web site promotion,search engine optimisation and traffic building resources and information
 
this site WWW

A Simple Guide to Analyzing All Those Web Traffic Ideas - Part 1


There will be a lot of people unhappy about what I am going to reveal in this article. However, I think it is time somebody spoke out about what is happening on this wonderful medium we have come to know as the internet. What I am talking about are the "sharp" practices engaged in by people offering all sorts of dubious marketing plans.

Confusion, deception, hype and downright dishonesty abound on the world wide web (www). I should know. Like tens of thousands, perhaps even hundreds of thousands of people before me - I've been caught. And it is highly probable that so many more will continue to be caught in the future unless something is done to stop it.

The www is the new frontier for those who seek to make money from inexperienced people. It's quick, it's easy and it is so impersonal. Specifically, I am talking about the selling of high priced junk information (often referred to as "reports") to unsuspecting customers.

It's almost the perfect robbery.

Newbie website owners beware! There are hundreds of con-artists and specious operators lurking out there in cyber space. They are just waiting to pull you into their clutches.

How do they do it?

OK. What is the one thing that every new website owner has to have? Answer - traffic. Pure and simple. If you don't have traffic, you might as well not even have a website - unless, of course, you just enjoy looking at it yourself.

Your quest for traffic demands that you seek knowledge from those who profess to have it. And that is the root of the problem. It seems that every second website seems to be selling information on how to improve your website. With so many experts, who do you trust?

Oh you can read the sales "blurb" (yeah, I know, my site has "blurb" too. All websites use it) and be wooed by all the so-called "facts" but who is offering the information and does it really work? How do you separate credible information from useless junk? There certainly is plenty of junk out there.

There appears to be an increasing number of self-styled gurus professing to know exactly how to drive that precious traffic right through your site. In fact, if you believe everything they promise, you will need to install a set of traffic lights on your site just to control the massive flow. (Or so they would have you believe!)

Your quest for knowledge can very quickly send your credit card into debt hyper-drive, or, I should say, hyper-dive! Just enter your details and zap - here it comes. It's the answer to all your www dreams. (You wish!)

Let's examine some of the things you need to be vigilant about:

The information you pay for might be:

  • - widely known among experienced net users - but not by you. If you want to pay for this information it might just be worth it to "fast-track" your education. In other words, you will be paying for fairly basic information but you will learn something from it. In that respect, the information can be good because you can learn from the experience of others. Many "special reports" and "secrets revealed" fall into this category. However, some clearly do not. (PS: What type of credit card do you have?)

  • - available FREE all over the www. All you have to do is look. "Seek and ye shall find". If you are lazy and you need to be spoon fed then there are any number of hunters out there who will line you up in their sights. The information is probably current and will work but why pay for it when it is so abundantly available at zero cost? (PS: What is your credit card number?)

  • - "old hat" information. The internet moves at such speed that what worked several years ago or even several months ago now doesn't work at all. This type of information is totally useless and should be avoided. Often this ancient information will even contain broken hyperlinks. Now that's a real turn off. It says so much about the quality of the information being provided. In reality, this type of information is just a collection of worthless old junk, like a shoe with a hole in its sole. (PS: When does your credit card expire?)

  • - a precursor to spending even more money. This little technique will whet your appetite just enough to entice you to spend lots more money. Some "wealth creation" seminar presenters use this technique. It's just bait for the "real" information which, of course, is far more expensive. "Caveat emptor" - let the buyer beware! (PS: What are the three ID numbers on the back of that credit card of yours?)

  • - Steering you to other sites offering "fixits." This is something like point 4 above, except the information provider suggests you go to a third party (a "friend" - more on this in Part 2) to purchase more programs or more specific information. Often these recommended sites can offer expensive or time consuming programs. (PS: Now, just press submit.)

  • - credible and/or valuable. This is information of the best kind. Usually it will contain "cutting edge" ideas that are currently working on the www. However, your ability to source this information from the many traps above will range from difficult to almost impossible.The biggest trick used by con-artist "gurus" is their ability to "dress up" the information they are offering to make it look like something new or different. It's a bit like the old pyramid selling schemes that do the rounds with monotonous regularity (or the letter offering you millions of dollars from Nigeria just for giving them your bank details! Can you imagine anybody doing that? Well, plenty do!) Plenty buy the "dress-ups" too. Same old information, different name.

    Another thing you need to be aware of is the amount of "fluff" or packing that surrounds the real subject matter. Often there can be several pages on the main idea and several dozen pages of near useless information to make it appear bigger.

    I recently purchased a report of just 19 pages. It contained just one dubious idea that could have been presented adequately on about half an A4 sized page. The rest of it was pure packing and completely useless twaddle. The cost? I hate to admit it - $39.95 US. Ouch!

    I have even heard of some training manuals on offer claiming that they contain five hundred pages (plus) of "cutting edge" information. You would think that represents a lot of information. It was certainly advertised as a "definitive" web-building and traffic steering "master" tutorial. I later learned (from another source) that the pages are only printed on about one-third of the available space and that the font size would be very beneficial for extremely sight impaired readers. That makes it a very expensive tutorial. I'm pleased to say that I didn't buy that one.

    You need to be wary of these things.

    Part 2 of this article contains further hints which will enable you to detect whether an offer of increased website traffic will be worthy of purchase or not.

    If you enjoyed Part 1, don't miss Part 2.

    Part 1 and Part 2 of this article are covered by copyright. However, both parts may be freely used providing there are no changes whatsoever to the content and the following resource box remains intact.

    PS: If you think this information might help a friend from falling prey to these dubious practices you can send them a copy of this article (or any related parts) or direct them to the website URL above. Let's get the word out and put a stop to this.

    About the author: Gary Simpson is the author of eight books covering a diverse range of subjects such as self esteem, affirmations, self defense, finance and much more. His articles appear all over the web. Gary's email address is budo@iinet.net.au. Click here to go to his Motivation & Self Esteem for Success website where you can receive his "Zenspirational Thoughts" plus an immediate FREE copy of his highly acclaimed, life-changing e-book "The Power of Choice."




    MORE RESOURCES:

    The 'Poor Man's Traffic Intercept'
    InformationWeek, NY - 13 hours ago
    By Thomas Claburn So you want to intercept Internet traffic? If the National Security Agency is too busy to help out, you could always exploit a weakness in ...
    Huge Internet Security Hole Demonstrated BroadbandReports.com
    Hack Lets Researchers Silently Eavesdrop on IP Networks Dark Reading
    all 7 news articles


    Researchers reveal core web-routing vulnerability
    ZDNet UK, UK - 18 hours ago
    To do this, BGP maintains a table of available IP networks, and finds the most efficient routes for internet traffic. In their presentation, Pilosov and ...
    Hijacking huge chunks of the internet - a new How To Register
    Full disclosure: The only protocol for net security ZDNet UK
    all 8 news articles


    How to Intercept the Internet Like the NSA
    Wired News - Aug 26, 2008
    There was a lot of additional information I wanted to include in my article about intercepting internet traffic through the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), ...
    Revealed: The Internet's Biggest Security Hole Hard OCP
    Revealed: The Internet's Biggest Security Hole Wired News
    all 8 news articles


    Washington Post

    Comcast Proposes 'Fair Share' Internet Traffic Control
    NewsFactor Network, CA - Aug 21, 2008
    Following a Federal Communications Commission ruling that Comcast blocked Internet traffic and ordering the company to submit a compliance plan about how it ...
    Comcast gets 30 days to explain its Internet policies Bizjournals.com
    Update: Comcast has no traffic management plan yet Afterdawn.com
    Comcast has 30 days to detail Internet plans Broadcast Engineering
    Home Media Magazine - xchange Magazine
    all 239 news articles


    Cymphonix Announces Counter-Intuitive Approach to Controlling ...
    MarketWatch - Aug 13, 2008
    SALT LAKE CITY, Aug 13, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- With the opening ceremonies of the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympic Games complete and over 210 million Internet ...


    Beijing Olympics: Opening ceremony fuels internet traffic surge
    Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Aug 8, 2008
    The spectacular Olympic opening ceremony saw internet traffic surge to five times its normal level, according to some estimates. Much of the extra internet ...


    IT Infrastructure A Qwest for Growth
    eWeek,  NY - Aug 25, 2008
    You look at Internet traffic on our network, and it typically doubles every 15 months. On a per-user basis, each individual user will generate 40 percent ...


    New York Times

    FCC slams Comcast for blocking Internet traffic, vows to police ISPs
    Los Angeles Times, CA - Aug 1, 2008
    But the 3-2 FCC vote sets a new precedent in the volatile battle over Internet traffic flow, known as net neutrality. In concluding that Comcast violated ...
    FCC Orders Comcast To Stop Blocking Internet Traffic InformationWeek
    FCC Orders Comcast To Stop Blocking Internet Traffic MediaPost Publications
    FCC orders Comcast to stop arbitrarily blocking Internet traffic iTWire
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch - Chatter Shmatter
    all 968 news articles


    Neighborhood P2P could alleviate Internet traffic concerns
    TG Daily - Aug 19, 2008
    The idea: Keep Internet traffic local. Internet service providers have not made many friends by starting a discussion about possible bandwidth caps. ...
    The 160-mile Download Diet: Local File-sharing Drastically Cuts ... Science Daily (press release)
    all 7 news articles


    Internet traffic changes road rules
    New Zealand Herald, New Zealand - Jul 31, 2008
    By Alastair Sloane Once, a used car dealer bought from the average Joe, who didn't know what the wholesale price of the car was and sold to another average ...

    Internet-Traffic - Google News