Create Income With Expired Domain Traffic
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by Ken Johar August 04, 2003
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| Ken Johar |
Ken is Founder of ExpiredTraffic.com and has experience working as a professional domain speculator and investment advisor. He has written numerous articles and tutorials on the topic of expired site traffic.
http://expiredtraffic.com/
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| Ken Johar
has written 3 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Ken Johar... |
He hides behind his flickering computer screen, waiting patiently
until the time is right. Every waking moment, he compiles more and more
valuable information about your Website -- he knows how popular it is,
how much traffic it receives, what market segment it serves, and most
importantly, when your domain will expire. And then he pounces. In an
instant, your domain, your hard work, your time is his. Who is this elusive
swashbuckling buccaneer of the Internet? He's Ultsearch... and he's coming
soon to a domain name near you.
Ultsearch
(who has been known to go under the alias Yun Ye) is an icon. He's a legend
in his own right — yet he's also a vague apparition whom no one
really knows much about. His concept is simple: pillage and plunder the
'net, one site at a time. And so far, it's working to the tune of six-figures...
per day.
Has
he Caught Up with You Yet?
We begin
with a quick demonstration of just how ubiquitous and all-encompassing
the Ultsearch concept has become.
Have you
ever stumbled across a site which looked like this?

If you said
yes, congratulations! You're one of the millions upon millions of passive
contributors maintaining the continuity of one of the most finely orchestrated,
and elusive concepts in Internet history -- an operation of truly monolithic
proportions. Oh, and you've proved that Ultsearch's concept works.
If you said no, then somehow you've managed to elude the
path of this king of the Internet. Don't count on it to continue for too
long -- he'll catch up with you eventually.
If you're like the overwhelming majority of respondents,
you answered in the affirmative -- you have visited one of Ultsearch's
sites. But why are they prevalent, and what's the scoop behind his operation?
As the story goes, Ultsearch operates a PPC (pay-per-click)
business based in Hong Kong, which has a portfolio of over 50,000+ registered
domains that it uses for this purpose. It is believed he started grabbing
domains in late 1998, and has only accelerated his acquisition strategy
in recent years.
Understanding Pay Per Click Search Engines
Skip over this if you are already familiar with the concept. If not, read
on...
In order to fully appreciate and comprehend Ultsearch's
strategy, one must have a grasp of the concept of Pay Per Click Advertising.
In short, PPC search engines are performance-based search
sites where search results are ranked according to the bid amount advertisers
are willing to pay, and advertisers are charged whenever a searcher clicks
on their search listing.
Advertisers supply listings, potential keywords and their
bid amount per keyword. When a search is performed, the first search engine
listing for a specific keyword is the one with the highest bid. The remaining
listings are ranked according to bid amounts (highest to lowest). A higher
ranking generally brings in more traffic. However, the higher an advertiser's
search results are placed within the engine, the more he coughs up for
each successful click to his site.
There are a great deal of PPC search engines on the Web.
By far the largest include FindWhat, Ah-ha and 7search. Findwhat is a
publicly listed company and one of the fastest growing sites on the Internet.
Large networks
such as Yahoo! have, in most cases, set up a profit sharing (affiliate)
agreement with large PPC search engines, to share the revenue generated
by clicks originating from their sites. Google has a competing concept
called Adwords,
which allows advertisers to place sponsored links for specific keywords
searched by Google Users.
How
Ultsearch Uses the PPC Engines» Page 1
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