Archive for the ‘Text Links’ Category

Using Paypal to Handle Advertising Subscriptions

Friday, October 12th, 2007

A convenient, simple way for advertisers to add (or remove) themselves from your site, can be done through the use of a PayPal Subscription Form. This will allow you to accept advertising subscriptions and recurring payments on your website through a customized payment button. It’s safe for both publishers and advertisers, as either has the option of dropping the subscription at any time, and it allows systematic payments without the need for recurring billing.

When creating a subscription advertising package, you will want to include some detailed information about your advertising opportunities and some site demographic information. Take care not to mention the terms ‘text link’, ‘SEO’ and ‘PageRank’ on your advertising page.

For Example:

Benefits include:

1. A link and full web site description on our front page.
2. THISSITE.com ranks high in Google, Yahoo, MSN, etc.
3. THISSITE.com is indexed about every 48 hours by the major search engines, including Google, MSN, Yahoo!, AOL, AltaVista, and others. It is likely, but not guaranteed, that your site will be indexed by these search engines as well.

Cost: Only $XX a month.
You may cancel at any time. Please allow up to X business days for your ad to appear.
NOTE: Only advertisers related to ___ are allowed. All advertisers are subject to approval.

Under this, you would put your Paypal subscription form with a field for the ad information, which might include the link, the keyword phrase, the banner graphic location, ect.

To create a subscription form, go to Paypal > Merchant Services > Subscribe (Under Merchant Buttons)

Under the Subscriptions & Recurring Payments page, you will create your subscription form. We recommend creating a three day trial period. That way, if it takes a few days for you get the ad on the site, the advertiser is not charged. It also provides you a time window to reject any inappropriate advertisers before they are charged. You will then want to add options to create additional information fields related to the ad (link, link phrase, etc.)

You should also include information that lets advertisers easily stop their campaign when they choose to do so.

How do I cancel my sponsorship?

You can cancel your subscription from your PayPal transaction history. A subscription can be cancelled up until the day of the next scheduled payment. Follow the directions below:

1. Login to your PayPal account
2. Click on the My Account tab
3. Click on the History sub tab
4. Click on the Status of the subscription in question (you may use the History search features to locate your transaction)
5. Click Cancel Subscription
6. You have successfully canceled your subscription

When an advertiser does cancel their advertising, it’s a good idea to follow up with why and let them know that you will be pulling their ad at the end of the subscription period.

With a little setup work to start, you can easily manage many advertisers.

Website Sponsorship Ideas

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

When creating an advertising mix for your website, consider your potential advertisers and your audience. Too many ads can turn off your audience and your advertisers. (After all, who wants to pay $X/month to compete with fifty other button ads?) There are many types of direct advertising that you can offer, and it often takes some trial and error to find the right mix of advertising.

Below are the most common website sponsorship methods:

Banner/Button Positions: What’s old is new again. They offer color and sometimes animation. For best results, choose standard ad sizes.

Text Links: These can be static links. Sometimes they may have a sentence or two about the advertiser under them. Paid text links have come under scrutiny lately, but they still remain popular, and SEOs are still buying them. They key is to be smart with them. Contextual linking falls under this category.

Pop-ups/Pop-Unders: Intrusive and annoying, but they do tend to have a higher click-through rate than banners. (Or is that just people accidentally clicking on the ad when they are actually trying to close them.) Many users have blockers that keep standard popups from appearing.

Content Sponsorship: Advertisers have limited control and submit their own content to the publisher, as well as having their ad on the page. These sponsorships tend to be for fixed periods, and the content should be targeted to the publisher’s audience.

Interstitials: Sometimes referred to as Bridge Ads, interstitials appear as you move between pages on a site. Click-throughs are generally greater than from banner adverts or traditional pop-up ads.

Email Newsletters: An advertiser is prominently displayed at the header and/or footer of a regular email newsletter. The ad can be text-based or graphical in nature.

Text Content Links: A keyword phrase embedded within the content of a web page is linked to the advertiser’s web site. Bloggers are sometimes paid to specifically link content. Like text links, this type of advertising has also come under scrutiny.

Are we missing any direct ad types here?

Offer Permanent Contextual Linking

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

With text link networks under fire and causing angst among webmasters everywhere, there are still ways for publishers to sell text advertising without relying on networks and with little risk of ‘paid link detection’.

This method works especially web for bloggers, but can apply to content on any website.

The idea: Offer to hyperlink specific phrases within articles or content. Offer permanent content links for a one-time fee. For a small website, you could offer a bundle of links for a set price, such as 5 links for $25 or $50 dollars. For the publisher, it’s easy money with no further commitment. For the advertiser, it provides inexpensive permanent backlinks.

The publisher can offer particular pages or sections that they are willing to backlink, and the advertiser can select what phrases they want linked and where. Sometimes the content may need to be tweaked a bit to get the proper phrasing in place. This can be worked out during the negotiation process.

In many cases, it’s better to sell links from older content that is already backlinked from other outside sources.

The key is that the paid links should be contextual. If an article is about buying commercial real estate, paid link should be a related term, such as ‘commercial real estate’ that links to a website or web page about commercial real estate. It’s better to reject inappropriate advertising than potentially compromise your search engine standings for a few dollars.

Tips: Only sell one or two links per page. Do not repeat the link throughout every instance of the term on a page. Do not employ the same text link phrase sitewide. And most important, make sure the contextual links are in the body of the content.

There are many ways Google can spot paid links. And whether paid links are evil or not is up for debate. Done properly, offering links through the above method is virtually undetectable.