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Understanding Key E-Business Terms

Whether you're operating your own online business, wanting to
start one, running affiliate programs, or wanting to advertise
in e-zines - or sell advertising in your own e-zine or on your
web site, it's important to know and understand the relevant
terms used in e-business today. Hits: You see this term
everywhere, and often, it is misunderstood and misused. Each hit
to a web site doesn't necessarily represent one visitor.
Generally, hits refer to not only the web page itself, but all
files requested, including all graphics. Therefore, if a page
has 25 graphics, each visitor to that page represents 26 hits -
one hit for the page and 25 for the graphics. As you can see,
hits can be very misleading when representing web site traffic.
Page View - Also known as Impressions: As the term indicates,
this refers to the number of times each page on your site is
viewed by a visitor. If your site has 20 pages, and a visitor
goes to all pages, that visitor generated 20 page views. Keep in
mind, every time that same visitor returns to your site, they
will again generate more page views, regardless of the time
between visits. Please note that some affiliate programs use the
term page views or impressions synonymously with unique
visitors. Unique Visitors: This, by far, is the best and most
reliable measure of traffic. A unique visitor is one visitor to
a web site, regardless of how many pages he or she visits or how
many pages or files/graphics the site contains. Unique visitors
are counted only once for a specific period of time - depending
upon how the site statistics are configured. Generally, a
visitor is only counted once in a thirty day period, no matter
how many times they may have returned during that time. Keep in
mind, this time period varies wildly in the industry, so when
talking about unique visitors, make sure you know how long it
takes for a visitor to be counted again. CTR - Click Through
Ratio: Used primarily in affiliate programs and advertising,
this is the ratio between the total impressions of a banner or
link and the number of times a site visitor actually clicks on
(or executes), the banner or link. For example, if a banner/link
had 10,000 impressions in a month, but the advertiser's
banner/link was only actually clicked 2,000 times during that
same period, the CTR would be 20%. CPC - Cost Per Click: This
represents the amount of money (or other consideration), an
advertiser would pay to the site owner each time their banner or
link was clicked by a site visitor. CPI - Cost Per Impression:
This represents the amount of money (or other consideration), an
advertiser would pay to the site owner each time their banner or
link was viewed by a site visitor. CPM - Cost Per Thousand:

This is the amount an advertiser would pay a site owner for
every thousand units. I'm using the term UNITS to represent
whatever the site owner and advertiser agreed to base payments
on - per click, per impression, per subscriber (in e-zine
advertising), etc. For example, if you were being paid $.20
cents for each click through, and in a month your site generated 10,000 click throughs for a specific advertiser, you would be paid $2,000.

There are many more terms you should become familiar with, but these are the most commonly used terms with regard to web site traffic, affiliate programs, and web site and/or e-zine
advertising. I hope this helps in your future marketing
decisions.



Should You Be Linking for Traffic or Rankings?


Just for a change, rather than a technical article, I would like to tell you a story. To begin, imagine your website is a little country bar, now let's go back to when the internet began, and reciprocal linking was being done properly. Now just sit back and picture the following.....There you are. . .


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