How An Exit Pop Can Be An Affiliate Marketing Dream Come True October 10, 2007
Posted by articlesubmissionsoftware in Exit Pop Tips.Tags: affiliate marketing, conversions, exit pop, exit pop up
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For marketers who use their own domains to promote products made by other people, a new exit pop has just been released that can double and even triple their affiliate sales.
It’s called Exit Pop Monetizer and what it does is quite clever. Rather than shoving an alarming exit pop up into the faces of departing visitors, the script presents an exit survey that asks them why they’re leaving. The survey has multiple pre-loaded possible answers connected to a redirect link for each answer.
When the visitor answers the question by clicking on a radio button, they’re immediately taken to another offer relating to their choice of answer.
Being able to input any possible answer to any possible question and redirect to an alternate offer, opens the door for marketers to capitalize on quite a bit of traffic that would otherwise dissolve into cyberspace. Considering that not everyone will want what you have to sell, giving them alternatives before they leave is a wise move.
For more than a decade, Internet marketers have been searching for ways to optimize the monetization of their sales pages. Exit Pop Monetizer unlocks that last bit of virtual real estate.
To further illustrate the value of this little script, the average sales page converts visitors into buyers around 10% of the time. That means that up to 90% of all traffic will leave empty handed. So just by adding an exit pop that can offer alternate products, at the very least you’ll get another 10% to convert of those who aren’t impressed or aren’t interested in your product or your initial affiliate offers.
This can add a tidy sum to your ClickBank account in no time.
You can also redirect traffic to a squeeze page, a resale rights page, or any other page. One user came up with the idea of selling space on his exit pop up and capitalizing on the revenue derived from ad space.
Exit Pop Monetizer opens a lot of doors that, until now simply weren’t there. No other exit pop will ever do what this one does!
Turning an Exit Pop Up Into Valuable Virtual Real Estate October 3, 2007
Posted by articlesubmissionsoftware in Exit Pop Tips.Tags: exit pop, exit pop monetizer, exit pop up, virtual real estate, vre
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Until now, exit pop up scripts do one thing. They simply try to stop a web page visitor from leaving a site. But could they possibly do more if there was a better approach to the whole exit pop strategy?
Recently, a new script has started circulating that changes the playing field and allows the user to develop a scenario that offers the departing visitors with alternatives.
Its called Exit Pop Monetizer.
The concept behind it is, there’s really no way to “bully” a web site visitor into staying, nor would you really want to, so why not show them other products that you can capitalize on as they’re heading out the door?
Now this opens an entirely new range of possibilities.
The script is set up to put what looks like an exit survey on the browser screen as the visitor moves their mouse in the vicinity of the X to close the site. It can ask a simple question like, “could you tell us why you’re leaving?” and provides a number of possible answers, much like a multiple choice type question.
Each answer has its own radio button that the site owner can connect a link to an affiliate product, or a resale rights page, or even a squeeze page. When the visitor chooses an answer and clicks on a button, they’re instantly taken to the alternate site.
But one clever mind recently came up with another way to monetize the use of the script. Rather than linking a button to an affiliate link, the site owner could sell advertising space on the exit pop and provide their departing guests with links to sites that pay to be there.
When you consider that up to 90% of all site traffic do eventually leave without buying from the site, that’s quite a bit of exposure for any advertiser to get for very little up front cost.
Depending on the amount of traffic a site gets and its page rank with the search engines, selling advertising space on an exit pop up could become rather lucrative.
Exit Pop Monetizer allows the user to place any question, any number of answers, linked to any sites. So its the perfect resource to capitalize on the traffic the site gets. It gives that traffic the opportunity to buy the product presented on the site, but if they decide not to, it presents them with alternative products they may be more inclined to purchase.
Thus it turns, what used to be, an annoying bullying tactic into a professional style piece of virtual real estate the site own can keep for “in house” products, or turn into the perfect advertising platform to sell space on.
So if you’re considering adding an exit pop up to your site, you’d best be served by using one that can open new doors as your visitors tries to close yours.
Can An Exit Pop Really Stop Your Visitors From Leaving? October 2, 2007
Posted by articlesubmissionsoftware in Exit Pop Facts.Tags: conversion, exit pop, exit pop up, exit pops, exit survey
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Let’s face it, up to 90% of all your web traffic will leave. So to try and limit that number, some people resort to adding exit pop scripts to their sites in order to jolt people into staying. But do they really work?
The idea behind them is that when a site visitor decides to click off the site, a flashy pop up comes up and “screams” STOP!!
I don’t know about you, but those things tend to annoy the heck out of me.
I mean, I read the sales pitch, I watched the videos, I thought about it, and I decided I didn’t want it. That’s my prerogative isn’t it?
It’s been my experience that the best way to make friends is to avoid annoying people at all costs. Trying to force me into staying where I don’t want to be is not going to make me think you’re acting in my best interest.
But now that still leaves us with the vast majority of people walking away from our primary means of survival (our sales pages) without spending a dime.
How can we monetize this whole thing without driving people to drink?
Perhaps the key to this is to think about what the visitors are doing on a sales page to begin with. It would seem pretty clear that they’re looking to buy something. So it’d also be safe to say that they’re shopping, right?
And if they’re on your sales page, then it would be a safe bet to conclude that they’re in the market for something relating to what you’re selling.
But let’s accept the fact that they don’t want what you offer for the moment, and think the way they may be thinking.
Suppose you sell a widget that makes submitting articles easier. So they’re shopping for an article submitter, but they don’t want yours for whatever reason.
Wouldn’t it be a logical idea then to offer them an alternative to yours?
They’re leaving your site anyway. And chances are they’re still going to shop around for what they came to your site looking for. So why not?
Wouldn’t it be more reasonable than annoying people by trying to force them to stay if you offered them an alternative?
They’re going to go look without you, so why not keep them with you and give them a choice? No doubt you must have an affiliate link lying around for your competitor’s product. Maybe even a couple different ones.
Seems to me it would be prudent to save them some browsing time and let you capitalize on their departure, wouldn’t you think?
So if an exit pop was going to work in the best fashion possible, it would have to offer alternatives rather than scream at your visitors as they leave.