New Service To Capture ‘recycled Trafficก

New Service To Capture ‘recycled Trafficก

by: Steve Palmer

Find Expired Domain Names with Builtin Traffic and Search Engine Listings

The most valuble commodity on the internet today is search engine traffic. Unfortunately, most of the traditional options for developing search engine traffic are expensive and timeconsuming: You can pay large fees to a search engine optimization firm, bid for high placement on the major engines, or pay $299 to Yahoo (and wait a few months) to be listed in their directory.

Now, an innovative new service offers a better solution: Purchase ‘recycled Trafficก. Every day, hundreds of domain names are left to expire by their previous owners. Many of these domain names are already listed in Yahoo and other directories, and some receive search engine traffic. Rather than condemn all of these wouldbe visitors to frustration and a กPage Not Foundก error, why not purchase the expiring domain and graciously redirect them to your own site?

This is the insight behind RecycledTraffic.com, a new service offering a user friendly, searchable index of expiring domains. The site’s search tool lets webmasters find expiring domains according to keyword and search engine ranking.

For example, a recent client searched the listings to see if they could pick up a little recycled traffic for Sedo.co.uk, a leading domain broker, and found the name กCCWorld.ccก, formerly a site selling .cc domain names (กhey, perfect!ก) with a respectable link popularity of around 700. Sedo.co.uk dropped a few bucks to renew the name, and CCWorld.cc now sends about 25 targeted visitors per day their way. Not too bad for less than 10 bucks a year!

You can try out the search engine yourself for free at http://www.recycledtraffic.com/, but the actual domains are hidden until you become a member.

About The Author

Steve Palmer has been a part of the dot com startup craze for the past 5 years. A business development and marketing wiz, Steve has a knack for recognizing evolving internet trends and capitalize on them with methodical drive.

[email protected]

This article was posted on July 21, 2002

by Steve Palmer