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Slippery slopes: how internet analytics brought one man a mountain of success

December 17th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Analytics

Daniel ran a quite successful business, ski sales and many more. He liked skiing — but more ever, he liked outfitting other persons for the slopes, and earning a good living at it, so that he could pay for his own ski vacations.

He had a decent internet-location that drew a reasonable amount of traffic, thanks to the fact that he’d bought his domain through a company that gave him great advice on becoming the name right. But with the economy being what it was, daniel realized he needed to be a go-getter whether or not he was going to fund this year’s trip to vail. He didn’t want to spend his holiday break sitting in his shop pushing ski helmets. So what to do?

One thing daniel had going for him was a neat email list of previous and potential customers. Long before it was standard exercise, he’d been collecting email addresses from visitors to his store. Daniel decided to utilize this database to establish an early seasonal advertisement. He got a great deal of responses, and even a sale or two. But the venture wasn’t almost as successful as he’d hoped.
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Beware of 3rd Party Cookies for E-commerce sites

March 15th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in E-commerce

What’s A “Cookie” Anyway?

A cookie is a message given to a Web browser by a Web server. The browser stores the message in a text file called cookie.txt. The message is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server.

Information acquired with cookies helps the Web server track such things as user preferences and data that the user might submit while browsing the site. For instance, a cookie might include data about the purchases that the user makes (if the Web site is an ecommerce site), or the cookie might “remember” the user’s contact information so the user won’t have to re-key it on future site visits.

1st Party and 3rd Party Cookies Distinguished

There’s an important difference between 1st party and 3rd party cookies. If you use 1st party cookies, they’re passed to a visitor by your site, and the data generated remains with your site. But then, if you hire an independent company (such as Google with its Google Analytics program) to pass the cookie, that cookie is called a 3rd party cookie.

Privacy Concerns With 3rd Party Cookies More »

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