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	<title>Long Island Web Design &#124; Unreal Web Marketing &#187; duplicate content</title>
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		<title>SEO Glossary</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Apr 2010 00:19:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>unrealweb777</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Search Engine Optmization Tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Website Marketing Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ALT Tags]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Backlinks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Click-Through-Rate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cloaking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deep Linking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Description Meta Tag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Doorway Page]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[duplicate content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dynamic IP Address]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Googlebot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SEO Glossary]]></category>

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SEO  Glossary
Algorithm &#8211; A complex mathematical  formula used by a search engine to rank the  web pages that it finds by  crawling the web.
ALT Tags &#8211; Used to display a short  text description of an image when you hover  your mouse over it. The ALT  description is also [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>SEO  Glossary</strong></p>
<p><strong>Algorithm</strong> &#8211; A complex mathematical  formula used by a search engine to rank the  web pages that it finds by  crawling the web.</p>
<p><strong>ALT Tags</strong> &#8211; Used to display a short  text description of an image when you hover  your mouse over it. The ALT  description is also displayed in place of  the image if the user is  browsing with image display turned off.</p>
<p><strong>Image ALT  tags</strong> are useful to your  page&#8217;s visitors. Equally as important, they  can help with your search  engine rankings by increasing the keyword  density (if you use your  keywords in your ALT tags).</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;img src=&#8221;blue-widget.jpg&#8221; width=&#8221;156&#8243; height=&#8221;175&#8243;<br />
ALT=&#8221;Photo of blue widget&#8221;&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Apache Web  Server</strong> &#8211; The web server  software that is most used on the internet  today.</p>
<p><strong>Bad  Neighborhood</strong> &#8211; A web page that  has been penalized by a search  engine (most notably Google) for using  shady SEO tactics, such as  hidden text or link farms.</p>
<p><strong>Backlinks</strong> &#8211; Links from another web  page to your web page. Most search engines  provide an easy way to get a  list of all of the backlinks to a specific  page. Also referred to as  Incoming Links.</p>
<p><strong>Broken Link</strong> &#8211; A link that no  longer takes the user to the destination page when it  is clicked on.  This is usually the result of the destination page  having been renamed  or deleted from the server. Also referred to as a  Dead Link.</p>
<p><strong>Click-Through</strong> &#8211; The action of  clicking on a link to visit a web page.</p>
<p><strong>Click-Through-Rate  (CTR)</strong> &#8211; The  number of times a link is clicked on divided by the  number of times that  same link is displayed (called an impression).</p>
<p>Example:<br />
A link is displayed 100 times (100 impressions) and clicked<br />
on 5 times. The CTR is 5% (5/100=.05).</p>
<p><strong>Cloaking</strong> &#8211; Serving one version of a  page to a human visitor and a different  version of the same page to the  search engines. This is usually done to  &#8220;fool&#8221; the search engines into  giving the page a higher rank than it  would normally receive while  making sure the human visitor sees a  useful and attractive page.</p>
<p>Note: Cloaking  is discouraged by most major search  engines, including Google.</p>
<p><strong>Comment  Tags</strong> &#8211; Used in a web  page&#8217;s HTML source code to indicate certain  information about a section  of the page code. Some search engines will  consider keywords contained  in comment tags for keyword density  purposes, others (including Google)  will not.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;!&#8211;This is a comment&#8211;&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Content </strong>-  The information located  on a web page. This includes text, images, and  any other types of  information that a webmaster places on the page.</p>
<p><strong>Counte</strong>r  &#8211; A script that counts the  number of hits, unique visitors, and/or  page views that a web page (or  an entire site) receives. These &#8220;stats&#8221;  provide very useful information  for the webmaster.</p>
<p><strong>Crawler</strong> &#8211; A program used by search  engines to &#8220;crawl&#8221; the web by following  links from page to page. This  is how most search engines &#8220;find&#8221; the web  pages that they place in their  index. Also referred to as a spider or  robot.</p>
<p><strong>Crawling  The Web</strong> &#8211; Search engines  use crawlers to move from web page to web  page by following the links on  the pages. The pages &#8220;found&#8221; are then  ranked using an algorithm and  indexed into the search engine database.</p>
<p><strong>Cross  Linking</strong> &#8211; This is where the  owner of two or more websites interlink  the sites in order to boost  their search engine rankings. If detected,  cross linking often results  in a search engine penalty.</p>
<p><strong>Dead Link</strong> &#8211; See Broken Link.</p>
<p><strong>Deep  Linking</strong> &#8211; Linking to a page  that is one or more levels removed from  the home directory. Deep linking  is often desirable to build PageRank  to a specific page on a website.</p>
<p>Example:</p>
<p>http://www.yoursite.com/tutorials/diy-seo.html</p>
<p><strong>Description</strong> &#8211; A short sentence or  paragraph that describes a web page&#8217;s content,  usually used as part of a  link to describe the page being linked to.  See also link anchor text.</p>
<p><strong>Description  Meta Tag</strong> &#8211; A meta tag  that describes the content of the web page  in which it is found. Used by  some search engines for keyword density  purposes. Also, some SE&#8217;s will  use the description meta tag for the  description provided to a user when  the page is returned in a listing  of search results. It is recommended  that you use a couple of your  targeted keywords in the description meta  tag.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;META NAME=&#8221;Description&#8221; CONTENT=&#8221;This sentence<br />
describes the content on this page.&#8221;&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Directory</strong> &#8211; A categorized list of  websites that is maintained by human editors  instead of crawlers.  Yahoo.com is the most widely recognized directory  on the web, but there  are literally thousands of others.</p>
<p><strong>Domain</strong> &#8211;  The human-friendly  &#8220;address, or URL&#8221; of a website. When a user types a  URL into a web  browser, a dedicated computer somewhere on the web  known as a Domain  Name Server, or DNS translates the URL into a  discrete IP address which  is then used to find the actual website being  requested.</p>
<p>In the URL  http://www.rlrouse.com, rlrouse.com is  the domain.</p>
<p><strong>Domain Name  Servers (DNS ) </strong>- These  are special computers that translate  human-friendly URLs into  computer-friendly IP addresses. This process  takes place every time a  user requests a page from a website.</p>
<p><strong>DNS  Propagation </strong>- Every time a new  domain name is registered (or an  existing one is transferred to a new  DNS), the information about the  domain and the DNS that hosts it must  make its way around the entire  internet. This process usually takes  around 24 hours, during which time  the domain will be inaccessible to  users.</p>
<p><strong>Doorway  Page</strong> &#8211; A page that is  usually optimized for a particular search  engine and search term.  Multiple doorway pages are often used to help  ensure that the same basic  content is ranked well on several different  search engines. The use of  doorway pages for this purpose is frowned  upon by most larger search  engines, including Google.</p>
<p><strong>Duplicate  Content</strong> &#8211; Two or more  separate web pages that contain substantially  the same content are said  to contain duplicate content.</p>
<p>Google and  other top search engines have set up  filters to detect duplicate  content when their crawlers are active on  the web. When pages  containing duplicate content are detected, they are  often assessed a  duplicate content penalty which means a lowering of the  page&#8217;s ranking  from what it would have received naturally.</p>
<p><strong>Dynamic  Content</strong> (dynamic pages) &#8211;  Web pages that are often generated from  database information based upon  queries initiated by users. Dynamic  pages often include the ? character  in the URL.</p>
<p><strong>The URLs</strong> of dynamic pages often  use these extensions: .asp, .cgm, or .cgi. Most  search engines don&#8217;t  index dynamic content very well (or at all).  Google has recently been  doing a better job at indexing them however.</p>
<p><strong>Dynamic IP  Address</strong> &#8211; An IP address  that changes every time a computer logs on  to the internet. See also  Static IP Address.</p>
<p><strong>Filters</strong> &#8211; A filter is a software  routine that examines web pages during a  robot&#8217;s crawl looking for  search engine spam. If the filter detects the  use of spam on the page, a  ranking penalty is assessed.</p>
<p>Common filters  look for hidden text, links to bad  neighborhoods, and many other SEO  techniques that the search engine  doesn&#8217;t like.</p>
<p><strong>Google.com</strong> &#8211; The leading search  engine on the internet today with approximately  80% of all search  traffic. When people speak of search engine  optimization (SEO), they&#8217;re  often referring specifically to Google.</p>
<p><strong>Googlebot</strong> &#8211; The crawler that  Google uses on a daily basis to find and index new  web pages.</p>
<p><strong>Google  Toolbar</strong> &#8211; A downloadable  toolbar for Internet Explorer that allows a  user to do a Google search  without visiting the Google website. The  toolbar also displays the  Google PageRank (PR) of the page currently  displayed in the browser. The  latest version also includes a very good  popup-blocker. The Google  Toolbar is a must have for every serious  webmaster.</p>
<p>The Google  Toolbar can be downloaded here:</p>
<p>http://toolbar.google.com</p>
<p><strong>Header Tags</strong> &#8211; HTML tags that help  outline a web page or draw attention to  important information. Keywords  located inside header tags can provide a  rankings boost in the search  engines.</p>
<p>Examples:<br />
&lt;h1&gt;This is an H1 tag.&lt;/h1&gt;<br />
&lt;h2&gt;This is an H2 tag.&lt;/h2&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Hidden Text  and Hidden Links</strong> &#8211;  Using a text font that is the same (or nearly  the same) color as the  background color, rendering the text or link  invisible or very difficult  to read. The same effect can also be  achieved by using various HTML  tricks.</p>
<p>Hidden text  and hidden links are often used to  artificially increase a web page&#8217;s  keyword density for a keyword or  keyphrase and/or to artificially boost  the link popularity of other  pages on your site(s).</p>
<p>The use of  hidden text and hidden links is frowned  upon by Google and most other  search engines. Using them will most  likely result in your web page(s)  incurring a penalty by the search  engines.</p>
<p><strong>Hits </strong>-  The term hits is commonly  misused. Many people think of a hit as a  visit to one of their web  pages. This is incorrect. A hit takes place  every time a file is  accessed on your website.</p>
<p>For example,  let&#8217;s say your friend&#8217;s home page has a  logo gif and 12 pictures on it.  Every time a visitor loads that page,  14 hits are recorded: 1 for the  logo gif, 12 for the pictures, and one  for the page itself. So don&#8217;t be  all that impressed if he boasts that  his site receives 1000 hits a  day. In our example, those 1000 hits could  have been generated by as  few as 72 visitors to the site.</p>
<p>The only  meaningful way to evaluate the traffic  flow of a site is to consider  the average daily or monthly number of  unique visitors and page views a  site receives.</p>
<p><strong>Home  Directory</strong> &#8211; The main  directory where your site&#8217;s main index page is  located. The index page  in your home directory can be accessed like  this:  http://www.yoursite.com</p>
<p><strong>Image Map</strong> &#8211; Placing separate  hyperlinks on different areas of the same image.  Clicking on different  parts of the image will take the user to  different web pages. Not very  search engine friendly.</p>
<p><strong>Inbound  Links</strong> &#8211; See Backlinks.</p>
<p><strong>Index </strong>-  The list of web pages  stored and ranked by a search engine. Also known  as a database.</p>
<p><strong>Indexing</strong> &#8211; After a search engine  has crawled the web, it ranks the URLs found  using various criteria (see  algorithm) and places them in the database,  or index.</p>
<p><strong>IP Address</strong> &#8211; A unique numerical  Internet Protocol Address (IP Address) that is  assigned to every  computer that connects to the internet. IP addresses  can be either  static (never unchanging) or dynamic (changes with every  internet  connection).</p>
<p>Your  computer&#8217;s IP address is what enables it to be  &#8220;found&#8221; on the internet  in order to receive email, web pages, etc.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
216.239.36.10</p>
<p><strong>IP Spoofing</strong> &#8211; Returning an IP  address that is different from the one that is  actually assigned to the  destination website. This is often done with  redirects. A huge no-no  (it&#8217;s even a criminal offense when done under  certain circumstances).</p>
<p><strong>Keyword  (Key Phrase) </strong>- A word or  phrase typed into a search engine in order  to find web pages that  contain that word or phrase. A web page can  (and should be) optimized  for specific keywords/phrases that are  relevant to the content on that  page.</p>
<p><strong>Keywords  Meta Tag</strong> &#8211; An HTML meta  tag that lists all of the main keywords and  key phrases that are  contained on that web page. Some search engines  use the keyword meta tag  to help rank web pages in their databases.  Google does not.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;META NAME=&#8221;KEYWORDS&#8221; CONTENT=&#8221;small business,<br />
business,advertising,sales&#8221;&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Link Anchor  Text </strong>- The &#8220;clickable&#8221;  part of the link structure. Using keywords  in the link anchor text of  your inbound links will help your search  engine rankings for those  keywords.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;a href=&#8221;http://www.yoursite.com&#8221;&gt;This is the link<br />
anchor text for this link&lt;/a&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Link  Exchange</strong> &#8211; Placing a link to  another website on your own site in  exchange for a return link back.  Also known as reciprocal linking.</p>
<p><strong>Link Farm</strong> &#8211; A web page created  solely for search engine ranking purposes that  consists almost entirely  of a long list of unrelated links. These types  of pages are penalized by  almost all search engines, including Google.</p>
<p><strong>Link  Popularity</strong> &#8211; A measure of how  &#8220;popular&#8221; a web page is on the  internet as measured by the number of  inbound links pointing to your  web page. Link popularity is one of the  main factors used to help  determine search engine rankings.</p>
<p><strong>Linking</strong> &#8211; Placing a link to  another web page (usually on another web site) on  one of your own web  pages.</p>
<p><strong>Links</strong> &#8211;  URLs placed within a web  page so that when they&#8217;re clicked on the  browser is served with a  different web page, often on a completely  different web site.</p>
<p><strong>Log Files</strong> &#8211; Files that are  constantly and automatically created and updated on  your web server that  provide very specific details about the activities  taking place on your  web site.</p>
<p>This includes  referring URLs, IP addresses, pages  visited, errors generated, number  of unique visitors, total page views,  total hits, and much more.  Carefully reviewing your log files can  provide valuable information  about your site&#8217;s performance and visitors.</p>
<p><strong>Meta Search  Engine</strong> &#8211; A website  that takes your search query and passes it on  to several different  search engines and directories, then summarizes  the results in a logical  manner for you to review.</p>
<p><strong>Mirror  Sites </strong>- Identical, but  separate websites on different domains. They  are commonly used  legitimately by large websites to share heavy server  loads, and by  search engine spammers to generate more search engine  referrals and  revenue.</p>
<p>In general,  the search engines frown upon mirror  sites and do not hesitate to  assess duplicate content penalties when  they feel they are warranted.</p>
<p><strong>Outbound  Links </strong>- Links from your  web page to another web page.</p>
<p><strong>PageRank  (PR)</strong> &#8211; A proprietary  numerical score that is assigned by Google to  every web page in their  index. PR for each page is calculated by Google  using a special  mathematical algorithm, based on the number and  quality (as determined  by Google) of the inbound links to the page.</p>
<p><strong>Page Views </strong>-  Each time a web page  on a site is accessed by a visitor, it counts as  one page view. It  doesn&#8217;t matter if the same user viewed the same page 5  minutes ago, it  still represents another page view.</p>
<p>For example,  let&#8217;s say that a website receives two  unique visitors in one day. The  first visitor surfs around the site and  views a total of six pages. The  second visitor views 11 pages. This  represents 17 page views for the  day by two unique visitors. (This poor  webmaster needs to do some  serious SEO and site promotion!)</p>
<p><strong>Paid  Inclusion </strong>- Some directories  will only consider placing your URL  into their database if you pay them a  fee.</p>
<p>Yahoo charges a  $299 per year evaluation fee for  commercial sites. Note that this fee  doesn&#8217;t guarantee that your URL  will be accepted and placed in the  Yahoo database, but rather that Yahoo  will consider your site for  inclusion in a timely manner. If your site  is rejected, you&#8217;re just out  your $299. But you do have an opportunity  to appeal the decision.</p>
<p>Other smaller  directories will guarantee to list  your site upon payment of their fee,  provided that your site meets their  guidelines (these are clearly  explained ahead of time).</p>
<p>Many search  engines also have a paid inclusion  program, including Inktomi and Alta  Vista. You don&#8217;t have to pay to be  included in search engines however.  If you have a few quality inbound  links to your site, the search  engines will find and index your site on  their own eventually.</p>
<p>The advantage  of utilizing their paid inclusion  services is they&#8217;ll usually crawl and  index your site within 48 hours or  less instead of the weeks or even  months that it often takes otherwise.</p>
<p><strong>Pay-Per-Click  (PPC) </strong>Search Engines  &#8211; This is a traffic generating method where a  search engine or  directory places your link in their searchable  database and charges you a  fee every time your URL comes up in a search  and it gets clicked on.  The amount of the fee that you pay is usually  determined by bidding on  keywords or keyphrases.</p>
<p>The two  largest PPC search engines are Overture and  Google AdWords. There are  also numerous smaller PPC engines on the net,  some very good a  delivering affordable targeted traffic, others not.</p>
<p><strong>Penalty </strong>-  A punishment levied  against a web page by a search engine as a result  of using an SEO tactic  that it doesn&#8217;t approve of. Tactics that most  often result in penalties  include using hidden text, sneaky redirects,  and linking to a bad  neighborhood.</p>
<p>A penalty  usually results in a web page being  credited for a lower Google  PageRank (PR) than it has actually &#8220;earned&#8221;.  Penalties also result in a  page being &#8220;buried&#8221; deep within the SERPS  where it will almost never  be found again by searchers.</p>
<p><strong>Rankings</strong> &#8211; The order in which  individual web pages are returned in the SERPS  for a given search query.  Search engines rank the web pages based upon  relevancy to your search  terms according to their proprietary  algorithm.</p>
<p><strong>Reciprocal  Links</strong> &#8211; Links to  another website placed on your site in exchange  for links back to your  site from theirs. This is a proven way to build  link popularity which is  instrumental in getting high search engine  rankings.</p>
<p><strong>Redirect</strong> &#8211; A tactic sometimes used  to send a user to a different page that the  one she found in the SERPS.  For example, a webmaster optimizes a web  page for a very popular  keyword. When a user finds the page by  searching on that keyword, she is  subsequently redirected to a  different, possibly non-relevant page that  the webmaster stands ready  to make money from.</p>
<p>This is  considered to be an invalid use of a  redirect and the search engines  (including Google) will penalize pages  that use one in this manner.</p>
<p><strong>Referrer or  Referring URL</strong> &#8211; The  URL of the web page where a visitor clicked a  link to come to your site.</p>
<p><strong>Relevancy</strong> &#8211; The degree to which  the content on a web page that is returned in a  list of search results  (SERPS) &#8220;matches&#8221; the topic of the information  that the user was  searching for. In other words, if you use the search  phrase &#8220;small green  widgets&#8221; and a page is returned that deals with  &#8220;large red  thingamajigs&#8221;, the relevancy of that page is very poor.</p>
<p><strong>Robot </strong>-  A program used by a search  engine to crawl the web in order to find,  rank, and index new web  pages.</p>
<p><strong>Robots.txt </strong>-  A special file that  is commonly used to exclude some or all robots  from crawling certain  files or directories on a website. This file  should b placed in your  website&#8217;s root directory.</p>
<p><strong>Search  Engine Friendly</strong> &#8211; A web  page that has been designed and optimized  for high search engine  rankings. A search engine friendly page also  makes it easy for search  engines to follow the links on the page.</p>
<p><strong>Search  Engine Optimization (SEO)</strong> &#8211;  The process of optimizing a web page  for high search engine rankings  for a particular search term or set of  search terms.</p>
<p><strong>Search  Engine Results Pages (SERPS) </strong>-  The ranked listing of web pages that  are returned for a specific search  query.</p>
<p><strong>Search  Query</strong> &#8211; The keyword,  keyphrase, or list of words that you type into  a search engine to find  web pages on a topic that you&#8217;re interested  in.</p>
<p><strong>Search Term</strong> &#8211; A list of keywords  or a keyphrase that a user types into a search  engine to find a list of  web pages related to topic that he/she is  interested in.</p>
<p><strong>SEO</strong> &#8211;  See Search Engine  Optimization.</p>
<p><strong>Server</strong> &#8211;  A computer that hosts web  pages and delivers them to a user&#8217;s internet  browser when requested. A  dedicated server hosts one website only. A  shared server hosts multiple  websites. Dedicated servers deliver web  pages faster and provide more  capacity and features than shared  servers, but they&#8217;re also considerably  more expensive to use.</p>
<p><strong>PageRank</strong> (PR) For Money &#8211; Selling  or buying a link from a web page with a high  Google PageRank for the  stated purpose of increasing the other page&#8217;s  PR. This is highly frowned  upon by Google and will result in a penalty  for both pages if Google  finds out about it.</p>
<p><strong>SERPS</strong> &#8211;  See Search Engine Results  Pages</p>
<p><strong>Spam </strong>-  When speaking of search  engines, spam is loosely defined as any  technique used to give your web  page(s) an unfair ranking advantage  over other pages.</p>
<p><strong>Spider</strong> &#8211;  See Crawler.</p>
<p><strong>Static IP  Address </strong>- An IP address  that is permanently assigned to a computer.  The IP address doesn&#8217;t  change with each connection to the internet.  See also Dynamic IP  Address.</p>
<p><strong>Submitting  Your URLs</strong> &#8211; This is the  process of telling a search engine or  directory about your web pages.  The URLs that you submit are placed  into a queue for later crawling or  human review.</p>
<p>If you have  backlinks pointing to your web pages,  there is usually no need to  submit your URLs to the search engines  because their crawlers will find  the pages on their own and index them.  You do need to submit your URLs  to directories however because they use  humans instead of robots to  visit the sites that you submit and evaluate  them.</p>
<p><strong>Title Meta  Tag</strong> &#8211; This HTML tag is  used to provide web browsers and search  engines with an &#8220;official&#8221; title  for the page currently being  displayed. Using a couple of keywords in  your title tag can help boost  the page&#8217;s search engine ranking for those  keywords.</p>
<p>Example:<br />
&lt;META NAME=&#8221;TITLE&#8221; CONTENT=&#8221;Page title goes here&#8221;&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Top-10  Ranking</strong> &#8211; A web page that  is listed in the first 10 search results  for a search query. Top-10 in  Google also means on the first page using  the standard search criteria</p>
<p><strong>Traffic </strong>-  A website&#8217;s average rate  of traffic flow within a given time period.  It can be measured in a  couple ways, including unique visitors and  total page views. Don&#8217;t  confuse hits with unique visitors and page  views. The term hits is  virtually useless when evaluating website  traffic statistics.</p>
<p><strong>Unique  Visitors</strong> &#8211; The number of  visitors who access a website within a  given time period (usually 24  hours) from a single IP address. If you  visit the same website three  times within a 24 hour period, your visits  only count as one unique  visit for that day.</p>
<p><strong>URL  (Uniform Resource Locator)</strong> &#8211;  Each web page has it&#8217;s own specific  human-friendly URL, or web address.  URLs are mapped to  computer-friendly IP addresses by special computers  called Domain Name  Servers, or DNSs.</p>
<p>Example:</p>
<p>http://www.rlrouse.com</p>
<p><strong>User &#8211; See  Visitor. </strong></p>
<p><strong>Visitor </strong>-  A person who visits your  website. Also known as a User.</p>
<p><strong>What is  Internet Marketing?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Internet  Marketing </strong> is the use  of the Internet  to  advertise and sell goods and services. Internet  Marketing includes pay  per click advertising , banner ads , e-mail  marketing , affiliate  marketing , interactive advertising , search  engine marketing  (including search engine optimization ), blog  marketing, article  marketing, and blogging.</p>
<p>Internet  marketing is a component of electronic commerce. Internet  marketing can  include information management, public relations, customer  service,  and sales. Electronic commerce and Internet marketing have  become  popular as Internet access is becoming more widely available and  used.  Well over one third of consumers who have Internet access in their   homes report using the Internet to make purchases</p>
<p><strong>Internet  Marketing History</strong></p>
<p>Internet  marketing first began in the early 1990s  as simple, text-based websites  that offered product information. Over  time Internet marketing evolved  into more than just selling information  products, there are people now  selling advertising space, software  programs, business models, and  many other products and services.  Companies like Google, Yahoo, and MSN  have leveled the playing field of  internet advertising. By offering  local advertising to small to medium  sized businesses, ROI has grown  while the bottom line has been lowered.  This type of marketing is the  backbone of modern capitalism, allowing  anyone with an idea,product or  service to reach the widest audience  possible. The next evolutionary  step would be to refine the consumer  search to those consumers  specifically searching for your product or  service, and entice them  with catchy tag lines and promotions. Once the  consumer has chosen your  company, and entered your e-store, the design  of your website will  determine the online to offline or e-commerce  conversion rates. These  are what business owners covet, the lowest cost  per lead.</p>
<p>To clarify,  while internet marketing can cover any  facet of online marketing as  described above, current use of the term  internet marketing commonly  refers to the use of direct response  marketing strategies, that were  traditionally used in direct mail,  radio, and TV infomericals, applied  to the internet business space.</p>
<p>These methods  have been found to be particularly  useful on the internet due to its  tracking capabilities coupled with the  ability to instantly reach the  prospect, whether it be B2B or Business  to consumer. This ability for  careful anaylsis has become quite common  now, which is why you will  commonly see terms such as ROI, conversion  rate, and sales letter  commonly come up when discussing internet  marketing.</p>
<p><strong>Business  Models</strong></p>
<p>Internet  marketing is associated with several  business models. The main models  include business-to-business (B2B) and  business-to-consumer (B2C). B2B  consists of companies doing business  with each other, whereas B2C  involves selling directly to the end  consumer (see Malala, 2003)[1]  When Internet marketing first began, the  B2C model was first to emerge.  B2B transactions were more complex and  came about later. A third, less  common business model is peer-to-peer  (P2P), where individuals  exchange goods between themselves. An example  of P2P is Kazaa, which is  built upon individuals sharing files.</p>
<p>Internet  marketing can also be seen in various  formats. One version is  name-your-price (e.g. Priceline.com). With this  format, customers are  able to state what price range they wish to spend  and then select from  items at that price range. With find-the-best-price  websites (e.g.  Hotwire.com), Internet users can search for the lowest  prices on items.  A final format is online auctions (e.g. Ebay.com) where  buyers bid on  listed items.</p>
<p>It should be  noted, however; as described above,  under history, that current use of  the term internet marketing commonly  refers to the use of direct  response marketing strategies, that were  traditionally used in direct  mail, radio, and TV infomercials, applied  to the internet business  space. When professionals and entrepreneurs  commonly refer to &#8220;internet  marketing&#8221; it is this model that they are  often referring to. &#8230;.The  theory was that broadcaster would begin  transmitting digital signal in  this new band and then the analog signal  would be discontinued when  consumer penetration of the new technology  was deemed sufficient&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>Internet  Marketing Benefits</strong></p>
<p>Some of the  benefits associated with Internet  marketing include the availability of  information. Consumers can log  onto the Internet and learn about  products, as well as purchase them, at  any hour. Companies that use  Internet marketing can also save money  because of a reduced need for a  sales force. Overall, Internet marketing  can help expand from a local  market to both national and international  marketplaces. And, in a way,  it levels the playing field for big and  small players. Unlike  traditional marketing media (like print, radio and  TV), entry into the  realm of Internet marketing can be a lot less  expensive.</p>
<p>Furthermore,  since exposure, response and overall  efficiency of digital media is  much easier to track than that of  traditional &#8220;offline&#8221; media, Internet  marketing offers a greater sense  of accountability for advertisers.</p>
<p>Compared to  the other media marketing(like print,  radio and TV), Internet marketing  is growing very fast. It&#8217;s also  gaining popularity among small  businesses and even consumers when trying  to monetize their blog or  website. The measurability of the internet as  a media makes it easier  to experience innovative e-marketing tactics  that will prove a better  Cost of Acquisition than other media. However,  in most developed  countries, internet marketing and advertising spending  is around 5%  only, while TV, radio, and the print are more.</p>
<p><strong>Limitations</strong></p>
<p>Limitations  of Internet marketing create problems  for both companies and consumers.  Slow Internet connections can cause  difficulties. If companies build  overly large or complicated web pages,  Internet users may struggle to  download the information. Internet  marketing does not allow shoppers to  touch, smell, taste or try-on  tangible goods before making an online  purchase. Some e-commerce vendors  have implemented liberal return  policies to reassure customers. Germany  for example introduced a law in  2000 (Fernabsatzgesetz &#8211; later  incorporated into the BGB), that allows  any buyer of a new product over  the internet to return the product on a  no-questions-asked basis and get  a full return. This is one of the  main reasons why in Germany internet  shopping became so popular.  Another limiting factor, particularly with  respect to actual buying and  selling, is the adequate development (or  lack thereof) of electronic  payment methods like e-checks, credit cards,  etc.</p>
<p><strong>Security  Concerns</strong></p>
<p>For both  companies and consumers that participate  in online business, security  concerns are very important. Many consumers  are hesitant to buy items  over the Internet because they do not trust  that their personal  information will remain private. Recently, some  companies that do  business online have been caught giving away or  selling information  about their customers. Several of these companies  have guarantees on  their websites, claiming customer information will be  private. By  selling customer information, these companies are breaking  their own,  publicized policy. Some companies that buy customer  information offer  the option for individuals to have their information  removed from the  database (known as opting out). However, many customers  are unaware  that their information is being shared and are unable to  stop the  transfer of their information between companies.</p>
<p>Security  concerns are of great importance and  online companies have been working  hard to create solutions. Encryption  is one of the main methods for  dealing with privacy and security  concerns on the Internet. Encryption  is defined as the conversion of  data into a form called a cipher. This  cipher cannot be easily  intercepted unless an individual is authorized  by the program or company  that completed the encryption. In general,  the stronger the cipher, the  better protected the data is. However, the  stronger the cipher, the  more expensive encryption becomes.</p>
<p><strong>Effects on  industries</strong></p>
<p>Internet  marketing has had a large impact on  several industries including music,  banking, and flea markets &#8211; not to  mention the advertising industry  itself.</p>
<p>In the music  industry, many consumers have begun  buying and downloading MP3s over  the Internet instead of simply buying  CDs. The debate over the legality  of duplicating MP3s has become a major  concern for those in the music  industry.</p>
<p>Internet  marketing has also affected the banking  industry. More and more banks  are offering the ability to perform  banking tasks online. Online  banking is believed to appeal to customers  because it is more  convenient than visiting bank branches. Currently,  over 50 million U.S.  adults now bank online. Online banking is now the  fastest-growing  Internet activity. The increasing speed of Internet  connections is the  main reason for the fast-growth. Of those individuals  who use the  Internet, 44% now perform banking activities over the  Internet.</p>
<p>As Internet  auctions have gained popularity, flea  markets are struggling. Unique  items that could previously be found at  flea markets are being sold on  Ebay.com instead. Ebay.com has also  affected the prices in the  industry. Buyers and sellers often look at  prices on the website before  going to flea markets and the Ebay.com  price often becomes what the  item is sold for. More and more flea market  sellers are putting their  items up for sale online and running their  business out of their homes.</p>
<p>The effect on  the Ad industry itself has been  profound. In just a few years, online  advertising has grown to be worth  tens of billions of dollars annually.  As Advertisers increase  and shift more of their budgets online, it is  now overtaking radio in  terms of market share.[5]</p>

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