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| | #1 |
| Active Warrior Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 39
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Hi, Little confused here...if we go ahead and build a landing page for a campaign, how are we supposed to implement the submission form if networks don't allow us to partial iFrame? I would 100% iFrame the advertiser's site with my own domain, but Google slaps this method? Are we merely supposed to "presell" the user with our custom landing page and then send them to the advertiser's landing page? Thanks for your help as always. Regards. |
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| | #2 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: Long Island NY
Posts: 352
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[QUOTE=merkin;3520299]Hi, Little confused here...if we go ahead and build a landing page for a campaign, how are we supposed to implement the submission form if networks don't allow us to partial iFrame? I would 100% iFrame the advertiser's site with my own domain, but Google slaps this method? Are we merely supposed to "presell" the user with our custom landing page and then send them to the advertiser's landing page? Thanks for your help as always. Regards.[/QUOTE Spot on....the landing page is designed to pre-sell the consumer, multiple call to actions are placed on the landing page, directing the consumer off to the offer landing page where they can fill out the form...There are certain cases where advertisers will allow partial i-framing but the process that's usually in place is a publisher must prove quality and volume before they are giving the green light to pop the form onto their own landing page... You should approach the network about pre-popping the form....i don't know the kind of offer you're running or the network but as a "meet in the middle" solution you can ask if they have the ability and are willing to allow you to prepop first name, last name, whatever fields you want....then you can create your fields on your landing page, once they fill that information out on your landing page, they hit the offer page with that basic information already on the form... |
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| | #3 |
| Senior Warrior Member War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Brazil
Posts: 3,496
Thanks: 174
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Partial iframing is something that most networks and offers won't allow you to do, because it's often used by BH marketers to trick people into completing offers without knowing what they really are. However, your landing page doesn't need to have any iframes. The idea of a landing page can be to capture leads for you to promote the offer with an email series, or simply "presell" the offer, change people's mindset and make them more likely to complete the offer (in this case you'd have just a link to the offer's page, no iframes). William
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| | #4 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 397
Thanks: 31
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Your landing pages will essentially make the visitor click on your call to action button that will take them through your cpa affiliate link. Another approach could be your call to action captures there email and name and you send a series of autoresponder emails with links to your cpa links in them. Make sure those cpa campaigns allow email marketing though.
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| Tags |
| form, implementing, landing, page |
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