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clickspirationcasinoLooking for affiliate programs and referral schemes? Like our popular sister site, clickspiration casino is a visual directory of quality online advertising links - to help you choose the very best affiliate program for your needs. clickspirationcasino smargeting - it's smarter targeting! |
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It's becoming increasingly more difficult to market to web-weary visitors who've seen it all before. Luckily, we've got a few casino smargeting techniques up our sleeve.
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Use our simple guide to easy web creation options in conjunction with our casino affiliate links directory, and you'll be earning in no time! the directory is designed to help publishers choose top affiliate casino advertising programs and referral schemes that look great with their sites - as well as convert. But besides providing homeworking and earning opportunities with our great visual directory of casino and gaming links, we do our best to provide you with eseential info for affiliate marketers and advertisers. So check back often for updates on affiliate marketing, resources and tips, as well as the best new casino and gaming affiliate schemes.
Smarget your ads for improved resultstest your smargeting options Targeting. It's quite possibly the most important factor in any advertising or marketing campaign, and for good reason: it works. But to reap results, you've got to get it right. And that, of course, is easier said than done. In theory, effective targeting shouldn't be quite such a challenge. After all, its premise is fairly straightforward: find the right product, find the right user and introduce the two. But as most publishers know, getting those clicks, leads or purchases can be tough. After all, it's estimated that just a couple of people in a hundred will even think about going near your ads. In which case, you'll need to do more to persuade them. Test your smargeting optionsIn order to smarget, we'll be thinking about ads from two points of view: the way they look and the way they earn. There's plenty that's already been written about ways to enhance ad performance, and any legitimate method that optimizes revenue clearly has a place in smargeting. Any info you already have regarding ad positioning, blending and the like is a valuable resource, particularly if you feel it works. But we're about to look at a smargeting concept that may not be so obvious. The received wisdom is that 'blending' ads makes them more successful. In other words, if an ad's colors and look closely match its environment, users are more likely to click it. The reasoning behind this is so-called ad blindness, the idea that if ads stands out too much, most users will simply ignore them. But what if, for some others, ads are something they want to notice? A part of a website they actually enjoy? It's certainly true that many sites aimed at a particular demographic - younger, outgoing - use quite the opposite technique. Such 'psycho-blending' is a clear attempt to smarget a user's mindset and personality. After all, if ad campaigns in the offline world are created for particular audiences, why shouldn't online strategies at least partly follow suit? On the other hand, as users become much more used to the tactics of 'classic' blending, a general drop in clickthrough rates seems to indicate that they're also learning to ignore anything 'camouflaged' on a page. (I'll explain exactly why I think this is happening and how to off-set its effects later in the article). So which way to turn? Although there's constant debate about which system works best, you'll need to discover which gets results for you. And it's not just a question of tweaking ad colors because if you're smargeting, you'll want to investigate the idea of psycho-blending, too. Are some ad formats more suited to your users' overall personality than others? The first step is to make sure you know exactly which different formats are available. There are many affiliate ad programs, and each have their own distinctive looks or functionality. Peel-back ads; classic text ads; text ads featuring images; video; you name it, you're likely to find it. right here in clickspiration. Sign up to a selection of programs offering ads you feel might work - or even some you think might not. You'll now need to test these different ad types to compare performance on your site. This, admittedly, is far from an exact science, but harnessing the power of keywords will help balance results. And despite flaws, this simple test method should tell you far more about smargeting your users than you already know. Work with a page that has no other advertising on it, and decide on a specific keyword. Ensure it's a fairly standard one so that ads are readily available across all formats; choose one, too, that you know attracts users - we want to test ad types, not the keyword itself. As an example, I'm going to select 'camera', and will imagine that we're going to test inline text, a standard text ad, a mini-mall and finally a banner. To work with the inline text format, you'll need an ad scheme that lets you isolate keywords as well as the number of ads you want appearing in the text - in our case, it'll be just the one. To ensure that 'camera' is the only operative word on the page, simply add the 'sectioning' tags to your source code as specified by the affiliate program. Publish your page and leave it online long enough to get a handle on the stats. Essentially, you're looking at clickthrough rate - page impressions divided by number of clicks - and should be able to track this data in your affiliate admin area or through your own stats software. You'll want to ensure you allow a good number of impressions for each ad type tested - thousands preferably, but you can settle for less if your traffic isn't that high. Once you think you've a good idea how the ad is performing, try the standard text ad. Place it inside your text roughly in the same position as the previous example, and make sure the size isn't hugely disproportionate to the inline link you've just used. Again, you may need to section keywords so that 'camera' is active. Publish the page and check your stats. Once you've reached the set amount of impressions, repeat the process using the mini-mall format with 'camera' as a product. Finally, test a banner (again, you may need to isolate keywords or locate a specific camera ad from a company such as Commission Junction.) Did you learn anything from these tests? Was there a definite preference amongst your visitors? And more importantly, how did clickthrough rates compare to the format you've been using so far? If any are noticeably higher than your current format, you've learnt something valuable about your users. Either that overall, they prefer a different format to the one you've been using; or, that changing or mixing ad types provokes real interest. Either way, you can use such results to push your smargeting further. Turn up the heat - where are your visitors clicking?Some ad providers make it easy for you to refine smargeting techniques by providing precise admin tools allowing you to track individual ads. Surprisingly, however, this tends to be an exception rather than a rule. Which is where the heatmap comes in - an incredibly useful smargeting tool. In case you've not come across the term or technique before, a heatmap quite simply uses color to visually depict levels of activity: the 'hotter' the color, the greater the activity. Its use in web optimization shows exactly which areas of your page are getting the most clicks - an invaluable insight, and until recently, one that was only available to specialists. Now, however, there are a couple of great new online tools that offer heatmap info for your site, and best of all, several are free (with some limitations). I'm sure the technique will become very popular indeed and that soon you'll have a lot more options to choose from. But for the time being, you'll find the links here on our tools page. If you're working with a variety of ad programs on one site, or even using just one that doesn't allow you to chart the effects positioning has on ad performance, heat maps are clearly one of the best optimization tools around and a perfect smargeting weapon. What's more, if you're investigating the perfect combination of ad formats, a heat map will help you determine what mix of ads is popular far faster than trawling through separate sources of data. The wider contextMost would agree that contextual advertising is the backbone of perfect smargeting techniques. In the best possible scenario, you've managed to establish your very own context by promoting a specific niche that visitors actually come to your pages for. But since that's an exception rather than a rule, contextual advertising within your site should - in theory at least - target visitors with advertising that's geared to their interests. What's more, if you're savvy, and really want to optimize your earning opportunities, you'll carry out keyword research before creating site content. Let's say, for example, that you're running a food and wine site and want to write an article on white wine. You happen to know a lot about German whites, but by taking a look at a keyword tool before starting - Google's free one works just fine - if you type in 'white wine' as a search term you'll notice that 'California white wine' is a much higher paying keyword phrase than 'German white wine'. Which means that you've now found your topic, knowing that any contextual ads generated by the content are likely to be the highest payers. And while you're at it, you may as well check out a few other high payers, too. A pretty good smargeting move, right? Maybe not. Consider the following scenario. Your visitor - a regular - hasn't yet turned up at your site. They're intending to stop by, but right now they're viewing a blog. It's also about food and wine because after all, that's their main interest. There's an ad at the top of the page for Californian white wines, which happens to tie in nicely with the article they're reading. Elsewhere in the blog, they notice an ad for Belgian chocolates. They decide to switch to your site, keen to check out some of your recipes. They immediately notice an ad on the homepage. It's the one they've just seen for the Californian wine producer. And oddly enough, there's an article that's similar to the one they've just read. No worries - your visitor clicks through to the recipe page and starts scanning the latest content. Then they notice an ad for Belgian chocolate. It's in a slightly different format, but otherwise exactly the same one they saw just a few minutes ago. This is almost starting to get a little irritating, and your visitor can't help wondering why they're seeing the same ads over again. Of course, the answer in this case is because you and your rival publisher were being smart - or so you thought - with keyword optimized content. But the fact is that even if you're not expressly manipulating keywords, a scenario in which users surf from site to site seeing the same ads is growing increasingly common. After all, that's exactly what contextual advertising is about. And even the largest advertising networks only have a limited amount of ads to share across an ever-increasing number of affiliated sites. All of which means that, sooner or later, visitors with specific interests will encounter ads on your site they've seen many times before. Which isn't something even the very best blending or positioning techniques can do much about. So how can we tackle this growing problem? Clearly you're not going to abandon contextual ads, because they do work - just less efficiently as time goes by. The smargeting answer is to review the idea of context and prise it open. To take another look at what you're offering and work out if you can push it that little bit further. It's time to start thinking laterally about your average user profile. What else is likely to make them tick? In fact, coming up with ideas may be a lot less difficult than you think. Take, for example, our food and drink site. If our users are interested in food, perhaps they'd also be keen on tableware. Products such as dinner services, glasses or cutlery, perhaps? Maybe they like to hold dinner parties, too. What about flowers arrangements for the table? Or speciality cleaning products? - those red wine stains can be tricky to remove. And then there's the area of food preparation itself. Kitchen and cookery utensils could extend to high-end goods such as fridges, dishwashers, or kitchen design and fittings. Get the idea? Not only have you found yourself several potentially valuable niches within your food and wine sector, you've also discovered a way to vary the potential monotony of your regular campaign with a completely new and unexpected message. It's the smargeting way to fight increasing ad blindness - and to emphasize the difference I'd certainly consider a contrasting ad format, too. So investigate some of the options here in clickspiration; a highly visual mini-mall would be just the thing for kitchenware, for example. And finally, don't forget to check those heat map results to see how far your smargeting can take you.
Welcome to our casino and gambling affiliate links directory - a unique visual directory designed to help affiliate publishers choose exactly the right casino referral programs for their pages and needs. Casinos, slots, online betting, roulette, poker, bingo - you name it, we aim to cover it!. As well as providing a visual resource of top casino and gaming links, we want to keep you up to date with marketing info for publishers and advertisers in the affiliate gambling and gaming sector. So check back frequently for updated guides and affiliate marketing resources.
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