Theo
Account Terminated
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2004
- Messages
- 30,306
- Reaction score
- 2,216
Nothing too complex.
I have the numbers to show how Sedo's PPC has been going downhill for months on end. This sub-forum is about Sedo. This particular thread, is about my personal experience with Sedo's PPC - a sentiment shared among many others.
I've been sweet-talked for months on end by Sedo specialists to keep my portfolio there and indeed, at times, the PPC did climb to satisfactory levels - only to fall way down soon. Sedo exclaims that we need to constantly "optimize", "tweak", "prod" and "poke" our domains as if it's the teats of a cow that needs constant milking. The fact is, that's their job - to get the best ads in place and to ensure they pass on a legitinate cut of the traffic revenue to us.
Moving out domains en masse is not a hard thing to do. It's not a matter of lack of global edits. It's simply disruptive to the traffic stats retained with Sedo for the past 34 months. It's a byproduct of Sedo's promises to increase PPC, to make us more money and of the countless times that Sedo failed to respond timely in public or private queries about how to improve the PPC that has been bleeding.
The "Tops and Flops of 2006" that Sedo displays in their pages is a quite amusing text, because both of these states are Sedo itself.
I have the numbers to show how Sedo's PPC has been going downhill for months on end. This sub-forum is about Sedo. This particular thread, is about my personal experience with Sedo's PPC - a sentiment shared among many others.
I've been sweet-talked for months on end by Sedo specialists to keep my portfolio there and indeed, at times, the PPC did climb to satisfactory levels - only to fall way down soon. Sedo exclaims that we need to constantly "optimize", "tweak", "prod" and "poke" our domains as if it's the teats of a cow that needs constant milking. The fact is, that's their job - to get the best ads in place and to ensure they pass on a legitinate cut of the traffic revenue to us.
Moving out domains en masse is not a hard thing to do. It's not a matter of lack of global edits. It's simply disruptive to the traffic stats retained with Sedo for the past 34 months. It's a byproduct of Sedo's promises to increase PPC, to make us more money and of the countless times that Sedo failed to respond timely in public or private queries about how to improve the PPC that has been bleeding.
The "Tops and Flops of 2006" that Sedo displays in their pages is a quite amusing text, because both of these states are Sedo itself.