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    <title>The Card Source</title>
    <link>http://thecardsource.featureblog.com/</link>
    <description>Your source for every card you will ever want too give.                        </description>

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    <lastBuildDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 11:40:14 EDT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Viral Marketing Tips: Greeting Cards</title>
      <description><![CDATA[
        When we speak about <b>viral</b> marketing, we are not talking about the newest disease. We are not talking about a Mad Cow Disease variant or something that you need to be vaccinated for. In fact, we are not referring to a disease at all. <p><p>What we are talking about is literally the most powerful traffic generation technique available on the internet. Viral <b>marketing</b> is so powerful that it makes the search engines look small and insignificant in comparison. Even link exchanges, as powerful as they can be, wilt into oblivion in comparison. <p><p>What you do with <b>viral</b> <b>marketing</b> is create something, anything, that visitors will want to give to other people. This thing, whatever it is, contains a link and perhaps a short advertisement for your website, ezine or ebook. So far so good, this is just good marketing. The <b>viral</b> part comes in because the people who receive these items want to give them to other people, who in turn want to give them away also. <p><p>So you see? What you get is an explosion of <b>marketing</b> for a very small price. It's actually kind of like an avalanche, in that you throw a snowball down a slope and it just grows and grows until the whole mountain of ice and snow is tumbling down. <p><p>One very cool <b>viral</b> <b>marketing</b> technique that any web site can take advantage of is <b>greeting</b> <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s. I'm sure you've run across these all over the web. You select a graphic (a drawing, photo or other image), perhaps a sound file and add some text. This is sent to one or more people via email. These people open the email and click on a link to view their <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>. They, of course, have the option from here to visit your web site and perhaps send additional <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> to other people (or back to the sender). <p><p>If your <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> are good enough, you can find this technique alone will generate an incredible amount of traffic. Of course, you have the same problem with <b>greeting</b> <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> that you have with your web site - you have to get people to it to begin with. Once you do that, however, you will find that it becomes more or less self maintaining. The more traffic you get the more you generate. Just make sure that all of your <b>greeting</b> <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a> pages are listed in the search engines, well displayed on your page (and perhaps all of your pages) and advertised elsewhere as much as practical. <p><p>In fact, it's a good idea to spend as much or more time <b>marketing</b> the <b>greeting</b> <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> as the rest of your site, since these tend to create visitors exponentially, while your site is linear. <p><p>How do you put <b>greeting</b> <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> on your site? First, pick a theme or two. If your site is about model railroads, for example, you might get some photos of trains and train sets; you could include vacation photos, cute animal pictures, scanned drawings or anything else that you feel would make a good <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>. Just remember to honor copyrights - make sure you have the right to make copies of the materials before you use them. <p><p>Once you have a theme or two, you need to find a <b>greeting</b> <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a> service. I've experimented with a few options. I've tried hosting it entirely on my own site, and what I've found is it is difficult to maintain. I've also tried it completely hosted on another site and found it is too restrictive. <p><p>The service that I settled upon is called CyberGreeting Network - http://cybergreet.net/. This company, in my opinion, provides the best of both worlds (local and remotely hosted). <p><p>The pages, images and sound files are stored on your own web site. You can tailor these all that you want so they blend with your pages perfectly. This is the perfect freedom, and as long as you set up the form properly all will work fine. <p><p>How do you do this? You download a template file (as explained in their instructions) and modify it to suite your needs. This may require a little effort on your part (as well as some skill with HTML) but the end result will be worth it. <p><p>The remote part of the product (which is free, by the way) is the piece that actually formats and sends the <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>. You see, on your page you get the visitor to supply the answers to a series of questions in a form. The form data is submitted to a CGI routine which puts everything together into a <b>greeting</b> <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>. Your visitor simply answers the questions and presses submit. You pass all of this to the routine, which then sends the <a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a> to the destination. <p><p>I was able to get half a dozen pages of <b>greeting</b> <b><a href="http://www.thecardsource.net">card</a>s</b> working perfectly in an afternoon. These remain on my site, and serve me well by creating a steady, growing stream of traffic. I think you would do well to take a look and determine if this will work for your site as well.<p><p><p><p><p> <p>  <p><p><b>About The Author</b><p><p><P>Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets. This website includes over 1,000 <b>free</b> <b>articles</b> to improve your internet profits, enjoyment and knowledge.<p><P>Web Site Address: http://www.internet-tips.net<p><P>Weekly newsletter: http://www.internet-tips.net/joinlist.htm<p><P>Claudia Arevalo-Lowe is the webmistress of Internet Tips And Secrets and Surviving Asthma. Visit her site at http://survivingasthma.com<p><p>  <p> <p>

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      <link>http://thecardsource.featureblog.com/</link>
      <author>Richard Lowe, Jr.</author>
      <pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 11:40:14 EDT</pubDate>
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