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20
Jun
2003

Essential Internet Marketing Acronyms Explained

If you’re new to Internet marketing, the many acronyms and abbreviations often used in discussions on the subject can be confusing. To help you get up to speed quickly, here are the meanings of the most important:

ASCII
American Standard Code for Information Interchange – A universally recognized set of digital codes that represent each of the letters, punctuation marks, and other symbols you can type on your computer. What people usually mean by “plain text.”

ASP
Application Service Provider – Company that offers access to software applications and related services over a network or the Internet.

B2B
Business to Business – Refers to trade between businesses rather than between businesses and consumers.

B2C
Business to Consumer – Refers to businesses selling products or services to end-user consumers.

CGI
Common Gateway Interface – A way web servers pass information to and from application programs (to process forms for example). CGI programs or “scripts” can be written in several programming languages, including C, C++, Java and Perl.

CPA
Cost Per Action – Cost to an advertiser for each visitor that takes a specific action in response to an ad, such as subscribing to an ezine, requesting a free trial, or making a purchase. Also used to describe advertising employing this model.

CPC
Cost Per Click – Cost to an advertiser for each click on a promotional link by a site visitor or newsletter reader. Also used to describe advertising employing this model.

CPL
Cost Per Lead – Advertising expenditure required to obtain each new sales lead.

CPM
Cost Per Thousand – The amount charged per thousand impressions (showings) of an ad (“M” is the Roman numeral for 1000). Whilst websites sell ad impressions in blocks of 1000, with newsletters the number of subscribers determines the final price. Also used to describe advertising employing this model.

CPS
Cost Per Sale – Advertising expenditure divided by sales generated to determine the cost to make each sale; or the commission payable for each sale generated by an affiliate.

CR
Conversion Rate/ Ratio – The percentage of respondents to an ad, or readers of a sales message that complete the action desired (usually making a purchase, but can also be subscribing to a newsletter, for example).

CRM
Customer Relationship Management – Improving interaction with customers through better understanding, with the aim of increasing customer satisfaction and loyalty (thus increasing profits).

CSS
Cascading Style Sheets – Used to globally define how elements in a Web page are displayed instead of relying on HTML code in the page. Makes designs more flexible and reduces HTML file sizes.

CTR
Click-Through Rate/ Ratio – The percentage of website visitors or newsletter readers who click on a particular link. Used to measure response to ads or sales messages.

FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions – Often used as the title of a page on websites that answers commonly asked questions about a product or service.

FFA
Free-For-All Links – Web pages that allow anyone to add a link back to their own website, usually in exchange for accepting promotional messages from the FFA page owner.

PFI
Pay For Inclusion – Paying to have web pages included in a search engine’s database and regularly updated.

PPA
Pay-Per-Action – Affiliate commissions where a set amount is paid for generating a specific action, such as taking a free trial or subscribing to an ezine. PPL, PPC and PPS are usually considered as PPA.

PPI
Pay Per Impression – Where an advertiser pays for each display (impression) of their advertisement (usually a banner).

PPL
Pay-Per-Lead – Where a commission is paid for each sales lead generated by an affiliate. A “lead” is usually defined as somebody who signs up for a free trial, or requests further information, etc.

PPC
Pay Per Click – Ad sales or affiliate commissions where a set amount is paid for each click on a promotional link by a consumer.

PPCSE
Pay Per Click Search Engine – A search engine where the results are composed of advertisers who pay a fee for each click on their listing. Using a bidding system, the advertiser willing to pay the most is ranked highest.

PPS
Pay-Per-Sale – Where a commission is paid for each sale generated by an affiliate. The commission is usually a percentage of the sale, although sometimes it’s a fixed amount.

ROI
Return on investment – How much profit is made after advertising and other costs have been subtracted. A measure of how successful a marketing campaign is in terms of the returns on money spent.

RON
Run Of Network – Where ads (usually CPM banners) are shown (rotated) across the pages of the entire network of sites owned by a company, or controlled by a particular advertising network. Cheaper than only having the ad appear on selected sites.

ROS
Run Of Site – Where ads are rotated across the pages of a single site. Cheaper than only having the ad appear on selected pages.

SE
Search Engine – A searchable database of pages on the Web. Different from an Index (like Yahoo) in that pages are not reviewed by a human editor before inclusion.

SEM
Search Engine Marketing – Similar to SEO (below), and sometimes used to emphasize that generating quality targeted traffic is of greater importance than simply obtaining high rankings. Can also include PPCSEs and other search engine advertising.

SEO
Search Engine Optimization – The process of optimizing web pages to achieve high rankings in the search results of a search engine, in order to attract more visitors.

SEP
Search Engine Positioning – Getting your page listed on the search engine results page. Similar to SEO.

SERP
Search Engine Results Page – The page of listings displayed upon completion of a search at a search engine.

SSI
Server Side Include – A way for a web server to include variable values and information from an external source into a web page as it is requested by the browser. Uses include automatic display of data like the Last Modified date of the page, or storing common page elements in their own files, enabling site-wide updates by modifying a single file.

USP
Unique Selling Proposition – The reason why somebody should buy from you and not your competition. The unique benefits that your products or services offer consumers. What it is that makes you special, different.

I suggest you print this article out and keep it somewhere handy. Refer to it whenever you’re not quite sure what something stands for, and before you know it you’ll be an old hand!

Author Bio:
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