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April 15, 2009 at 9:34 pm #798586
Anonymous
Inactiveawesome new news, thanks,
didnt vote yet, need to understand it better first :Bong:
edit to add:
when i asked for more explanation someone answered:
This is interesting. The example URL given in the blog post above is http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&ct=res&cd=7&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.com%2Fmypage.htm&ei=0SjdSa-1N5O8M_qW8dQN&rct=j&q=flowers&usg=AFQjCNHJXSUh7Vw7oubPaO3tZOzz-F-u_w&sig2=X8uCFh6IoPtnwmvGMULQfw
Now, Google already send clicks on search results through those URLs – via a redirect. this is either triggered via javascript when you click on the link, or is occasionally hard-coded when, I assume, they’re testing how the javascript method is working out.
But, these URLs never show up in referrers, since they go through a server-side redirect. For it to be a referrer, it would presumably have to be a browser-side redirect like a meta refresh or some kind of javascript.
So, how are these URLs supposed to suddenly start ending up in referral strings? How will a browser end up on a URL like the above after searching for something?o my….now i am really lost……:crazy:
April 16, 2009 at 9:03 am #798601
serj11MemberQuote:If the operators know what the keyword was from analytics and the placement from the referrer string why won’t they just optimize for the terms themselves?It shouldn’t make any difference for affiliates that rank themselves and then direct their visitors to the merchant once “adding value” on their own site.
For affiliates that try to rank their affiliate URL within the search engines directly there will be issues but these can be mitigated and managed with careful planning.
If you’re concerned then I will be happy to provide the answers, on the back of your cashed check!
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