Thursday, August 20, 2009

Want to Trademark Your Name On Radio And Need A Dj For Radio Try Us

Start your Radio Show Today Get a Great-Dj A Go Go Should you need a female voice talent, we may be able to engage one for you. This service will only be available in conjunction with orders from us and not as an agent for the female talent.

History
Jeff Straub Radio Imaging has been serving customers since December 2003. Jeff traveled as a musician as a kid and wrote and performed music for many years--so his first radio and TV experiences were as a "subject." Jeff later worked in radio and television as a public information officer for a municipality. While hosting a radio show that promoted independent rock artists, Jeff began doing radio imaging and production. He then went on to DJ and worked as production manager for one of the largest net classic rock stations, 9412.

Upon seeing the demand for quality voice work and production AND the absolutely insane prices some folks were charging, jeffradio.com was "born" as a solution.

Future Goals
Well, gee. It's pretty simple, really. We want to be YOUR source for all of your voice over needs! As we said before, long-term relationships that are mutually beneficial are what good business is supposed to be about!

Why not place an order

1. Multiple Links Per Post Were you should Make Money

1. Multiple Links Per Post
Lets start with a simple yet powerful technique - linking to the product you’re promoting on Amazon more than once in a post.
When I used to write reviews of products with affiliate links I did so with one link. I’m not sure why but for some reason I thought a single link would be enough and I didn’t want to run the risk of annoying readers with more. However one day it struck me that the reviews I were writing were quite long and by the time people got to the end of them they’d scrolled down the page so that the link to Amazon was no longer visible.
At this point I started to experiment with a link at the top and tail of the post. I did some heat map tracking of which link proved to be most clickable and also used Amazon’s tracking codes to see which one would ‘convert’ to a sale more often. The results were interesting:
both links got clicked quite a bit but the one under the article was clicked on slightly more than the top one (despite being under the fold)
the lower link converted better than the top one
those who clicked on the top link still made sales (although not as many) - but interestingly it wasn’t always the product I reviewed - often it seemed to be related products
I concluded that having read a review of a product that people were now better informed to make a purchasing decision. As a result, if they did click a link after reading the review they were more likely to buy the product.
Those clicking on the top link seemed to be more in a ’surfing’ mode. They clicked on the link less because they wanted to buy it but more out of interest to learn more. Some bought the product and some bought other products once they were ‘in the door’ at Amazon.