ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::All

10 Steps For Fighting Click Fraud

Author : Steve Dimeck
Pay-Per click fraud dates back even from the time when Overture was still Goto.com. Only, it wasn't as serious as it is lately since the pay-per-click (PPC) advertising is becoming very popular for getting highly targeted traffic as well as making an affiliate-based commission.

So, what's pay-per click fraud?

In an ideal world, you and I will pay a fee to a site that offers PPC program and hosts our ads whenever those ads are being clicked by a visitor. The visitor then examines our site and eventually makes a purchase. We make money.

In click-fraud-world as it is nowadays, those clicks that you and I pay for are not coming from potential customers. But from scam artists, automated scripts known as "hitbots", underhanded competitors, and even affiliates that just click on our ads in order to earn commission offered by the PPC providers. We lose money.

Fraudulent clicks or "click spam" can be defined as any kind of click that occurs with zero possibility for a conversion to occur, or a website visit not being originated by a legitimate user. Fraudulent clicks happen on a regular basis - even more than what we could possibly imagine.

Indiatimes published a shocking article about a mother who gets down to work every evening while holding a baby in her lap. She is clicking on PPC advertisements. She doesn't care about the ads, but diligently keeps count — it's $0.18 to $0.25 per click.

"The trend is catching up in India," - says Goutam Rakshit, chairman, Advertising Council of India - "It's a numbers game as far as media buying is concerned. And anybody who can manipulate numbers gets the edge. This is unethical, and needs to be curbed."

John Squire, the vice president for product marketing for Coremetrics, estimated that his company's clients are spending approximately $10 million a year on fraudulent clicks. They are spending about $10 million on consumers that don't exist.

How much are you paying for customers that don't exist?

If you think your PPC campaign funds are depleting due to a fraudulent click activity, affiliate-generated fraudulent activity, or if you are simply suspicious of the traffic that occurs without any increase in sales - then perhaps you need to start getting tougher with your PPC analysis.

You can always ask for refund from the PPC provider running your campaign if you have suspected a fraudulent click activity. But, you won't get the refund unless you have hard core facts to prove it.

And now, let's get down to the facts.

1a. On a less technical note, define a unique URL for the sales page that will go through the PPC program. Clone your sales page and save it under a different URL.

If your page is selling vitamins for an example, and lets say your URL is www.hotvitamins.com, save it as www.hotvitamins.com/power. Or, create a sub-domain, such as http://power.hotvitamins.com.

Then, use this "cloned" sales page for your PPC campaign. That way, the only traffic coming to that page is from the PPC website. Only, do not link this new URL to any other website. You want to have 100% pure PPC traffic so you can keep an eye on it.

1b. For more technical people, you can assign unique session id to each of your URLs within your PPC campaigns. I'm seeing both techniques being used.

2. Use a basic log analyzer program to begin to investigate the data on the received clicks, including date, time, referrer, page views, URL, IP, etc. Your webhost should already provide you with a log analyzer program or a "Site Statistics Tool."

If not, maybe it's time for you to change your webhost, or you have to install log analyzer software yourself.

What you want to do at this stage is look for anything suspicious. Based on how comprehensive your "Site Statistics Tool" is, at the end of the day you want to be able to capture the IP address from each click.

Then, look at the quantity of the clicks from each IP address, click behavior and click timing. Run a "reverse IP address lookup" to see who is making those clicks.

Basically, you want to be able to gather as many details as possible for each and every click. Whether you will depend on the tool your webhost is providing you, or you will install a software yourself, or you will contract it out, make sure you have the capability of capturing the IP address.

If the IP address was not captured, or cookies were not generated, that's an indication of clicks being generated by automated scripts known as "hitbots."

3. Start tracking the conversion ratio. You can choose to track conversions either by using your own conversion tracking system, or by using a third-party conversion tracking tool. There are plenty of low-cost conversion tracking solutions.

In some cases, the services offering to track your clicks will have a sales conversion option available for you. That's a service you definitely want to get if you don't want to deal with it yourself.

But, if your sales ratio is very low or even zero, your chances are very high that you're being bullied by someone. It could as well be the low demand of your product or a high competition, but if you're getting high amount of traffic from your PPC campaign and low to zero sales, the chances are very high that you could be a victim of click-fraud.

So, what do you do if you suspect that you're receiving fraudulent clicks on your PPC campaign?

4. Be meticulous - very thorough. Make sure you have data that points to questionable traffic. You have to have evidence of the suspicious clicks. Ensure that you have a legitimate case even if you have to double check your records. The PPC provider will ask you for facts and not an opinion.

5. Carefully document your traffic analysis during your PPC campaign. Document anything related to the campaign - handwritten notes, email exchanges, scribbles, reports, screen shots, etc.

6. Be sure to record every one of the clicks, whether they're from your server logs or from a third party processor that you might be contracting for this purpose.

7. Document all relevant competitor positioning. Ever since Google changed its policy on PPC ads, there have been various reports on competitors of a same product manipulating Google's new system.

It's the people with more technical knowledge manipulating the system for their own good while killing the campaigns of the people with no technical knowledge. They're not breaking Google's rules, but they know when to pause their campaign (knowingly) and when to reactivate it again.

8. On the other note, you might want to contact your competitors to see if they're experiencing click fraud. Your PPC campaign might not be the only one experiencing these fake clicks. Two victims' cases presented to the PPC provider will make a stronger case.

9. When feeling highly confident that you have a strong case and clear facts that you've been a victim of click fraud, contact your PPC account representative and submit your data with a request for refund. Their investigations can, and do take time.

10. Meantime, continue to monitor your click activity and record any additional data.

It's unfortunate that we have to be so much involved to protect ourselves. We pay for advertising so we can free up our time and let someone else do it. But with the seriousness of PPC "click spam" nowadays ........ you snooze - you lose.

If the PPC providers don't solve this problem, perhaps there are other ways of bringing highly targeted traffic with less stress.

About the Author

© Steve Dimeck. Author and Publisher. To receive more quality articles such as the one you just read, sign up for Steve's [TSM] Bulletin at: http://tsmbulletin.ogdteam.com
Your next issue of the [TSM] Bulletin is just one click away.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Fastest Money Making Affiliate Program
  2. Marketing On The Cheap: Speak Out!
  3. Do You Know Where Your Marketing Dollars Are Going?
  4. Non-Profit Success Requires Ongoing Marketing
  5. Marketing Tips - Ten Quick Marketing Actions
  6. Incentives For Customers? Whats New?
  7. Growing Your Business With Your Marketing Priorities
  8. How Toyota Captured the #1 Market Share . . . Through Solid Decision-Making!
  9. Marketers VS Consumers Predators VS Prey
  10. Where Are Your Leads Coming From?
  11. Are Your Prospects Walking Out on You?
  12. Add Internet Marketing To Your Marketing Mix
  13. Cheery Cards for Cheery Sales
  14. Spend Less, Earn More
  15. The Marketing Ability of Greeting Cards
  16. Creativity in Catalog Design
  17. Business Card Printing Options
  18. Lead Generation: What Is It worth?
  19. Flyer that says “Get Me”
  20. The Best Out of Catalog Printing
  21. Posters Can Make a Digital Difference
  22. The Wrong Way of Doing Postcards
  23. Business card’s Enduring Commercial Commitment
  24. Folds of Communication
  25. Strength of Postcard’s Style and Personality
More related feeds
10 steps for fighting click fraud
pay-per click fraud dates back even from the time when overture was still goto.com. only, it wasn’t as serious as it is lately since the pay-per-click (ppc) advertising is becoming very popular for getting highly targeted traffic as ...

Identity Fraud Centre...Check Your Status for Free - Did you know ...
This identity fraud tactic is known as "phishing." There is no trick to fighting identity fraud like this, save using common sense. If you aren't expecting an email from a trusted source or if you don't know the sender, it is safer to ...

10 steps for fighting click fraud | ppc domination
here are 10 steps for fighting click fraud. tags: environment, playstation, software, industry-news, baseball. related posts. ppc report speeds click fraud refunds (0) outsourcing ppc what you should consider (0) daily roundup … ...

CRM News: Internet Fraud: Old Threats Are New Again: Security Tips ...
The parameters you choose to set as a business will depend on a wide range of factors -- from the characteristics of your customer base to the capability of your fraud team -- but within these 10 steps are approaches that will cut some ...

5 Reasons Why Real Estate Agents Are Not Like Car Salesmen
Private Lending for Real Estate Investors: The Six Steps to a Private Lending Program - By : Michel Lautensack · Fighting Foreclosure - What You Should Know When Fighting Foreclosure - By : Pearl White ...

Learn More On rapid keywords | ppc-domination.com
... razvanro on PPC - Use Squidoo to Improve Your Pay Per Click Income · Pay Per Click Campaigns on PPC - Use Squidoo to Improve Your Pay Per Click Income · Websites tagged "clickfraud" on Postsaver on 10 Steps For Fighting Click Fraud ...

Greg Craig State Department: What Could Have Been
You use high level diplomacy, espionage, and stay 10 steps ahead of them, letting them know what you know if you find something you don't like; confront them face to face and hold them accountable, after you have established a ...

Generate cash from your mail: 10 Steps For Fighting Click Fraud
10 Steps For Fighting Click Fraud · Steve Dimeck. Pay-Per click fraud dates back even from the time when Overture was still Goto.com. Only, it wasn't as serious as it is lately since the pay-per-click (PPC) advertising is becoming very ...

Commision Blue print review | ppc-domination.com
The product banks on the idea that pay-per-click or PPC advertising is the most powerful tool that needs to be mastered to be able to maximize your online profits. As opposed to social networking and other online campaigns, ...

White Collar Fraud: New York Democratic Party Leadership Takes ...
He said once they were the only causes worth fighting for. And he fought for them once, for the only reason any man ever fights for them; because of just one plain simple rule: 'Love thy neighbor.'... And you know that you fight for the ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved