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Why Traffic Exchanges Suck
by Gray Rollins

Published on this site: March 2nd, 2007 - See
more articles from this month

The theory of a traffic exchange is great - you need traffic,
they provide traffic. Signing up for a traffic exchange means
you will be getting more traffic all right, but there is no
guarantee that any of it will translate into sales. Traffic
exchanges make no sales guarantees, and they don't much mention
your actually making money after getting this new traffic. So
why do people join them?
When signing up with a traffic exchange, you are agreeing to
visit other sites in that exchange network. For doing this, you
will then get traffic from other members directed to your own
site. So, site owners are looking at your site, browsing
around, they may see something they like and buy it. Or, they
may think your site is a great idea and mention it on their own
site. Of course, in reality, it never seems to quite work that
way.
Large sites don't have much reason to join traffic exchanges
and look at other people's sites like this. Small businesses
with fairly new sites do. So guess who joins traffic exchanges?
Any advertising you might get on a site from being seen on a
traffic exchange is going to be on a small, low budget site,
which likely won't bring much traffic your way even if it does
happen.
In addition, many traffic exchange systems are set up on a
cheesy automatic timer so that you don't have to spend too long
looking at any one site in order to get in your quota. The time
each site is given is usually less than a minute, giving you
such in-depth exposure to those small, beginning websites. Just
imagine the business that will come your way from all of that.
Think about your own reasons for wanting to join up with a
traffic exchange. Is it to seek out new life and new
civilizations? To boldly find new websites and buy lots of
stuff from them? Heck no. People want to join because it is
cheap, or free, and you don't have to spend much time looking
at those other sites in order to bring traffic to your own. So
how many of the other guys do you suppose join the exchange to
buy things from other people?
Most traffic exchanges work on a credit system- you have to
earn credits to get viewers to your site. You earn credits by
looking at sites, then those credits are used to send viewers
to yours. And the quota is usually not one to one. Sometimes
you have to look at two or three sites in order to get one
person directed to your site. So, members are going to try to
look at as many sites as possible to get their own traffic
numbers up. Seeing as many sites as possible, combined with the
short times they have to view each site, it is pretty unlikely
that any one site will stand out enough to ever return to. So,
if you want untargeted traffic for no real reasons, traffic
exchanges are terrific. Otherwise, traffic exchanges suck.

Gray Rollins - is a featured writer for
Ultimate Traffic Blueprint. Get a free traffic building report
from http://www.ultimatetrafficblueprint.com/ and notice that it
never mentions amateur tools like traffic exchanges. Also,
check out the marketing blog - http://www.marketingeffects.com/


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