internet marketing glossary - tripinfo.com

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Behavioral Targeting - Using an individual's web-browsing behavior, such as pages visited or searches made, to select which ads to dis- play to that individual. Bounce Rate - The percentage of entrances on a web page that result in an immediate exit from the website. They come, they see, they flee. The lower the bounce rate, the bet- ter. Bounces are seldom seen below 20%. Branding - The process of using marketing images to get people to easily remember your products & services over competitors; by 2005 over 50% of internet ad spending. Clickstream - Record of a user's activity on the internet, including the websites & pages that the user visits, how long the user was on a page or site and in what order they were visited. Upstream is pages clicked "from", while Downstream is pages clicked "to". Click-through - The process of clicking on an online advertisement to the advertiser's website destination. Click-through Rate (CTR) - Average number of click-throughs per hundred ad impressions, expressed as a percentage. Average site click-through rate is under 1%. Contextual Targeting - Determining which ads to display to an individual based on the content of the website they are viewing. Conversion - An action that signifies a com- pletion of a specified activity. For many sites, a user converts if they buy a product, sign up for a newsletter or download a file. Conversion Rate - The relationship between visitors to a website and actions considered to be a "conversion" – expressed as a percentage. Cost-per-Inquiry (CPI) - The cost paid per inquiry received for traditional media advertis- ing, which then requires fulfillment via mailed or faxed information. Cost-per-Lead (CPL) - The cost an advertis- er pays per qualified lead, like those from vol- ume-buyers or industry professionals. Qualified leads are self-selected & targeted. Cost-per-Thousand (CPM) - The cost, per one thousand delivered, of buying advertising space in a given media vehicle. This term is heavily used in print, broadcasting & direct marketing, as well as with online. Cost per thousand is calculated by dividing the total ad cost by the number of thousands of media units delivered. The "M" in CPM is Latin for thousand. Crawler / Spider / Robot - Component of search engine that indexes websites automat- ically. A search engine's crawler (also called a spider or robot), copies web page source code into its index database and follows links to other web pages. Direct Traffic - Visitors who come to a web- site without first visiting a search engine, another site or a marketing tactic. Dynamic IP - A temporary IP address assigned by a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) computer from a pool of IP addresses. Engagement - Measurement of the extent to which a consumer has a meaningful brand experience when exposed to advertising. The Advertising Research Foundation defines: Engagement + Trust x Targeted Contacts = Brand Impact. Geo-Targeting - A sponsored search cam- paign feature that allows advertisers to restrict ad distribution to users with an IP address registered at an ISP with addresses assigned to a designated market area. Internet Marketing Glossary TRIPinf o . com group trips start here

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Page 1: Internet Marketing Glossary - TRIPinfo.com

Behavioral Targeting - Using an individual'sweb-browsing behavior, such as pages visitedor searches made, to select which ads to dis-play to that individual.

Bounce Rate - The percentage of entranceson a web page that result in an immediateexit from the website. They come, they see,they flee. The lower the bounce rate, the bet-ter. Bounces are seldom seen below 20%.

Branding - The process of using marketingimages to get people to easily remember yourproducts & services over competitors; by2005 over 50% of internet ad spending.

Clickstream - Record of a user's activity onthe internet, including the websites & pagesthat the user visits, how long the user was ona page or site and in what order they werevisited. Upstream is pages clicked "from",while Downstream is pages clicked "to".

Click-through - The process of clicking onan online advertisement to the advertiser'swebsite destination.

Click-through Rate (CTR) - Average numberof click-throughs per hundred ad impressions,expressed as a percentage. Average siteclick-through rate is under 1%.

Contextual Targeting - Determining whichads to display to an individual based on thecontent of the website they are viewing.

Conversion - An action that signifies a com-pletion of a specified activity. For many sites,a user converts if they buy a product, sign upfor a newsletter or download a file.

Conversion Rate - The relationship betweenvisitors to a website and actions considered tobe a "conversion" – expressed as a percentage.

Cost-per-Inquiry (CPI) - The cost paid perinquiry received for traditional media advertis-ing, which then requires fulfillment via mailedor faxed information.

Cost-per-Lead (CPL) - The cost an advertis-er pays per qualified lead, like those from vol-ume-buyers or industry professionals.Qualified leads are self-selected & targeted.

Cost-per-Thousand (CPM) - The cost, perone thousand delivered, of buying advertisingspace in a given media vehicle. This term isheavily used in print, broadcasting & directmarketing, as well as with online. Cost perthousand is calculated by dividing the total adcost by the number of thousands of mediaunits delivered. The "M" in CPM is Latin forthousand.

Crawler / Spider / Robot - Component ofsearch engine that indexes websites automat-ically. A search engine's crawler (also called aspider or robot), copies web page sourcecode into its index database and follows linksto other web pages.

Direct Traffic - Visitors who come to a web-site without first visiting a search engine,another site or a marketing tactic.

Dynamic IP - A temporary IP addressassigned by a Dynamic Host ConfigurationProtocol (DHCP) computer from a pool of IPaddresses.

Engagement - Measurement of the extent towhich a consumer has a meaningful brandexperience when exposed to advertising. TheAdvertising Research Foundation defines: Engagement + Trust x Targeted Contacts =Brand Impact.

Geo-Targeting - A sponsored search cam-paign feature that allows advertisers torestrict ad distribution to users with an IPaddress registered at an ISP with addressesassigned to a designated market area.

Internet MarketingGlossary

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Page 2: Internet Marketing Glossary - TRIPinfo.com

Hit - Meaningless due to misuse. A hit is arequest for a file from a web server; a singlepage view may require 100 or more hits. Thenumber of hits is often cited as a measure ofpopularity, but this number is misleading anddramatically over-estimates popularity. A hit isneither a page viewed nor a visit.

Impression - The display of an online advertise-ment to a website visitor. An online impression iscomparable to a reader actually viewing a print ad.

Integrated Marketing Unit (IMU) - Standardad sizes created by the InteractiveAdvertising Bureau (IAB). Among the mostcommon are Square Buttons, VerticalBanners & Wide Skyscrapers.

IP Address - An internet protocol locationthat is a unique numeric address that elec-tronic devices use to identify and communi-cate with each other on a computer network.These IP numbers are also used to collectdata for geographic locations.

Multi-media Marketing - A campaign thatincorporates more than one medium (email,internet, print, radio, television, viral, etc) alsoknown as “Integrated Marketing” or “Multi-platform Marketing”.

Page View - The display of a complete webpage, including all graphics & text.

Portal - A website featuring an array of links& services, like a travel reference informationportal to thousands of links + air, rail, gasprices, hotels, maps and weather info.

Rich Media - A term for advances in onlinecreative that take advantage of enhancedfeatures like animation, audio & video. Richmedia takes many different digital file forms.

Really Simple Syndication / Rich SiteSummary (RSS) - A format for deliveringregularly changing web content, used bynews sites and weblogs, which providessummaries of information with links to thecomplete content.

Search Engine Marketing (SEM) - The actof marketing a website via search engines,whether this be improving rank in organic list-ings (search engine optimization), purchasingpaid listings (PPC management) or a combi-nation of these and other search engine-relat-ed activities (i.e. affiliate programs, shoppingfeeds or link development).

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) -Choosing targeted keyword phrases properlyrelated to a site, and ensuring the site placeswell when those phrases are searched online.

Social Media - An umbrella term that definesthe various activities that integrate technolo-gy, social interaction and the construction ofwords & pictures (Facebook, Myspace,Twitter, etc).

Static IP - A number, in the form of a dottedquad, assigned to a computer by an Internetservice provider (ISP) to be its permanentaddress on the Internet.

Unique Visitor - A person viewing your site,tracked over long periods of time, countedonce. Search engine spiders indexing pagesshould not be counted as visitors.

User-generated Content (UGC) - Variouskinds of media, publicly available, producedby those who actually use a product (likeproduct reviews or feedback).

Viral Marketing - Any marketing techniquethat induces websites or users to pass on amarketing message to other sites or users,creating a potentially exponential growth inthe message’s visibility & effect.

Visit - A visit begins when a visitor enters asite and ends with an exit click or a period ofinactivity. The next event (click) will be a newvisit.

Web Analytics - The objective tracking, col-lection, measurement, reporting and analysisof Internet data. Proper web analyticsremoves spider traffic and duplicate clicks.

Sources: Google; iWEBTOOL, TechTarget, WAA (Web Analytics Association);Webtrends, Inc.; Wikipedia.TRIPinfo.com

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