Profiting from Targeted Expired Website Traffic
by Ken Johar


A few years ago, an Internet visionary named Ultsearch (Editor's 
note: See http://www.expiredtraffic.com/index.php?page=ultsearch
for more info regarding Ultsearch) came along, stumbled across 
the most ingenious profit generation idea in the history of the 
Internet age, and quietly went on to make untold millions. To 
this day, he has held a monopoly on the biggest underground 
industry on the Web. In fact, you've likely helped him out, and 
not known it. So how did he single-handedly go on to plunder the 
spoils of the Internet? He connected two simple dots: expired 
domains + link popularity and realized their sum equaled expired 
traffic. 
 
The Expired Traffic Equation

Expired Domain + Link Popularity = Expired Traffic 

Homesteading - An Interesting Analogy

Back during the colonization boom in the late 1800's, an act 
called the Homestead Act of 1862 allowed one person to take 
claim over the land and property of another, if that person 
had abandoned it to colonize further westward. Talk about a free 
lunch. As it turns out, some settlers found fully built homes, 
with irrigated and cultivated land, all available for the taking. 
One man's loss, as it turns out, is always another's gain.

In a similar fashion, the Homestead Act of 1862 can be applied 
to domain names--the virtual real estate property you build your 
site around. Anyone has the right to lay claim to a domain if 
the previous owner has abandoned it. As with homesteading for 
land and property, homesteading for domains is essentially the 
same thing. Some owners spent years building up their virtual 
online property while others may have left it undeveloped. Being 
able to differentiate between the two means all the difference 
in the world. 
 
Why Previously Developed Sites Expire

Every day, thousands of domains are expiring due to non-renewal. 
This is when a domain owner fails to fork over the small yearly 
renewal fee for it to his registrar. Sometimes names expire 
because the owners aren't using them; other times the owners 
forget to renew their registrations. 

A portion of these domains are very valuable since they still 
receive visitors--from search engine listings, and links they 
still maintain on other sites across the Web. If you can 
re-register these domains when they become available, it's a 
great way to boost the traffic to an existing site, or make 
money off the traffic the domain is still getting.

The major selling point here is that a domain name costs under 
$9/year (on sites like Godaddy.com) to purchase. So for $9, you 
can purchase domains which are still receiving anywhere from a 
few hundred to over a million visitors over the course of the 
year. And up until now, only a few people were aware of this 
obscenely scandalous tactic for acquiring targeted traffic. 

Now you might be thinking that re-registering expired domains 
with built-in search engine and link traffic is just the lowliest 
form of cyber-squatting.

Not at all. The fact is, a domain can expire for a number of 
legitimate reasons. 

· The previous owner may have run out of money to promote the site. 
· They may have lacked the time and motivation to manage the site. 
· They may have gotten tied up in other activities or another job. 
· They simply forgot to renew their domain. 
· They may have regrettably succumbed to illness or even death. 
· They failed to receive the notice from their registrar 
  informing them that their domain was about to expire. 

If it happens that the previous owner wants their name back, the 
ethical thing to do would be to give it back to them for a 
nominal fee, maybe $200 or less. In this way, you make a quick 
profit off the domain, and the previous owner walks away with 
their old site back. 
 
So How Do You Go About Finding Domains With Expired Traffic? 

Through link popularity, the second part of the expired traffic 
equation. 

Link popularity is a wildly popular concept with site developers 
and is used by many top search engines, such as Google, in their 
site ranking algorithms. Link popularity measures the number of 
incoming links a Website has on other sites across the Web. If, 
for example, you run www.widgets.com, and participate in a link 
exchange with 100 other sites on the Web, your site should 
hypothetically have a link popularity of 100. You've enhanced 
your site visibility, gotten fresh leads from these other sites, 
and your search engine rankings are improved in the process. 
Chances are the higher a site's link popularity is, the more 
traffic it receives, since it is visible across more places on 
the Web.

But what happens when a previously developed domain expires and 
becomes available to re-register? Do the links to it on other 
sites and the search engines disappear?

For the most part, no. And that's the kink in the system you can 
exploit. Websites, search engines and directories hardly have the 
time and effort to manually check if each and every one of the 
links on their site are active. This is what Ultsearch ultimately 
recognized. He understood that he could check lists of expired 
domains to isolate those domains with high link popularity 
numbers. It was these domains that were most likely previously 
developed and still receiving traffic from the links and search 
engine rankings which the previous owner of the domain had 
established. And for $8.95, he purchased these domains which 
were still receiving daily visitors, and made the best possible 
of their daily stream of traffic. 
 
The Value of Expired Traffic

Now here's where it starts to get really fun. Let's say you find 
and register an expired domain, XYZ.com, which still receives 50 
visitors/day. This is how it breaks down.

Expired Name:     XYZ.com receives 50 visitors/day
Visitors in 1 year: 50*365 = 18,250
Cost of domain:   $8.95/yr
Cost per visitor:   $8.95/18,250 = $0.00049/visitor     
Yearly Income Potential w/Allclicks: 18,250*0.02 - $8.95 = $356.05      
Income Potential w/ 250 similar sites: 250*356.05 = $89,017/year

Herein lies the key to why expired traffic is so powerful. In 
this scenario, you've found a site which is still getting 50 
visitors a day. Over the course of a year, you receive over 
18,250 real targeted visitors, for the cost of a domain name, 
$8.95. For webmasters, expired traffic is great since you can 
find like-minded sites which have expired but are still receiving 
traffic. You can redirect these visitors to your existing site, 
all for mere fractions of a penny. 

If you don't currently run any sites, you can place targeted 
affiliate links for advertisers or redirect the site to something 
like Allclicks.com, which pays you $0.02 for every visitor to 
your site, irrespective of how you link to them. This way, with 
a domain receiving just 50 visitors a day, you make $356 off an 
investment of only $8.95. This is almost a 4000% return on your 
investment. It gets really interesting when you start to register 
a large number of sites receiving expired traffic. (Ultsearch, 
for example, is estimated to be making several millions dollars 
a month off expired traffic.)

So how do you get a piece of this market--a market where a 
select few individuals in the know have quietly gone on to make 
untold millions? Through the right tools, and sound advice. 
Understanding every aspect (locating expired traffic, registering 
it, and properly utilizing it) of this nascent game--which I 
estimate fewer than 2-3 thousand or so individuals are actively 
participating in--is the key to prospering in it. Very few 
legitimate opportunities exist on the net which offer 
entrepreneurs startup costs of less than $10, minimal, passive 
involvement, and a growing recurring revenue stream--expired 
traffic just happens to be one of them. While everyone continues 
to march to the drum of optimizing and developing existing sites 
to eek out small gains, I'll continue to find other people's 
abandoned property, and use it without fail to make a quick buck. 
But hey, you do what suits you best!


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Ken Johar is Founder of ExpiredTraffic.com and has experience 
working as a professional domain speculator and investment 
advisor. He has written numerous articles & tutorials on the 
topic of expired site traffic. ExpiredTraffic.com is the only 
source for finding, capturing and profiting from the burgeoning 
expired traffic industry.  "Expired Traffic for Dummies" is a 
great resource for understanding the ins and outs of expired 
traffic and yours FREE just for visiting his web site. Web Site: 
http://www.expiredtraffic.com Site URL: http://www.expiredtraffic.com
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