How you monetize Non T1 Traffic?

14 replies
I do some have traffic from non T1 (US,UK,Canada, Australia)...How to monetize this traffic.

Warriors...Share your ideas?

Thanks,
Vikash
#monetize #traffic
  • Profile picture of the author MrJp
    Hey Vikash!

    Jp here, your best bet with T2's or lower are to send them to an offer where you will get paid on commission instead of getting paid per lead. Any of your own product or affiliate product would work. PLR membership trial offers are also a good bet in this situation.

    I hope this helps a little bit

    Regards

    Jp
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  • Profile picture of the author JohnZ
    There are plenty of ways to monetize traffic from foreign countries. For example, you could sell PLR products. Compile several articles into an eBook, rewrite existing content, or use it in its original form. Set up a sales page and promote your offer. You can also create a membership area on your site or blog, and offer PLR products to those who subscribe.
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  • Profile picture of the author Angshuman Dutta
    There are several PPD and CPA offers out there that pay for T2 traffic. You can try those. When choosing such offers, use the filter "all countries" and you'll have a list of offers from the CPA network that accepts T2 traffic.
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  • Profile picture of the author SEO Power
    It's easy. For example, if they are coming through search engines, determine what it is they need through the keywords they are using to find your site, and then promote an offer to them relevant to their needs.
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  • Profile picture of the author artflair
    I'd focus on CPA offers that allow all countries - you'll probably have a hard time trying to sell them anything, even if the offer is good...
    Good luck
    Art
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  • Profile picture of the author ddev
    CPA or some cheap CB product (CB has good payment alternatives that work well for most of the countries).
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  • Profile picture of the author JensSteyaert
    That's actually funny people giving you advice to promote cheap products.

    Just market to them the same as you market to T1 traffic, there's money to be made everywhere...
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    • Profile picture of the author Steve B
      If you know what country/language the traffic comes from, you could segment the leads and market specifically to the locality; however, in most cases you're not going to be certain what you're dealing with.

      I'm not sure the marketing beyond T1 needs to be any different unless you have specific demographics to better individualize your message.

      The most important thing remains . . . the targeting of your message/offer to the specific reason why the lead came into your possession.

      Good luck,

      Steve
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      Steve Browne, online business strategies, tips, guidance, and resources
      SteveBrowneDirect

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    • Profile picture of the author ddev
      Originally Posted by JensSteyaert View Post

      That's actually funny people giving you advice to promote cheap products.

      Just market to them the same as you market to T1 traffic, there's money to be made everywhere...

      Sorry, not all the countries have a similar economy.

      List of minimum wages by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      Geopricing it's not new. Top companies use it to apply Geo discounts by IP for a reason: different countries may have a different economy. And they want to optimize their traffic to get more sales.

      Real Life Example: Parliamentary report urges Australians to bypass online geo-blocks that can double prices for IT products.

      So, if you're outside AU, these companies are selling their products at a "cheaper" price to you.

      And top marketers rotate affiliate offers by country too (groups of countries). For example, i can't imagine an amazon affiliate trying to sell a gym platform from US, to visitors from AU / UK / FR / MX etc (would they pay shipping?). In those cases, using alternative affiliate offers would make more sense. Different offers for different groups of countries.

      You may use geo pricing / geo offers or not but (as i showed before), lots of companies and marketers are silently using it each and every day.

      Edit: I removed my signature for this thread so it doesn't look as i'm trying to sell you something (as the product is related to the conversation).
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      • Profile picture of the author JensSteyaert
        Originally Posted by ddev View Post

        Sorry, not all the countries have a similar economy.

        List of minimum wages by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

        Geopricing it's not new. Top companies use it to apply Geo discounts by IP for a reason: different countries may have a different economy. And they want to optimize their traffic to get more sales.

        Real Life Example: Parliamentary report urges Australians to bypass online geo-blocks that can double prices for IT products.

        So, if you're outside AU, these companies are selling their products at a "cheaper" price to you.

        And top marketers rotate affiliate offers by country too (groups of countries). For example, i can't imagine an amazon affiliate trying to sell a gym platform from US, to visitors from AU / UK / FR / MX etc (would they pay shipping?). In those cases, using alternative affiliate offers would make more sense. Different offers for different groups of countries.

        You may use geo pricing / geo offers or not but (as i showed before), lots of companies and marketers are silently using it each and every day.

        Edit: I removed my signature for this thread so it doesn't look as i'm trying to sell you something (as the product is related to the conversation).
        Yes that makes sense, but that would only apply to the top marketers and companies, and this is a general forum where people try to learn about interenet marketing.

        I would presume this doesn't apply for way over over 99% of the people here. You can't really compare how we should market our products and how Amazon, Apple or Microsoft markets their products, they can afford to do that.

        If i would charge more for people just because they live in the US, you would see a steep decline in my sales from US customers pretty soon if the word gets out.

        PS: The article says consumers are frustrated by this, so not really good advice to charge differently based on location...
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  • Profile picture of the author des gabriel
    cool stuff
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  • Profile picture of the author Clyde Dennis
    One question I would have for you is where is the traffic coming from?
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  • Profile picture of the author ddev
    Just a small comment: Geopricing it's not reserved to big companies as today it's very easy to do it (i won't put url's of smaller sites that use it, but this practice is very extended).

    Today things are really easy, even for newbies. 15 years ago running an online store was something really complex. Today, you launch Cpanel or similar and you'll probably find an icon to create a shopping cart in 5 minutes. You have WordPress where anyone can make miracles with plugins and so on.

    The same applies to things like GP.

    And yes, people may like it or not (i would only like to be geopriced if it's for a discount) but it's there.

    Best Regards,

    Diego.
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  • Profile picture of the author roshan03
    T2 traffic ----> Give away free products/info ----> build list ----> promote/sell
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