong selling point.

However, like most associate programs, this one doesn’t reward you for signing up new associates and - unlike my Favourite Web Cards - it doesn’t give you permission to use your special URL in newsletters or articles.

At first glance, I didn’t like some of the banners provided, because they emphasize how great the associate program is, instead of persuading merchants to list - which is how you will earn your commissions. On second thoughts, though, they are eye-catching ads, well designed to generate high click-throughs. And it’s getting people to click which is often the hardest part.

Overall, I think it looks good, so I’ve signed up, and I asked Richard for permission to use my special URL in the newsletter. I haven’t received a reply - probably because my web host is up to his favourite trick, installing new equipment, and some of my e-mail has been bouncing.

[UPDATE: This site has vanished.]

==============================================
2. New way to start your own affiliate program
==============================================

For merchants wanting to start their own associate program, there’s a new option, Affiliate Link software from AffiliateZone.com (and it has its own affiliate program).

AffiliateZone.com is a joint venture of BelHal Technologies and Interferenza. Craig Belcher owns BelHal - Triguide.com/giftshop - (pronounced bell hall) and Giancarlo Russo owns Interferenza , which specializes in advanced web services.

“We developed the software so any webmaster could start and maintain their own affiliate program without a large upfront cost that our competitors charge,” Craig said.

Affiliate Link software is a series of cgi scripts that allows a webmaster to start and maintain his own affiliate program for goods or services. “What we do is install these scripts on your server and give you some simple directions on how to use the software.”

The merchant can choose to pay a fixed amount for click-throughs or set the program to pay a percentage of the goods sold, or a mixture of the two.

“To help prevent fraud we have included a option where the link to your site from your affiliate’s site has to match the domain/path the affiliate had entered in his or subscription to your program,” Craig says. “Example: The domain/path the affiliate entered in his/her subscription was www.isp.com/user1 so if someone visits your site through www.isp/user2.com no sales or click-throughs will be accredited to that particular affiliate’s account.”

If you choose to use that option, the affiliate won’t be able to market your goods or services via newsletters, mailing lists, newsgroups, or articles on other web sites. It sounds unnecessarily restrictive to me, but the good thing is that it’s just an available option. It may suit some merchants who want tight control over how the marketing is done.

Real-time stats are provided so the merchant always knows who is selling what and how much, and the the affiliates have peace of mind that they are not being cheated. “You’ll attract larger companies to participate in your affiliate program since you have this type of service,” Craig says.

The Affiliate Link software can be installed on your server within three business days, he says.

“For a limited time we are installing the Affiliate Link Software on our clients’ servers for $250.”

If you’re too busy to start and run an associate program you can choose a Pay Affiliate option. Affiliate.Zone.com will mail the commissions for you.

By the end of August the new site will be 95% in place and the new domain will be used. You can expect to see some big changes at the site - but more about that when it happens.

Oh yes, I nearly forgot. The associate program pays a generous $US50 commission for every merchant who signs up for the Affiliate Link software. I think it’s an ideal one for my site.

http://www.affiliatezone.com/

===========================================
3. Amazon.com now has 3.1 million customers
===========================================

The mighty Amazon.com, king of associate programs, now has 3.1 million customers, attracted with the help of 60,000 associates, but it’s still losing money. Recent reports:

wired.com/news/news/business/story/13925.html
thestandard.net/articles/news_display/0,1270,1069,00.html

========================
4. Pyramid scheme payout
========================

Tempted to get involved in an illegal pyramid scheme? Checks totalling $3US.1 million have been sent to people who were defrauded in an international pyramid scheme.

wired.com/news/news/politics/story/13923.html

===============================
5. OzEmail Buddy similar to ICQ
===============================

OzEmail Buddy is a tool which tells you when your friends or business partners are online and allows you to exchange private and instant messages with them in real-time. It’s similar to ICQ and easy to use, says OzEmail, the largest ISP in Australia. “Simply compile a list of your friends’ email addresses and enter them into your buddy list. When you log on to the Internet from home or work your buddy list will appear. If your friends are online, their names will be highlighted in green and then you are free to start instant messaging them . . . it’s free and open to all Internet users around the world.” Of course, your friends need to have registered, too.

buddy.com.au

[UPDATE: This service closed.]

================================
6. Anyone want to buy a website?
================================

Lawrence Kellie writes:

SportsExtra.com says it is out of business.

Lawrence R. Kellie
Cala Creek Website Design http://www.calacreek.com
Affordable and elegant website design

=================================
7. What’s your web address worth?
=================================

If you haven’t bought your own domain name yet, this bit of news reported in the San Francisco Chronicle may persuade you to hurry up. Compaq, which owns the Alta Vista search engine, and has a ludicruous, hard to remember address - http://www.altavista.digital.com - has bought a better one.

It paid Jack Marshall of San Jose $3.3 million (US), for a much better address: www.altavista.com .

What will the name you buy today be worth in a few years?

Got a great idea for a name? See if it’s still available:
http://www.betterwhois.com

==================================
8. A good one - not for foreigners
==================================

Here’s bonus for people who read to the end of this: MyPoints. It’s another of those programs - like CarPrices and Web Cards - which reward you even when people don’t buy anything. MyPoints is a reward system. People earn points which can be redeemed for goods at various sites.

Here’s the really good part. The site is so lively and well designed that an amazing more than 30% of visitors sign up for the the free-to-join scheme. You earn $1 for each sign-up.

Work it out: Send 100 people there, and you earn $30.

The bad news: It’s for Americans and Canadians only. Whatever happened to the global village?

The associate program is run by a third party, LinkShare. You can join LinkShare here:
http://www.AssociatePrograms.com/linkshare

When you have signed up with LinkShare - it’s free - another program to consider is the Cyberian Outpost. It pays only 3% so I ignored it at first glance, but then I found out that the average sale is $US250 to $US300. It has a bright, lively site, designed for generating sales, I reckon.

I’ve just signed up.

[UPDATE: Cyberian Outpost was renamed Outpost.]

P.S. I’ve just checked my stats and I’ve made about $US90 this month with Web Cards - easy money for recommending that people ask for a free sample of an excellent product.

[UPDATE: I stopped promoting Web Cards after it started using spam.]

Free-Banners is AssociateProgram.com’s official banner exchange because it pays you for getting new members and rewards you with 10% of all banners displayed by members you sign up.

Sign up at Free-Banners now.

All the best

Allan Gardyne

By Allan Gardyne | Published 07/31/1998

Mar 6

Affiliate loyalty isn’t easy to win. To encourage affiliates to be loyal to your affiliate program, you have to do something really special to stand out from the crowd.

Some of the the techniques I describe here require considerable time and effort. However, they’re a wise investment because the alternative is so much worse - spending time and money hunting for super affiliates, who then switch to other programs.

If you succeed in creating loyal affiliates, they will not only stick with your affiliate program and promote it enthusiastically, they’ll recommend it to other top affiliates.

Just in case you’re wondering how important these tips are, consider this…

I learned many of these tips by studying an affiliate merchant who pays me four-figure and five-figure monthly commission checks. Yes, affiliate loyalty IS very important!

Here are 28 ways to win affiliates’ loyalty and boost their sales.

(I’ll assume you’re selling an EXCELLENT product and have a site that SELLS - a site with a high conversion rate. Without those, your program might as well be dead.)

Most important of all, HELP your affiliates

Give them all the tools they need to succeed. Provide lots of precise, detailed, “how-to” marketing info online. Keep them enthusiastic with tips in your affiliate newsletter.

Help your affiliates by writing emails they can publish - or adapt and publish - in their newsletters. Some will will be prepared to use a hard-sell message while others want something more low key.

Give them sales messages and graphics they can paste into their websites. Provide a wide variety of banner sizes, ezine ads, forum signatures, articles and rebrandable reports for them to give away.

While providing these materials, teach them the enormous power of writing personal endorsements and saying things in their own words.

Consider adding a toll-free number for affiliate support.

Put someone knowledgeable in charge of answering affiliates’ questions - promptly, in simple English.

A classic example of someone who went to extraordinary lengths to help affiliates succeed is the late Corey Rudl. Study how his company does it. He was running an affiliate program before Amazon.com and his company owes a lot of its $6 million a year revenue to the fact that it provides heaps of practical, helpful affiliate marketing advice. His company has a huge number of loyal affiliates, and has more than 100,000 affiliates.

Show your affiliates how your top affiliates achieve sales

Give your affiliates concrete examples.

Show them step-by-step, with all the precise details they need, how your top affiliates earn a good living. (Work with your affiliates on this. Not all affiliates will want such publicity. If so, respect their right to privacy.)

Pour special recognition on your high-earning affiliates

Send them flowers, champagne or chocolates. I still think very fondly of the affiliate merchant who gave me my first taste of Tattinger champagne.

Horrified at the thought of the cost? You’ll spend a LOT more finding new super affiliates.

Create friendships and win enthusiastic supporters

The first time Ken Evoy phoned me from the other side of world for a friendly chat I was very impressed. That friendly phone call helped win my loyalty.

Phone calls can turn business relationships into lasting friendships. Turn your top affiliates into loyal friends. Remember, you don’t want just a collection of affiliates. You want enthusiastic supporters.

You’ll need to understand the difference between shallow flattery and sincere appreciation. Read or re-read Dale Carnegie’s book, How to Win Friends and Influence People.

Encourage your affiliates to speak up

You’ll learn what they REALLY think about your affiliate program, and you’ll learn how to make it better.

Praise your top affiliate marketers on your site

This serves three purposes. It teaches other affiliates what works. It rewards your top affiliates by sending them traffic. The public recognition increases affiliates’ loyalty.

Recommend your top affiliates in email discussion groups

This is a way to build affiliate loyalty which won’t cost you anything except a few minutes of your time but will have a dramatic effect on how loyal your top-earning affiliates feel.

Write to a popular email discussion group such as LED Digest and recommend your affiliates’ sites or something they wrote.

Your affiliates will love you for this! (I’m extremely grateful for the public praise which AssociatePrograms.com and PayPerClickSearchEngines.com have received from affiliate merchants.)

Set those cookies fairly

If a customer returns the next day, the next week, or even a year later and makes a purchase, the affiliate should receive a commission. Track your customers in every way possible to make sure the affiliate receives the commission.

This is vitally important. If your “return days” period is set at zero, many good affiliates won’t even sign up for your program. The absolute minimum “return days” period should be 30 days. The longer the better.

Consider paying lifetime commissions

Imagine the power of saying to your affiliates, “They’re YOUR customers for life. Sell once, earn indefinitely.” That’s a powerful drawcard which will keep your affiliates loyal and enthusiastic.

See the article by Christopher Pearce How to start a lifetime commissions affiliate program. It also describes how to set up a residual income program - another excellent idea.

Pay your top affiliates bonuses

I received a pleasant surprise when veteran marketer Jim Daniels, author of Make a Living Online, sent me $250 for being his top-earning affiliate one month. That helped him retain me as a loyal affiliate.

I really appreciate the hundreds of dollars worth of Amazon book vouchers I receive from other merchants and the Flash memory stick I received recently from Neil Shearing.

Pay special affiliates a special high commissions

You know that key affiliates in key positions of influence are very valuable. Pay them accordingly. Don’t embarrass them by forcing them to ask for the special rate which they deserve.

Residual commissions and two-tier commissions also win favor with affiliates.

However, don’t assume that a high commission alone will be enough. You have to get everything else right, too.

Before you launch a two-tier program, ask yourself if there are affiliates in key places of influence who are likely to want to recommend your program to other affiliates. If there aren’t, forget the idea.

Two-tier commissions aren’t nearly as effective as they were several years ago. This is because these days affiliates tend to switch rapidly from one program to another, always looking for something better. Instead of having two tiers you might be better to pay one large commission.

However, affiliates are always going to be interested in earning residual income or lifetime commissions. I can’t imagine them ever going out of fashion.

Let them buy at discount prices

Give all your affiliates favored treatment. Give them special discount prices. However, don’t allow them to buy your products through their own referral links. That’s not fair to the affiliate who sent them to your site.

Provide individual product links

If you sell more than one product, provide individual product links. Don’t force your affiliates to link only to the main page of your site.

Mention loyal affiliates at affiliate marketing conferences

Give them a warm glow. Use their site as an example in your presentation. I love it at conferences when speakers recommend AssociatePrograms.com to the crowd.

Learn from your inactive affiliates

Do a survey of your inactive affiliates. Ask them what is wrong. Until you know why they’re inactive, you won’t know what to fix.

Inactive affiliates and under-performers could be next month’s or next year’s winners.

Learn from your best affiliates

You’ll probably receive a far more useful response if you ask your loyal super affiliates how to improve your program. Many of these winners will know the best features of the best affiliate programs on the Net. They’ll be happy to give you useful tips on how to improve your program.

Study what your top affiliates do

You’ll probably find that they’re earning money in all sorts of creative ways you’ve never thought of. Their knowledge can help your affiliates earn more.

Make affiliates feel part of your team.

Find ways to build a sense of community. Consider setting up a forum for your affiliates. However, be aware that this can be very time-consuming. You don’t want to have your forum ruined by a disgruntled former affiliate. Don’t start one unless you have someone available to moderate it.

Visit your affiliates’ sites

Here’s a good tip from Joel Gehman.

“We have someone on our affiliate marketing team personally visit the site of every super affiliate every month. All super affiliates get a personal email with specific comments and suggestions. We offer tips on which links are performing best and propose new placements on the site for our links. We also try to broaden the depth of the affiliate’s relationship with our program by suggesting new products or services for possible inclusion.”

Add new items automatically

When you add a new product to your product line, make sure your affiliates are rewarded when someone they refer buys that product. Don’t force your affiliates to sign up individually every time you launch a new product.

I love it when I see in my stats that I’m earning commissions from the sale of a product that they havebn’t even started promoting.

Piggy-back on the winners

Some affiliate merchants provide excellent resources for their affiliates. Encourage your affiliates to sign up with those merchants and learn from their tips. You can even earn a commission when your affiliates make sales in those programs while learning how to help you - and saving you time!

An excellent place to start is: SiteSell.

Imagine you’re an affiliate

See things from the affiliates’ point of view. Visit the Associate Programs Affiliate Forum and read what affiliates complain about. They’re worried about lack of response to emails, late payments, bait-and-switch tactics, high payment thresholds, low payouts.

Do whatever you can to avoid those mistakes, or your affiliates will dump you fast.

Don’t send them junk. Every time you contact your affiliates, sending them something useful, such as new artwork, a search box, top-performing links, search engine hints, and other tips on how to maximize their earnings.

Now that you’re imagining you’re an affiliate, have another look at your affiliate agreement. Is is fair? Would you want to sign a contract like that?

Notify them of sales

Provide immediate email notification when the affiliate makes a sale. This reinforces good behavior and encourages more sales.

Give busy affiliates the option of switching off these messages. One affiliates merchant often sends me 30 or 40 email sales notifications at once - and no way of switching these off.

Send a weekly stats report

Affiliates find it terribly time-consuming checking stats on many sites. Make it easy for them. If you provide complex stats, make sure there’s a link which gives the most important stats at a glance.

Consider emailing affiliates a weekly report of click-throughs, sales and commissions.

Pay affiliates in two ways

Consider paying them per click and a commission. For example, you could pay your best affiliates pays 5 cents per click and 20% commission on sales.

Pay affiliates for position

Persuade your top affiliates to promote you “above the fold” on their main page. Offer them 5% or 10% more if they’ll do this.

Pay them monthly - or more frequently

Don’t make your affiliates wait three months for a check. Pay them monthly - or even twice a month for your super affiliates.

Pay them promptly

After the end of the month, pay your affiliates as quickly as you possibly can. Imagine the powerful impression you’ll make if YOUR check is the first one an affiliate receives after the end of the reporting period. Paying fast shows you care about your affiliates.

Some affiliate merchants have even experimented with daily payout via PayPal. This impresses some affiliates but may not please really successful affiliates who don’t want the added “paperwork”. If you plan to pay daily, give affiliates the option of receiving monthly payouts.

Allow affiliates to set minimum payments

Affiliates in many countries have to pay hefty bank fees on U.S. commission checks. Frequent, small checks can actually annoy these affiliates.

Give them the option of setting a minimum payment amount, for example $50 or $100, to minimize their bank fees.

Avoid making silly mistakes

I know you’re in a hurry. Mistakes are understandable. However, if you make too many silly mistakes, affiliates will dump you. See Silly mistakes affiliate merchants make.

Treat your affiliates as business associates

Respect them or they’ll switch to someone who does. Don’t siphon off some of the traffic they send you to products on which they don’t earn a commission. When referred customers arrive at your site, all money-earning links on that page should earn a commission for your affiliate.

Provide real-time statistics

Serious affiliates need to know immediately whether their promotions are achieving results so they can test repeatedly, fix mistakes and maximize their sales.

Make things easy for your affiliates

They get discouraged fast. Some things are just too darn complicated for many affiliates. Keep your instructions simple and easy to understand.

Don’t have time to coach affiliates? Get expert FREE help

Ken Evoy provides more useful affiliate marketing support for his affiliates than any other affiliate merchant I know. Ken provides an incredible amount of useful information for affiliates: THREE practical newsletters, a 224-page free affiliate marketing manual, and an “80-20 Report”, and the newly revamped and enlarged “Affiliate Masters” course.

Now he’s ALSO helping affiliate merchants.

Be sure to visit the special section of SiteSell: For affiliate managers only.

I strongly recommend it.

(This is the affiliate merchant who regularly pays me four-figure and five-figure monthly commission checks. Get his expert free help now.)

It helps your affiliates while you earn substantial lifetime commissions.

By Allan Gardyne | Published 01/15/2006

Feb 20

I recently started a new job in a downtown office that’s right off the bus line. I decided to start commuting to save money on gas, since I live 18 miles away. I wanted a way to connect my laptop to the Internet so I could get some work done or catch up on email on the way.

To make things more interesting, the new company let me choose between a PC or a Mac. I chose the Mac so I’d get a chance to learn some new things, and they gave me a new Macbook that I’ve already fallen in love with. My wife has a PC laptop loaded with Windows Vista, and my Macbook is running Apple’s OS X.

I was able to connect both laptops to the Internet using my Bluetooth-enabled cell phone as a modem. I’ll break down the steps for both Mac and PC laptops, and you should be able to get up and running with these instructions in about 15 minutes.

Here’s what you’ll need for a tethered laptop-cell-phone:

  • Bluetooth-enabled cell phone (mine is a Motorola Razr V3, but a 3G phone is much faster when it comes to Internet data transfers)
  • Bluetooth-enabled laptop, or a laptop with a Bluetooth adapter.
  • Internet data plan or a dial-up Internet account. I used the MediaNet internet plan with AT&T ($19.99 a month for unlimited internet). You can also use an EarthLink Dialup account ($9.95 a month for six months, and $21.95 after that).

Pair your Bluetooth phone with your laptop

Configure your phone’s BlueTooth settings to make it visible to your PC or Mac. On a Razr phone use the following menu options:

Settings –> Connection –> BlueTooth Link –> Setup –> Find Me

This will tell your Bluetooth phone to broadcast a Bluetooth signal to your laptop for about 60 seconds - plenty of time for your laptop to recognize the signal and “discover” the device.

For Windows Vista on a PC laptop, follow these steps:

  1. Click the Start button, click Control Panel, click Printers and Other Hardware, and then click Bluetooth Devices.
  2. Click Add, and then follow the instructions.

For OS X on a Macbook, follow these steps:

  1. Open Applications –> Utilities –> Bluetooth Setup Assistant.
  2. Select the “Mobile Phone” device type.
  3. Complete the pairing process.

Your laptop will now be paired with your Bluetooth-enabled phone, and will be able to use the phone as a wireless internet modem. Once paired, you won’t have to go through the setup steps each time - it’ll remember your device for future connections.

If your PC doesn’t have a built-in Bluetooth adapter, I’ve seen them for about $25 on Amazon, such as the Motorola Bluetooth Adapter PC850.

Connect your laptop to the internet

Next you’ll connect to the internet using your cell phone as a modem. Bluetooth has a 30-foot range, so you can leave your cell phone in your pocket (or backpack in my case) and never have to touch it.

You’ll need to sign up for an EarthLink Dialup account, or an Internet data plan with AT&T.

For a PC running Windows Vista:

  • Click the Start icon and then select the “Connect To” menu.

    You’ll see the “Connect to a network” screen where your phone should be listed. You can select “Dial-up and VPN” from the dropdown to only show your GSM cell phone in the list.

  • Select your phone from the list, and click “Connect”. You’ll be prompted to enter your dial-up account user name, password, and phone number.


For a Mac running OS X:

Getting my Bluetooth phone connected was a little harder on the Mac, and involved loading some customized modem scripts that I found from Ross Barkman’s Home Page.

The scripts I used were the Motorola GPRS Scripts, which I saved to the /Library/Modem Scripts folder. The scripts download contains detailed instructions in the Read Me.rtf file that’s zipped up with the drivers - and they really work.

  • Set up PPP:
    A. Open Network Preferences
    B. Optional: Create a new location - call it “Mobile” .
    C. Select “Show: ‘Bluetooth Modem Port’”
    D. Select the PPP tab and enter your network name in “Service Provider”.
    E. Enter in “Telephone Number” - the APN for your network or “None” (without the quotes)
    F. Enter the Account name & Password (if required)
  • Set up the cell phone modem:
    A. Select the Bluetooth Modem tab in Network Preferences.
    B. Set ‘Modem: “Motorola GPRS “‘ - I used the Motorola GPRS CID3 script.
  • Connect to the Internet:
    A. Open Internet Connect (in Applications)
    B. Select Bluetooth Modem Port (or the equivalent USB or IrDA port name)
    C. Click “Connect”

Please refer to the Read Me.rtf file contained in the zip file for more detailed instructions and some helpful trouble-shooting tips.

If you’re using the AT&T MediaNet account (a GPRS plan), then you’ll enter WAP.CINGULAR for the phone number. Here’s a comprehensive list of numbers to use for other GPRS internet service providers: http://home2.btconnect.com/Taniwha/gprs.html

Once you connect to the internet using your Bluetooth cell phone, you’ll be able to browse the web, chat, check email and do all the other things you do with a regular internet connection.

Download speed won’t be fast though unless you’re using a 3G phone. Internet browsing speed with my Motorola RAZR phone reminded me of about a 28.8k dial-up modem, which was fine for websites containing more text than images - and certainly fine for IM. And it made the bus commute home much more enjoyable.

If your phone is 3G-enabled, it will give you speeds similar to a DSL home network, which is much faster than a regular dial-up account.

Source: RickSays

Feb 19

What are the secrets of the super sites? Why do some sites succeed while the majority of others fail? More and more Internet business owners are asking themselves these questions. The answers are frequently more obvious than you may think. Below are 10 tips for better, more successful web sites.

1. Build It For Speed

It’s a fact of modern life - people are in a hurry. Nowhere is that more true than on the Internet. It seems that no matter how much the technology improves, nothing is ever fast enough. In fact, several studies indicate that the fast technology advances, the faster people expect things to be.

So what does this mean for your website design? It means that you have between 10 and 30 seconds to capture your potential customer’s attention. If they can not at least begin to read about your product in that much time, they will be headed e

lsewhere. To minimize your load time, keep graphics small. Compress them where possible. Use flashy technology (Javascript, Flash, Streaming Audio/Video, animation) sparingly and only if it is important to your presentation.

2. Target Your Market

Know who your market is and make certain that your site caters to their needs. It is critical that your site reflect the values of your potential customers. Is your market mostly business professionals? If so, the site must be clean and professional. Is your product aimed mostly a teenagers and young adults? Then your site could be more informal and relaxed. The key here is to know your market and build the site to their preferences.

3. Focus The Site

Make certain your web site is focused on the goal, selling your product or service. A site offering many unrelated products is not necessarily unfocused, but this is often the case. If your business does offer many products, dedicate a unique page for each instead of trying to sell them all from one page. Upselling or cross selling is vital but don’t dedicate so much to it that the customer feels caught in a bait and switch. Make mention of other products but do so subtly.

4. Credibility Is Crucial

The most professionally designed site won’t sell if your customers don’t believe in you. The impersonal nature of the Internet breeds a certain level of mistrust. For your web site to be successful you must overcome this tendency.

A clear privacy statement is one way to build your credibility. Every commercial web site should have a privacy statement posted on line. Provide a prominent link to your privacy statement from every page on the site as well as from any location that you are asking your visitors for personal information. Provide legitimate contact information on line. Your contact information should include an email address, mailing address, phone number and a fax number, if applicable. If you are unwilling to provide this information to your customers, how can they trust (or buy from) you?

5. Offer A Guarantee

Offer an ironclad, no exceptions money back guarantee. This item is really a credibility issue but it is important enough to warrant its own mention. What better way to establish your customer’s trust than to eliminate any risk for them? If the customer sees that your are willing to assume all of the risk, they will immediately be more inclined to trust you.

6. Make Payment Easy

Offer a variety of payment methods for your customer. If you don’t currently take credit cards, start immediately. You can either set up a merchant account or use one of the many credit card clearing houses. Take checks on line. Provide an address for those who prefer to pay by cash, check or money order. Make sure the payment process is clear, easy to access and intuitive to use. Eliminate as many steps as possible. Do not ask for any more information than is necessary to complete the transaction. Nothing frightens a customer off faster than feeling that their privacy is being invaded.

7. Simple Navigation

Make site navigation easy and intuitive. While it may be artistic to make your index page all black and hide the link to continue, will that generate business? If your customer can not navigate your site to find what they want, they will go elsewhere. Limit the choices and direct your customers through a sales process.

8. Consistency

Make sure the site is consistent in look, feel and design. Nothing is more jarring and disturbing to a customer than feeling as if they have just gone to another site. Keep colors and themes constant throughout the site.

9. Design for indexing

85% of all web users find what they are looking for via the top search engines. Make sure that your page is designed to maximize your placement. Focus on your keywords and keyword density but don’t sacrifice your message. Utilize the meta tags keywords, description and title. Use your keywords when naming your pages.

10. Content is (still) king

Good content sells product. Ask yourself the following questions. Does your copy convey the message you wish to get across to your visitors? Is it compelling? Does it lead your visitor through the sales process? Have others review, critique and edit your copy to insure it is delivering the intended message. Always double check your spelling and grammar.

Implementing the ten steps above probably will not make your site as successful as Yahoo or Amazon overnight. If they are implemented correctly and integrated into an overall web site design and marketing campaign, you should see a marked improvement in the site’s traffic and sales.

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Tony L. Callahan, is a successful Internet Promotions Consultant with more than twenty years of industry experience and is president of his own Internet marketing company, Link-Promote. He also publishes Web-Links Monthly, a newsletter full of tips, tricks, tools and techniques for successful web site promotions. To subscribe, send e-mail to: Web-Links- subscribe@topica.com.

Feb 15

Google program is a popular web advertising program which provides a good income source for many websites. There are well defined terms of service to strictly adhere to when participating in the program.

On my visit through sites and forums, I daily notice several instances of misuse of Adsense ads. So here a few helpful Google Adsense tips, probably many you already know, and few you might gain by knowing now. These adsense faq are all picked from the Program Policies, Terms and Conditions and FAQ itself and presented in a simplified manner.

1. Never click your own adsense ads or get them clicked for whatever reason. You know this one very well. This is a surefire way to close you Adsense account. Never tell your office associates or friends to click on them. Keep a check if your family or children are busy increasing your income by clicking your ads and indirectly trying to stop your income. Dont even think of offering incentives for clicks, using automated clicking tools, or other deceptive software. Adsense is very smart to detect fraudulent clicks. Check the ads which appear on your pages by the Google Preview tool if required.

2. Never change the Adsense code. There are enough means of adsense optimization & customizations available to change the colour, background or border to suit your needs. Do whatever you want to do outside the code, never fiddle within the ad or the search code. They know it when you do. The search code has more limitations to colour and placement, but you should adhere to the rules. The code may stop working and violates the TOS.

3. Do not place more than 3 ad units and 3 ad links or 2 adsense search boxes on any web page. Anyway, ads will not appear in those units even if you place more ad units. But this is the limit they set, so it is better to stick to it.

4. Do not run competitive contextual text ad or search services on the same site which offer Google Adsense competition in their field. Never try to create link structures resembling the adsense ads. Never use other competitive search tools on the same pages which have Adsense powered Google search. They do allow affiliate or limited-text links. Update: Google has allowed you to run contextual advertising like Yahoo ads, Chitika etc provided the ads do not resemble Adsense ads.

5. Do not disclose confidential information about your account like the CTR, CPM and income derived via individual ad units or any other confidential information they may reveal to you. However, you may reveal the total money you make as per recent updates to the TOS.

6. Label headings as “sponsored links” or “advertisements” only. Other labels are not allowed. I have seen many sites label ads with other titles. Dont make your site a target in a few seconds gaze.

7. Never launch a New Page for clicked ads by default. Adsense ads should open on the same page. You may be using a base target tag to open all links in a new window or frame by default. Correct it now as they do not want new pages opening from clicked ads.

8. One Account suffices for Multiple websites. You do not need to create 5 accounts for 5 different websites. One account will do. If you live in the fear that if one account is closed down for violation of TOS, believe me they will close all accounts when they find out. You can keep track of clicks by using channels with real time statistics. They will automatically detect the new site and display relevant ads.

9. Place ads only on Content Pages. Advertisers pay only for content based ads. Content drives relevant ads. Although you might manage some clicks from error, login, registration, “thank you” or welcome pages, parking pages or pop ups, it will get you out of the program.

10. Do not mask ad elements. Alteration of colours and border is a facility to blend or contrast ads as per your site requirements. I have seen many sites where the url part is of the same colour as the background. While blending the ad with your site is a good idea, hiding relevant components of the ads is not allowed. Also do not block the visibility of ads by overlapping images, pop ups, tables etc.

11. Do not send your ads by email. Html formatted emails look good and allow placement of these javascript ads. But it is not allowed as per TOS. You do not want impressions registering on their logs from any email even once. They are watching!

12. Keep track of your content. So Adsense is not allowed on several non content pages. But it is also not allowed on several content pages too. Do not add it on web pages with MP3, Video, News Groups, and Image Results. Also exclude any pornographic, hate-related, violent, or illegal content.

13. Do not alter the results after ad clicks or searches
- Ensure you are not in any way altering the site which the user reaches to after clicking the ads. Do not frame, minimize, remove, redirect or otherwise inhibit the full and complete display of any Advertiser Page or Search Results Page after the user clicks on any Ad or Search results.

14. Avoid excessive advertising and keyword stuffing - Although the definition of ‘excessive’ is a gray area and is subject to discretion, yet Google adsense with correct placement, focused content and high traffic will get you much more income than other programs, so excessive advertising is not required. Keyword stuffing does target better focused ads, but overdoing it is not required.

15. Ensure you Language is Supported - Adsense supports “Chinese (simplified), Japanese, Danish, Korean, Dutch, Norwegian, English, Polish, Finnish, Portuguese, French, Russian, German, Spanish, Hungarian, Swedish, Italian and Turkish”. In addition, AdSense for search is available in Czech, Slovak, and Traditional Chinese. If your web pages language is not supported, do not use the code on such pages.

Update:
16. Maximum 2 referral button per product per page - With the launch of the google adsense referral program, you are allowed to put only 2 referral buttons for adsense referral, adwords referral, Google pack and Firefox with google toolbar referral.

17. Do not specify Google ads as your alternate ads. - Several services like Chitika eminimalls allow you to place alternate urls, when a targeted paying ad cannot be displayed. This involved creating an simple html page and putting the ad to be displayed instead. Even Adsense allows an alternate url feature instead of displaying public service ads. But never use Adsense ads as alternate urls.

18. Do not confuse with adjacent images - It was a common policy to increase CTR by placing same number of images as the number of text ads, which falsely gave the impression that the text ads represented an explanation to these images. Inserting a small space or a line between the images and ads is not allowed. Make sure that the ads and images are not arranged in a way that could easily mislead or confuse your visitors.

Whenever in doubt, it is better to ask for adsense help from the learned staff of Google Adsense. They are very helpful!

Source: quickonlinetips.com

Feb 14

They say it’s the login page to your account? Make them prove it

At some point, there’s a chance you may receive an e-mail that looks like it came from Yahoo!, taking you to something that looks like a Yahoo! Search Marketing login page, but something’s…not quite right. It could be a “phishing” attack from someone who is trying to duplicate a Yahoo! page in order to get your user name and password to hijack your account.

Sign-in SealTo help combat these phishing scams, we have installed what’s called a “sign-in seal” on our log-in page. Already in use by many financial institutions, a sign-in seal is a cookie-based secret message or image that is displayed on your computer(s) only. (That is, the machine(s) you use to log in to your account.) If you use more than one computer, you’ll need to set up your seal for each. You can create your own custom text message to use as a seal, or upload your own image.

If you do not see your custom seal—and you haven’t cleared your cookies on your browser—when signing into your account, the site you’re on may be a “spoof” site designed to hoodwink you into giving up your valuable personal information. We encourage you to create a customized sign-in seal for your Yahoo! Search Marketing account today, then look for it every time you log in. You can set up your seal from your Yahoo! Search marketing log-in page (the real one).

—The Team at Yahoo Search Marketing

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