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Pixel Advertising is hot but will it last?
(c)2005 by Rick Tanzo
Introduction:
Pixel advertising is a form of promotion in which an ad is placed on a web site using tiny dots otherwise known as pixels, usually with size in the range of 100 pixels and higher. The pixel ad image normally links to the advertiser's product, service or web site.
The leading pixel ad site today is the milliondollarhomepage, selling ads at one dollar a pixel. Other web sites offer pixel ads from one dollar to a penny. A few sites offer pixel ads for free, a kind of promotion from the looks of it.
Origin:
Some people have the mistaken notion that pixel advertising came about middle of 2005. Actually, there have been two instances that pixel advertising appeared online.
The first advent of pixel advertising came on April 12, 2004, when a "one pixel ad" campaign appeared on eBay. The winning bidder would then have a chance to display an ad on the front page of cockeyed.com for 21 days, using a one pixel ad placed at the top of the home page. Nothing was heard about pixel ad from that point on.
The second advent came in August 26, 2005, when an enterprising UK student named Alex Tew deployed his milliondollarhomepage on the web. Since then, pixel ad sites have been sprouting on the Net, to the tune of 8 web sites a day. There are now more than 500 web sites selling pixel ads on the web.
Has pixel advertising caught fire this time around?
My own guess is that it would be too early to tell.
If you ask the pixel ad site owners, most of them will declare that this form of advertising is here to stay. The acknowledged originator of the pixel ad idea has a different view, however. In the words of the milliondollarhomepage creator Alex Tew:
"Is this a new trend in advertising? Personally, I think not. I believe this idea is a one-off that will only really work once. It's only unique the first time. However, there may be some future mileage in this 'pixel advertising' or 'micro-ads' concept in terms of fundraising for charities or other good causes. But of course, only time will tell."
Advertiser's how-to in placing pixel ads:
Below are key steps in placing your pixel ad.
First, select the best pixel ad web site. Because pixel ad sites are relatively new, most of them do not as yet earn a pagerank from Google. Much less do they rate high with Alexa.
I can only site a couple of web sites with good Google PageRank, where you can place your pixel ad.
One web site is the milliondollarhomepage by Alex Tew with a PR7. Another site is SEO expert Brad Fallon's blog site with a PR6. (And if you allow me, my own web site could possibly be mentioned, the internetmarketinglearningcenter.com, with a PR4.)
Second, choose or select the appropriate image to be displayed on the ad space. The key is to have lower pixels for your image.
Third, select the appropriate "alt tag" for your image. The alt tag is the text that hovers on your image when your mouse's cursor points to the image. This is the text that the visitor reads when visiting the ad site.
Fourth, determine how much would you want to spend for your pixel advertising. Higher ranked and much visited sites command higher rates.
Fifth, choose a site with good content.
Sixth, do your own research on the site you plan to place your ad. As in most endeavors, there's no substitute for a well planned activity.
Rick Tanzo enjoins you to constantly strive to make profit on the Internet, and visiting the following resources: home based business, computers, and internet marketing.
Pixel Advertising:Drive Traffic to Your Website
By Terry Till
Pixel advertising is fast becoming all the rage with new pixel advertising website pages appearing on a daily basis.
So what is pixel advertising and how did it all come about.
The original idea seems to have been started a few months ago by a British student named Alex Tew who was trying to find a way to make an online income and help pay his way through college.
He decided that if you were to divide a web page into a grid formation, consisting of 100 pixels per square, it may be possible to offer advertisers a choice of purchasing any amount of these grid squares and in return they could upload an image or banner and advertise their individual sites.
He set his pricing at $1 per pixel, which equated to $100 per grid square and in total meant that his web page, that consisted of a one million pixel grid, would be worth one million dollars if all available pixels were sold.
Well the idea was innovative and after starting to sell some of his advertising space to friends and colleagues the idea really started to spread and capture the imagination of the Internet world. From this initial start things really started moving fast and traffic to his site began to build at a tremendous pace. It wasn’t long then until the news and media became aware of what had become a phenomena and this news coverage really started the ball rolling.
Approximately three to four months after starting his pixel advertising website he has now sold over $800,000 worth of advertising and has nearly reached his initial goal of producing a one million dollar homepage.
It really does pay to advertise.
For free pixel advertising of your website visit:
http://www.pixeladzone.com
This is a brand new pixel website so all the prime positions are still available to the early birds.
Copywrite Terry Till 2005-12-08
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