e-Commerce Biz (Internet Business) Glossary
Search for Acronyms, Abbreviations, and Definitions
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-- A --
A/B Testing --
A/B testing tests two versions of an advertisement, the "A" version and
the "B" version, to determine which gives better results.
The classical A/B test has but a ONE variable difference between the
two versions.
This can be the headline, a body paragraph, an illustration, the price,
etc. But ONLY one of those per test.
This can be time-consuming and/or expensive.
A recently popularized methodology, called multivariate testing, allows
multiple variables to be tested.
Different combinations of headlines, body text, calls to action, pricing,
etc., can be tested to see which combination proves most effective.
One software product for accomplishing this is the
James D. Brausch Multivariate Copywriting Testing Software.
Above the Fold --
"Above the fold" is the section of a Web page that is visible without
scrolling.
Where the fold on a web page is located depends on the resolution
setting of the viewer's monitor.
For example, if the resolution is set at 800x600 the fold will be
higher on the page than if the resolution is set at 1024x768, where
the fold will be lower on the page.
The term derives from newspaper publishing, where important pictures
or news stories were placed on the upper half of the front page to
garner reader attention.
This is what you would see in a newsrack window (for a regular sized
newspaper, not a tabloid.)
Ad Impression --
Ad impressions are generated each time a user views a page displaying
advertisements.
(Assuming the page is set up for tracking.)
This is different from page impressions in that if a page contains
four adverts, the count will be one page impression and four ad
impressions.
See also
Page Impression.
Advertiser --
In the e-Commerce business, an advertiser is one who runs his advertisements on
publishers' websites.
Alternate Ads --
If you, as an ad publisher, are running Google AdSense ads, if they
can't serve a targeted ad to your ad spot, they will by default fill
the spot with a
PSA
for a non-profit organization.
When a user clicks on one of those, you don't get any earnings for
the click.
You can, however, modify the AdSense javascript to have Google get
and serve one of your own alternate ads for one of your own products
or an affiliate program.
Anchor Text --
Anchor text is the text you see for a clickable link.
That is usually underlined to call your attention to it, but nowadays
with all the trendy "kewl" web design using
css (cascading style sheets),
the fact that a link is there to click on may not be apparent until you run your
mouse over it.
The "css (cascading style sheets)" text just above is anchor text for a link that,
when you click on it, takes you to a short definition of "css" on this page.
For an example of a trendy "kewl" use of css, go to the very top of this page and
run your mouse over the heading "e-COMMERCE BUSINESS".
When you do so, you will see the text become underlined, and if you click on it,
you will be taken to the home page of this site.
Using descriptive anchor text for links from one page to another on your sites
is much better than a generic "click here".
"Click here" means nothing to search engines, where descriptive anchor text
will help greatly in improving the search engine ranking of the destination page.
Artemis Pro --
Article Submission Software from James D. Brausch.
Article Spinner --
Article Spinners are also known as Article Rewriters, Article
Generators, or Article Submitters.
These are software or services that takes original or
PLR
articles and generates or assists in generating a number of variations.
The variations are (hopefully) unique enough so that when posted
on web pages, blogs, article directories, etc., they avoid the
Google "duplicate content penalty" (placed in the "supplemental
results" bin).
Many of the article spinners just add junk, generating articles
full of nonsense and irrelevant material which will be
rejected by many sites.
Make sure you have software that turns out readable unique
article versions.
These will take a bit more effort on your part, but the results
will be worth it.
For a simple to use, inexpensive, article generating software
program, see
Articles Unique Article Generator.
-- B --
Bot --
"Bot" is short for "robot".
One type of bot is software used to visit and index the content of web
sizes.
This information is gathered and used by search engines to provide
lists of (hopefully) relevant web pages to searchers.
This information is also gathered by services such as Google AdSense
to enable providing
contextual advertising
to
publishers.
Other bots are designed for various nefarious purposes, such as
attempting to access financial accounts and information, to send
spam e-mails, submit spam blog posts and comments, etc.
-- C --
Captcha --
"Captcha" stands for "Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell
Computers and Humans Apart", a term trademarked by Carnegie Mellon
University.
Captcha is a challenge-response test with the aim of attempting to
determine if the user is a human or not.
A graphic presented to a user, which the user has to interpret and
enter into a text box on a web page in order to proceed farther in that
website -- for logging in, accessing an account, setting up an account,
verifying a payment, etc. This is usually in addition to a log-in
name or account number and password.
The graphic is usually a few digits and/or letters that are presented in
a distorted or obfuscated form, which can (hopefully) be interpreted by
a human, but not by machine. The purpose is to prevent automated
bot
log-ins or other site access.
For a very sophisticated log-in procedure including a "Turing Number"
captcha graphic, see the
e-gold "Turing Number" log-in method.
(And to find out more about e-gold - real money -
browse the e-gold® site.)
Click --
In the e-Commerce business, a click is a click on an advertisement that sends the
user (clicker) to a page on the advertiser's web site.
Client-side Software --
Software applications that are used to access or make better use of
the internet and are installed on users' machines.
This includes browsers and e-mail managers.
Contextual Advertising --
Advertising placed on web pages according to the content as
determined by keywords on the web pages.
Conversion --
A conversion occurs when a user you've referred completes the
necessary actions for you to receive earnings for that referral.
The event and earnings for referrals vary by product.
CPA --
Cost per Action.
The CPA is the amount an advertiser pays when a user completes a
certain action.
This can be for just a click on an advertisement, but usually
requires some further action after getting to the advertiser's page,
such as submitting a form or making a purchase.
CPC --
Cost per Click.
The CPC is the amount an advertiser pays each time a user clicks on an ad.
CPM --
The CPM is the amount an advertiser pays for every 1000 times a user
views an advertisement and an impression is recorded.
That is, it is the Cost per Thousand impressions.
Compare to
eCPM.
The "M" in "CPM" is an holdover from pre-computer days as an
abbreviation for thousand, and is still used much in the financial
area.
It is the Roman Numeral for 1000.
"K" (kilo) is the abbreviation used for 1000 in the computer world and
in weights and measures worldwide except in the U.S.A. and a few other
countries.
CPO --
The CPO is the Cost per Order, and includes ALL costs, per item and prorata
per item.
Crawl Rate --
The frequency of crawling your site.
Supposedly, the Google
crawler
will crawl a page every 90 days as the default frequency.
(THAT IS ONLY EVERY THREE MONTHS!!).
But if the content has changed since the last crawl, it will crawl
more frequently.
Some sites with frequent changes are eventually crawled daily.
If you have changed your site, you could try to get Google to crawl it
sooner by notifying them that your site has changed, at
Google Add URL.
Crawler --
Software used to visit and index the content of web sizes.
This information is gathered and used by search engines to provide
lists of (hopefully) relevant web pages to searchers.
This information is also gathered by services such as Google AdSense
to enable providing
contextual advertising
to
publishers.
CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) --
Cascading Style Sheets are an addition to HTML that allows web designers
to have more control over the appearance of web pages.
Colors, sizes, and faces of fonts can be specified so that they do not
have to be called out repeatedly in the main HTML for a page.
Many other attributes can also be controlled.
Different browsers frequently render pages differently, so the css
specifications override the default behaviour of a browser for a
more consistent web page appearance between browsers.
If the style information is extensive, it can be put into a separate file
to be called in the header of a web page.
So you will see something like this:
<link rel="stylesheet"
href="http://xxxxxxxxxxx.com/wp-content/themes/xxxxxx/style.css"
type="text/css" media="all" />
If the style information is less extensive, it may be in the actual
page itself.
You can see an example in the HTML source code for this page.
You can "View | Page Source" in the browser and then look for
"style type" in the source code.
For an example of its use, consider that text using the HTML <h1> tag
is usually VERY large.
The style information for this page makes it small, sets the font face
and color, makes upper case whatever text is between the <h1>...</h1> tags,
etc.
You can see an example of that at the very top right of this page.
CTR --
Clickthrough rate.
The CTR is the number of clicks an advertisement receives divided by
the number of times the advertisement is shown.
Cybersquatting --
A perjorative term used by those who have already snapped up the good
domain names when somone registers and tries to use and profit from
domains with similar names.
The monopolists claim that the so-called cyber-squatter would get
undeserved traffic if a user typed in an
incorrect version of one of the monopolists' hallowed domain names.
See also
Typosquatting.
-- D --
DGC --
Digital Gold Currency / Digital Gold Currencies.
For an example, see
e-gold.
DTI --
Daily Target Income.
See
Target Income.
Destination URL --
The URL to which an advertisement links.
This is the page a user sees when he clicks through to an
advertiser's
site from an advertisement on a
publisher's web page.
DR --
Direct Response. The Direct Response Industry encompasses print media,
radio, television, postal mail, AND internet marketing.
The consumer/buyer responds directly to an advertisment (e.g., a web
sales page) and orders. This is in contrast to retailing, where the
customer goes into a store and buys.
-- E --
eCPM --
Effective CPM.
Cost per 1000 impressions. From a publisher's perspective, CPM is a
useful way to compare revenue from different advertisements.
eCPM is calculated by dividing total earnings by the number of
impressions in thousands.
For example, if you (an advertising publisher) earned $200 from
51,000 impressions, the CPM would be $200/51, or $$3.92.
Note that this is a comparative measure and does not represent
actual earnings.
Compare to
CPM.
-- F --
FAQ --
Frequently Asked Question(s).
To save time handling pre-order questions, post-order questions, and support,
FAQs, to be effective, should result from an on-going process of refinement
derived from prospect and customer queries and complaints.
Many marketers disparage FAQs and don't post them because they say no one
reads them.
Others are just too lazy.
Still others just don't give a crap about the customer after they make a sale;
they just hope the customer will give up without demanding a refund.
My guess is that most people do try to find and read FAQs, but because
they are usually so hard-to-find and so poorly written and organized (searchable),
that they give up and then call customer service, after all.
Really, don't you think
most people would rather spend just a few moments on-line to get the information they
need from easily found and well-constructed FAQs as opposed to waiting ten, fifteen
plus minutes on hold, only to end up talking to some doofus in Appalachia,
or some wog in India whose accent they have to struggle to decipher?
-- G --
GTC --
General Terms & Conditions.
These are the terms set between you and a distributor as part of a purchase
order when an order is taken.
Geo-Targeting --
The
IP address
assigned to a computer generally reveals
at least its approximate location (country).
Using that information, advertisements shown on web pages can be
determined dynamically according to users' locations.
Glyphius --
Copywriting Evaluation Software from James D. Brausch.
-- H --
Hermusa --
Link Building Software from James D. Brausch.
-- I --
IM --
Internet Marketing.
IP Address --
Internet Protocol Address.
Each computer connected to the internet is assigned a unique number.
This enables communication but also can be used for tracking.
-- J --
-- K --
Keyphrase (Key Phrase) --
See Keyword.
Keyword --
A keyword (key word), for a webpage (web page), can actually be just one
word or several words.
Several words would be more accurately called a keyphrase (key phrase),
but common usage still refers to such as a keyword.
A keyword is what a user enters into a search engine (e.g., Google or Ask.com)
search window when he is searching for information.
Your web pages should, therefore, contain appropriate keywords to help
the search engine serve up appropriate
SERP
pages to the user.
A rule of thumb is that your keyword phrases that you want the
search engines to find for your users should not exceed five
words. Users search on one word most frequently, two words
less frequently, three words even less frequently... and rarely on
six words or more.
KFCP --
Keyword Focused Content Page.
A web page with content devoted primarily to discussing the subject
corresponding to a specific
keyword
(or keyphrase).
-- L --
-- M --
MAP --
Minimum Advertised Price.
If you are in the product business, selling to distributors rather than
direct response,
to prevent excessive price discounting,
you may want to set a MAP in your
General Terms & Conditions.
You can't control selling prices, but you can control the advertised prices.
Master Resale Rights --
The right to resell material, especially on-line
Private Label Rights (PLR)
material such as e-books and videos.
Any owner of "Master Resale Rights" material may sell it to anyone
else without restriction, in contrast to material that has
more limited (Non-Master)
Resale Rights
attached.
MFA --
Made For AdSense.
Websites designed specifically to generate Google AdSense
clicks, with content being a secondary concern, if at all.
MMO --
Make Money Online / Making Money Online
MTI --
Monthly Target Income.
See
Target Income.
Munius --
Article Directory PHP Script from James D. Brausch.
MuVar --
Multivariate Sales Letter Testing PHP Script from James D. Brausch.
-- N --
Nemeas --
Domain/URL Name Evaluation Software from James D. Brausch.
-- O --
-- P --
Page Impression --
A page impression is generated each time a users views a page displaying
advertisements.
(Assuming the page is set up for tracking.)
This is different from ad impressions in that if a page contains
four adverts, the count will be one page impression and four ad
impressions.
See also
Ad Impression.
Pareto's Law --
This is also known as the "80/20 Principle".
Pareto's Law states observations such that (approximately) 80% of the
results come from 20% of the effort (and conversely, that the other 20%
of results takes 80% of the effort).
That 80% of sales come from 20% of the customers.
That 80% of the wealth is owned by 20% of the people.
That 80% of crime is perpetrated by 20% of the criminals.
Etc.
Note that the 80/20 is a general rule.
In any given case, it could be higher, e.g., 85/15, 90/10, 95/5, etc.,
but usually no lower than 80/20.
Parkinson's Law --
Parkinson's Law states observations such that expenditures rise to
meet income (think governments' and your budgets).
That work expands (or shrinks) to fill the time available, etc.
PHP --
An HTML embedded scripting language used to create more
functional and consistent web pages in less time.
PLR --
Private Label Rights.
Refers to articles (private label articles) written by others that you
can use on your web pages in order to add content.
Unless you edit them, they will be the same as everyone else's using
the same article.
That means that Google and other search engines will see the article
as "similar results" (duplicate content) and your pages probably not
be shown in
SERP - Search Engine Results Pages.
To avoid that penalty and to generate even more versions that you can
post or email to other sites, you need an article rewriter such as the
Articles Unique Article Generator.
See also
Resale Rights
and
Master Resale Rights.
PPC --
Pay per Click. An advertiser pays the PPC amount each time a viewer
clicks on an advertiser's advert on a publisher's web page.
If there is a middleman, such as Google AdSense, the PPC amount is
divided between Google and the web page publisher.
PSA --
Public Service Ads.
If you, as an ad publisher, are running Google AdSense ads, if they
can't serve a targeted ad to your ad spot, they will by default fill
the spot with a PSA for a non-profit organization.
When a user clicks on one of those, you don't get any earnings for
the click.
You can, however, modify the AdSense javascript to have Google get
and serve one of your own
alternate ads
for one of your own products or an affiliate program.
Publisher --
In the e-Commerce business, a publisher is one who runs
advertisers'
advertisements on his website.
-- Q --
-- R --
Relusi --
Inbound Link Generating PHP Script from James D. Brausch.
Resale Rights --
The right to resell material, especially on-line
Private Label Rights (PLR)
material such as e-books and videos.
The purchaser from the author or owner may resell the material to
others, but in contrast to
Master Resale Rights
material, a person buying from the Resale Rights holder does not
have the right to resell the material.
-- S --
SEO --
Search Engine Optimization / Search Engine Optimized.
Tweaking copy and elements on web pages in an attempt to get higher
placement in user search results --
Search Engine Results Placement (SERP).
SERP --
Search Engine Results Page.
The page that a user gets from Google, Ask, or other search engine as a
result of what the user entered to search for.
Hopefully, your page link(s) will show up on the first page of ten
results.
Or at least in the next few pages.
If your pages targeting users searching for pages like yours don't show
up in the first few SERP pages, they may as well not be there at all.
You've got
Search Engine Optimization
work to do.
Spider --
Software used to visit and index the content of web sizes.
This information is gathered and used by search engines to provide
lists of (hopefully) relevant web pages to searchers.
This information is also gathered by services such as Google AdSense
to enable providing
contextual advertising
to
publishers.
-- T --
TDI --
Target Daily Income.
See
Target Income.
TI --
Target Income.
Your income goals. This can be broken down into yearly, monthly,
weekly, and daily numbers.
Take care of the daily figure, and the weekly, monthly, and yearly
figures will follow.
One caveat:
Say you have a weekly figure to meet of $7000.
You don't want to make $1000 a day and work for seven days
a week.
You ideally want to do something like set a Daily Target Income of
$2333 a day for three days, or even $7000 a day for one day per week.
TMI --
Target Monthly Income.
See
Target Income.
Trafficopia --
Traffic Selling PHP Script from James D. Brausch.
Typosquatting --
A perjorative term used by those who have already snapped up the good
domain names when somone registers and tries to use and profit from
domains with similar names.
The monopolists claim that the so-called typo-squatter would get
undeserved traffic if a user inadvertently typed in an
incorrect version of one of the monopolists' hallowed domain names.
See also
Cybersquatting.
-- U --
-- V --
-- W --
-- X --
-- Y --
-- Z --
Suggestions?
Do you have any suggestions?
Any terms you would like to see added to the e-Commerce internet
business glossary?
Go to the
Contribute Article
page to make your suggestions.
That page enables you to make comments and suggestions as well as
contribute e-Commerce related articles.
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