| BuilderDepot, Inc. Partners With LinkShare To Develop Affiliate ...
SAN DIEGO/EWORLDWIRE/May 16, 2007 --- BuilderDepot Inc., an online retailer, today announced it has selected LinkShare Corporation ('http://www.linkshare.com') to develop and help manage its online affiliate marketing program. The new BuilderDepot affiliate program enables a wide variety of companies, organizations and individuals to market over 140,000 products sold online at SpectrumSuperStore.com ('http://www.SpectrumSuperStore.com'). The rapid development of the Internet as a sales channel has fostered the creation of revenue sharing models between online retailers and partners. The program is designed to allow partners to offer their audience products ranging from appliances, automotive accessories, housewares, consumer electronics, home center, sporting goods, furniture, safety and security, and office technology.
Online Marketing Budgets Within the Industrial Sector Continue to ...
TROY, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Companies within the industrial sector are spending more on marketing and allocating a greater portion of their budget to online marketing, according to the 2007 Industrial Marketing Trends Survey. This second annual survey of marketing and sales executives and managers in the industrial sector was conducted by GlobalSpec (www.globalspec.com), the leading specialized search engine, information services and e-publishing company for the manufacturing, technical, industrial and engineering communities. Sixty-one percent of respondents stated that online marketing would command a greater portion of their marketing budget in 2007 than it did in 2006. In addition, 37% will spend at least one third of their marketing budget online. These results indicate the industrial sector is rapidly allocating their budget to online marketing, closing the gap between where they are advertising and where customers and prospects are searching for products and suppliers.
Google AdSense Says Don't Worry About Accidental Clicks, No One ...
Accidents happen from the Google Inside AdSense blog today caught my eye. Apparently, lots of publishers accidentally click on their ads and write in to Google to say sorry. Don't worry, says Google, "chances are we've already detected your clicks on your ads and discounted them." Bull. Seriously, bull. Here's an example. Over on my personal blog Daggle, I have AdSense ads. If I accidentally click on one of those ads, how does Google know that it was me the blog owner that did that and thus automatically issues a credit? All Google knows about me is that I use British Telecom as my broadband provider. Lots of people use BT. How is Google going to spot my click and know it is accidental? If I'm logged in to Google, THEN I'm more open to the idea they might see that my Google Account is linked to my Google AdSense account so discount clicks that way.
nonstopConsulting launches INFX interface for Affiliate Marketing ...
(openPR) - In a highly competitive landscape like travel/airline business Top-Affiliates requests best-of-breed support and advanced technical solutions from Merchants. Also they want to have as much as possible content/useful data. Within the travel industry e.g. airlines and car hire companies work beside others with so called INFX data. The original intention of INFX (abbreviation for Infox) has been to deliver a data string including all information for one single last minute offer on a weekly basis via paper to travel agencies. The data string includes information on flights, hotels etc. but was a pre-configured package. Within today's online/internet world of price comparison machines and dynamic packaging INFX in his original form is useless for Affiliate Marketing and Search Engine Marketing (SEM) campaigns.
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