Archive for December, 2009

Moving web hosts

General:
Have your web host set your TTL (Time To Live) to 0 on your old host, ASAP. (…)

PHP 5.3.x NOT SUPPORTED

A new version of PHP has just been released, version 5.3.x. It is not yet supported, so please do not upgrade your PHP on your servers to that version yet. (…)

Connection has been broken on “Make Link Tiny” or restore password

If you have the installed version, there was a brief period where a bug existed, which has been fixed. (…)

How To… Know which Twitter tweets work best

GoTryTHIS now creates twitter links, which support campaigns, so you can tweet the same link multiple times and see which tweet generates the most traffic.

For more details, see: http://uofgtt.com/Twitter

GoTryTHIS 2 and Twitter



You can now mirror your GoTryTHIS links on short Twitter-friendly links with GoTryTHIS, on our two tiny domains, http://twe.to and http://klk.to. (…)

How To… Split-test affiliate links

Split-testing affiliate links shows you which one converts better or brings in more money. (…)

How To… Use Tags

Group similar links together and organize your marketing links.

Part 2: Using GoTryTHIS Links

Once you have created a GoTryTHIS link, to use it, simply right click on the blue text of the link in the link list, choose “Copy Target URL” or “Copy Link Location, and then paste it into your marketing wherever you may have otherwise used the direct link you are replacing. (…)

How To… Cloak your referrer

When you are sending a lot of high-converting traffic to an affiliate link there is the possibility that the people selling the product you are recommending will try to reverse-engineer your marketing to compete with you or try to cut you out entirely, saving them from paying out all those commissions to you in the future.

The first clue they have is to look in their logs and to where the traffic you are sending them is coming from, by looking at the “referrer” stats, which shows the exact URL the person clicking on your marketing links came from.

GoTryTHIS can hide the referring link by cloaking the link.

Examples:

1. (…)