תשלום לקליק פנה דרך לתשלום לצ’ט
make money off of my use of this thing? Simple. Other people pay the cents.
On the right side of my screen are five sponsored links from companies that paid to have their sites show up in my email program. The problem is, three of them are in German, and though English is a Germanic language, I still have trouble speaking it, being that I am American. So barring the possibility that I will become fluent in German by the time I am finished writing this post, I won’t click on those. Neither will I click on the one advertising an MBA at the University of Wales Online. I’m sorry – ever since Diana died I just can’t bring myself to go to an Online Welsh university. Or maybe I’m just not interested.
The two that are remotely related to what I’m writing here have to do with online marketing. They’re here because Google scanned the subject of this email and sent me those links. But again, one of them is German. The result is that I won’t click on any of them, the advertisers won’t make any money, and maybe they’ll even stop paying Google, who will then stop giving me free email accounts and the world will blow up.
Though I don’t think it will get that bad, the pay per click model needs a change. So Stumpedia has begun a new model, Pay Per Chat. How it works, as reported by Altsearchengines is:
“Pay Per Chat begins with keywords, which show up on the side whenever a user does a Stumpedia search. The trick is, if you’re interested in something that’s being offered, you can then send a short text message to that advertiser, who then, if he feels you match him, can respond to your query. The advertiser only pays for queries they respond to. This makes advertising more personal, matched, targeted, and all in all more logical.”
Advertisers – think it’s too much of a risk? You get free advertising for the rest of 2009, so go give it a whirl.


