Funny enough, I was checking Google’s Keyword Tool the other day and noticed that lots of people are searching for “adsens“, not “adsense”. Clearly a misspelling, but it turns out that there are 110.000 Global Monthly Searches for “adsens”, but only 5,400 Local (US) Searches for “adsens” and the competition is also low:
2. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
Funny enough, I was checking Google’s
Keyword Tool the other day and noticed that lots
of people are searching for “adsens“, not
“adsense”. Clearly a misspelling, but it turns out
that there are 110.000 Global Monthly Searches
for “adsens”, but only 5,400 Local (US)
Searches for “adsens” and the competition is
also low:
4. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
Can you use this information to generate web
traffc?
Yes, If you set up a Pay-Per-Click (PPC) you can
take advantage of misspellings. Let’s say you are
paying for the keyword “ice cream” it would stand to
reason that the most common misspelling of this
keyword phrase is “ice craem”. Put that in your
keyword list and you will see that there are around
1.000 Global Searches for this phrase.
Surprisingly, including misspellings in current PPC
campaigns is not always done and this can cause
an advertiser to miss out on 100s, if not 1000s, of
extra click-thrus monthly.
5. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
As many clicks from misspellings cost but a
fraction of what the correctly spelled word could
cost, adding these variations into any PPC
keyword list can have a strong, immediate result
for your online marketing efforts.
6. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
You can also buy misspelled domain names and
redirect them back to your actual site or send the
traffic to an affiliate offer. We could for instance
purchase the misspelled
domain ”RealTraffikSource.com” and set up a
redirect script that reroutes the user to our actual
site. This is quality traffic, because only
someone who is looking for our site would
misspell it like that.
7. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
Note: Google has changed the way it displays
search results for misspellings. They now show
“Did you mean:” with a link to the correct search
query and its top 2 results.
8. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
Several people don’t use search engines but
drop a line directly into the search
window, mostly in cases of brand names like
Twitter, Facebook or Amazon. If you would be
the owner of a mispelled domain, for instance
“amazon.co” or “emazon.com” you would get a
high daily web traffic just from people who
wanted to visit the homepage of Amazon.
9. Read More @
RealTrafficSource.com
As you can see, one misspelling had a different
ending in the domain (.co), the other one a
misspelling in the name itself. If you have a
domain like this, you could easily made a
redirect to the correct homepage, but with your
affiliate link. So all these visitors would come
recommended by you and you could make a
good commission on the things people bought.
To make this forwarding you just have to activate
a permanent forwarding (301 forwarding) at you
domain company.