Track Your Ads or Fail
By Brian Hawkins
on Jun 8, 2008 in Business Tips
Track Your Ads or Fail - Wow, that’s a strong statement I know. But it’s that important. We are all in the same boat when it comes to time. We all have a limited amount of time to run our businesses, promote our sites or programs and somewhere in there find time to sleep and live a normal life.
There are so many different methods of advertising on the net that you can easily fill every minute of the day promoting your business without ever making a dime. You can spend all of your time and a bunch of money and still gain zero results.
The problem is complicated but everyone already knows. The biggest problem when it comes to finding the right programs for your advertising campaigns is that everywhere you turn someone’s telling you that they have the biggest, best and newest thing going. They all want your money or to add you to their down line or to place you in their affiliate program. Many of these marketers will say just about anything to get you to try their recommendation because their success depend on it. Sorting out what’s real and what’s just a waste of time can be very overwhelming to say the least. But you must have a system of tracking to see what’s working and what’s soaking up your time and money like a sponge.
The second biggest problem… Just as in traditional advertising what works great for one business may not bring in the same results for another. That’s why you can find an honest marketer that swears by a certain marketing method just to end up being another flop when it comes to your campaign.
Of course there are other factors such as ad copy, our targeted market and timing but the fact remains that we are just stumbling blindly destined to fail without a clear and effective way of tracking our advertising results. Without tracking, we have no idea when to try a new method or change our ad copy. What’s worse, we may have found the perfect fit and drop it without ever knowing that we stumbled on a gold mine. Time is priceless and ad tracking saves us time.
Ok, I know I tend to harp on things too long so let’s move onto solutions. First of all, I recommend we track everything. By that I mean we use a different tracking URL not only for every program but for each ad copy and every banner or html ad. One campaign can easily have dozens of tracking links. To keep things organized, I like to use a couple of very simple tools. First of all, I use notepad to record which URLs go with which program/campaign. I use notepad because it’s simple to use and it doesn’t tie up a bunch of my computer’s resources when I use it. The other tool I use is a small but powerful copy & paste tool called Flashpaste. I upgraded to Flashpaste Pro but I started with the free version and found it very helpful. I simply click ctrl/i and then scroll to the link or ad copy I want. I huge time saver.
One common way we see many online marketers tracking their links is by using a redirect through their own site. They look similar to this:
http://extremeezine.com/recommends/autopilot/index.html. The benefits are you can easily change the link should you drop a particular programs and it helps to hide the URL you’re promoting but only until the actual pages loads and then there’s your link. A big drawback with this system is that it would be a lot of work tracking everything with different URLs as I mentioned before. Another drawback is you still need to insert some way of recording the stats unless you want to rely on your server logs. I used the tracker http://4u2bn.com/a34 with the example link above. Some services allow you to insert a small line of JavaScript in the page’s html to record all types of stats. These are great but you still have the problem of limited URLs for your tracking program.
Another drawback to using the redirect ‘http://extremeezine.com/recommends/autopilot/index.html’ method is obvious. It can generate a very long URL just as affiliate programs do. That’s why I’m a big fan of programs such as YourAdTracker.com that combines link tracking with a short URL service. To get the same results that these services give you we would need to:
:: Set-up and upload a page for every link we want to track.
:: Set-up and include a tracking link or code.
:: Signup for a short URL for every link.
That’s easily two of three things to signup for and then we still need all that setup. So a third party link tracking with a short URL service is a no brainier.
Shortened URL Pros and Cons
The only con I can see with a shortened URL is that it doesn’t ‘describe or define‘ the link. As in the example above, http://extremeezine.com/recommends/autopilot/index.html tells you that I’m recommending AutoPilot whereas http://4u2bn.com/a34 doesn’t give a clue as to what you’re clicking on. This may be enough to prevent some people from clicking on the link. To help prevent this you need to be careful to fully explain the product/program in the ad copy and hopefully gain a little trust while doing it.
There’s no shortage in the Pros when it comes to shortening a URL…
:: It looks cleaner
:: You can easily change the like if it’s a membership service.
:: I won’t break in your emails causing wrapping problems so it’s much more reliable.
:: You can help conceal or cloak affiliate URL there by saving sales and/or credit.
:: It’s much easies to verbally tell someone the site address to go to.
:: It’s quicker and easier to type in the shortened URL.
I even shorten my own Blog links when writing my Ezine: http://extremeezine.com/track-your-ads-or-fail/ to http://4u2bn.com/a43
Wow, what a difference!
So track your ads or fail!
THAT’S RIGHT - I SAID IT,
Brian Hawkins
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7 Comment(s)
By
solo advertising (Who am I?) on Jun 9, 2008 | Reply
“The only con I can see with a shortened URL is that it doesn’t ‘describe or define‘ the link.”
Brian, here’s a real con: many such services have their domain names BLACKLISTED. When you use such links in your emails, your emails may arrive in the Spam folder instead of Inbox or may even be deleted by the most aggresive ISP or ESP.
Here are two such services that are whitelisted and you can safely use them:
TinyURL.com
SnipURL.com
By
Brian Hawkins (Who am I?) on Jun 9, 2008 | Reply
That’s a great point. I think you’re confused about the term ‘whitelisted’ but a clean and well maintained domain is certainly a major concern. The admins of any re-direction site must have and enforce stringent terms and anti-spam policies. While no domain can claim one hundred percent, the better services stay on top of the major ISP’s requirements to stay off those lists.
Another concern would be reputation. Services that have been around long enough to earn the most trust and recognition will draw more clicks for their clients. Many people will be reluctant to click on some strange looking link that they don’t recognize. To be fair, any third party link can pose a hidden danger. This concern can be eased by developing the trust of your lists and branding yourself as a trustworthy marketer.
Great comment.
By
solo advertising (Who am I?) on Jun 9, 2008 | Reply
Brian, why do you think I am confused by the term “whitelisted”?
Check this out: http://lookup.uribl.com/?domain=tinyurl.com and see that TinyURL is whitelisted while other services are blacklisted.
By the way, you may want to take very serious into consideration this: your domain name 4u2bn.com will ALWAYS be penalized by some spam filters. Some spam filters penalize ANY domain name that contains 4u or 4you.
There are not many penalty points, but a penalty is still a penalty and if the email has also other “problems”, then the message may be blocked …
By
Brian Hawkins (Who am I?) on Jun 9, 2008 | Reply
Hi Solo, I just meant the term ‘whitelisted’ is usually a concern when mailings are being sent and other than to our own members we don’t send emails. So far we’ve had no major problems getting through to members.
We don’t worry about search engine traffic as far as our tracking links because we block the spiders other than a few main pages. I’m sure you understand why.
That link you sent is a nice resource. Thanks for that, I bookmarked it. Our domain comes up with two green lights so I’m glad for that.
As far as the domain, too late to change and we’re happy with the success so far. We’re not a start up. We have several thousand members, get over 50,000 hits a day and are ranked 62,941 on Alexa. Small compared to TinyURL but too established to turn tail now.
All great points however and I’ll keep your comments in mind for my next article on link tracking. That’s what I love about our site getting more interactive with the change to blog format. It’s nice to see what others are interested in. Comment anytime, Brian
By
solo advertising (Who am I?) on Jun 10, 2008 | Reply
Hi Brian,
Yes, indeed I was referring to email communications.
I fully understand what you meant but I think that you missed one important point. Maybe you don’t send emails other than to your members … but I can assure you that your members send a lot of emails containing links belonging to your domain name 4u2bn.
For example, I know an ezine publisher who used to diguise many links from her emails using your service. At a certain moment she was about to give up publishing because of the spam filters. She knew that her messages have problems, but she didn’t knew what are the problems and how to solve them. I can guarantee you that 99% of your users have the same problems - few of them may know about the problems, others may even don’t know what happens. There are very few people out there who really know what’s the deal with those spam filters. The biggest part of the online users think that spam filters are some software for blocking the spammers. They don’t have any clue that some of their own messages are blocked by spam filtes …
This is the real problem: the emails sent by your users, not the emails sent by you.
Well, I don’t want to criticize your service, please don’t get me wrong.
I just wanted to offer you a piece of information and that’s all.
My advise is this: never ever buy again 4u or 4you domain names if you or your users/members will use such links in their emails. Or at least warn your users/members about the risks …
All the best to you and yours!
By
Scott Erickson (Who am I?) on Jun 12, 2008 | Reply
I think sort urls would be good if they said something and didn’t just have characters. They are great for cloaking. However I think a standard url is an excellent ad in itself.
By
Brian Hawkins (Who am I?) on Jun 12, 2008 | Reply
Hi Scott. I’m with you about the tracking links conveying the related site being promoted. The last big upgrade we did I was hoping to have the programmer work that in but it just wasn’t possible. Perhaps with another script it would be because I know I’ve seen it. Thanks for taking the time to share your opinion, Brian