Home
Home
Our network has developed many ways of delivering
traffic. Our most effective way is through the use of expired domains.
Everyday our network purchases abandoned domain names that have traffic
on them. These domain names had a previous website on them that fits
into our targeted categories. Basically, all we do is redirect that
traffic coming from these websites to your website.
When you make a purchase, one of our IT specialists will visit your
website and, whether you specified a target or not, we will target it
further so that we send you the very best visitors. It is in our best
interest to do so, if you generate sales or contacts chances are you'll
be back for another purchase. These abandoned domains have traffic on
them, and the previous owners either listed them on search engines, on
lists and marketed them so you now reap their hard work by having us
direct this traffic to your website.
This type of redirection is better than a popups (web surfers don't
like popups, it interrupts their online browsing) or popunders.
We are very proud of the traffic we offer. We do not have "secret
sources" or "secret methods" for generating traffic. Our traffic is
derived from hard work. Period. You deserve to know the source of the
traffic so that you can make an informed business decision when
purchasing it. Our traffic comes from expired domain names.
When someone creates a website, they generally register a domain name
to go along with it. The owner must pay a nominal fee every year to
keep their domain name. If the owner does not pay the annual fee, the
domain registrar will put the name on hold. With most registrars, an
"on hold" domain stops working. Most registrars allow an additional
grace period of 30-90 days for the domain owner to pay the annual fee.
During this period, the registrar will generally contact the domain
owner many times with attempts to get them to pay the fee and
reactivate the domain name. If the domain owner fails to pay on time,
and fails to respond during the 30-90 day hold period, the registrar
will drop the domain name. At this point, anyone can register the name.
We assume that the previous owner no longer wants a dropped name and we
will register the name if we feel that it will generate traffic. After
we own the name, we direct it to our server and send out the traffic to
the campaigns we serve. This traffic is the very best clean traffic.
As well just as important as traffic quality is targeting. There are
basically two things you need to consider when you think about traffic
targeting. One is where the traffic comes from and the other is how the
visitors are "chosen" to see your site. You may not know this, but many
companies will try to fool you into thinking visitors are coming to
your site by putting your site in a mini frame with a hundred others,
using a script to generate hit after hit, etc. Try asking the
competition where the visitors come from, we bet they won't tell you.
If you purchase targeted visitors, they could come from Altavista,
Lycos Network, Mamma.com, Netflip, and many other independent sites.
Well how on earth are we getting TARGETED visitors to you? The idea is
simple. Sites like AltaVista have extremely targeted categories that
get a lot of visitors. For example, someone may go to AltaVista and
look for forums, articles, or information about running a home based
business. BINGO! Altavista's computers immediately look through their
database of running campaigns and look for the campaigns targeted to
business. They choose which of those sites need the visitor the most
and they are immediately swept away to see your site. Pretty neat eh?
Well it is neat if you know what kind of traffic you're buying. What
was just described is the traffic we sell. We have investigated and
sampled virtually EVERY other traffic sources' services (of course we
want to check out our competition) and have found NOBODY is selling
traffic of this quality. Most of the targeted visitors are not even
targeted. Ask them how they target their visitors, they probably won't
even respond to your email.