Forum Moderators: martinibuster
on domains that generetaes less then 750,000 page views per month?
There are many sites with 10-15 visitors per day and they place adsence code for parking domains.
How could it be possible?
ONce parked would your traffic slowly decrease seeing there's no content to keep you up in the engines?
The whole idea about domainpark and other domain parking programs is that you don't get traffic from search engine
The traffic comes from direct navigation (people typing in the domain names directly into the browser address window).
Someone looking for widgets types in widgets.com hoping to find a place that sells widgets.
That type of traffic never dies down really.
Someone looking for widgets types in widgets.com hoping to find a place that sells widgets.
Lo and behold there is. It doesn't explain what a widget is though :)
So all you do is buy domains you think that will gather address bar traffic and if you seem to get traffic google will let you park them to ads..?
I think you have to host them yourself. So if you are paying $2.50 a month for hosting domains and earning $2.00 a month per domain from AdSense you are losing $.50 a month per domain plus registration costs.
I think you have to find very very cheap hosting and registration fees and have hundreds or thousands of decent domain names to make money with this concept. Or, have some very good domain names (which are all gone now unless you really pay up).
Traffic domains offer a baseline of daily traffic. Therefore, you have a certain level of predictability, a good thing in business and finance. If a search engine loves your website today - that's great - but with type-in traffic you will not starve for wont of search engine love.
The other nice - no, significant - attribute of type-in domains is their tendency to act as traffic filters. People looking for Miami Widgets, who type in MiamiWidgets.com, are likely in the hunt for such widgets. Chances are that if your AdSense ads offer MiamiWidgets for sale you will not only get a click but you will also get a conversion or other desired act.
That's the basics: Baseline traffic and filtered traffic.
Good domains are a good thing. They're still out there. You just have to turn over more rocks these days to find them. However I managed to pick up more than a few - for registration price alone in recent months - that have already paid for themselves. Paid simply by parking them. Domains with no preexisting link history or search engine traffic. Just type-ins, people looking for . . something precise, either the thing itself or information about the thing/whatever.
Not the easiest thing for noobs but if you do a lot of reading you'll get the idea of how to go about turning over the rocks without getting bitten.