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Originally Posted by LeRoy
Can you share some sales ratios?
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My ratios are different for each sponsor. The most popular blog I have, and 2 others, promote 3 sponsors. The ratios from pure Tumblr traffic are: 1:800 1:1400 and 1:2750. I'm actually very happy with all 3, considering where the traffic is coming from. But, I hope that adding sponsors and continuing to experiment will get all of my ratios closer to the 1:800 mark or better. I've seen better ratios through Tumblr traffic than I have with some of my own sites.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CamTraffic
nice reading you Dominic.
How do you usually link to the sponsor?
linking from the pic or adding a link in the description?
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I never link directly to the sponsor. I always use a buffer page that shows more content than the post on Tumblr. From that page I mix it up with direct join and tour pages. The buffer page is linked from Tumblr through both pictures and text added to the post or beneath the picture. I mix up that way of linking, as well. Doing the same thing over and over seems to result in fewer clicks than throwing some curve balls in there. Perhaps I just haven't found the right method for consistency as of yet.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mopek1
BTW, when it comes to tags can you just use them in this format:
milf,wife,tits,naked,porn etc... and then any time a person searches "milf naked" my page with those tags will come up?
Or
Will I have to use milf naked, milf tits, milf wife, etc...
Meaning do I need to use exact search terms in order to be found?
?
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That's a good question. From what I've seen with my own tagging, using an example of "milf naked" will bring you search traffic for "milf", "naked", and "milf naked". So, repeating the word milf in your tags isn't needed unless you specifically want results for "milf naked", "milf tits", and the like. I hope that makes sense.
Also, I'm certainly no expert on Tumblr search dynamics and I'm still learning as I go. My recommendation to you would be, experiment, document all relevant information, and compare it to your results when you experiment again.