No, this baby boom will certainly not swamp the Social Security  system (sort of a bad joke for those that live in the United States, but many other countries...most notably Japan...have an even more acute problem), but this baby boom is revolutionizing the way that pay per click advertising is being spread across the  Internet.
  One of the early participants in this pay per click baby boom was Google, with its AdSense program. With this program, Google shares pay per click revenue with a huge number of individual  partner websites that carry a few pay per click ads that are  distributed by Google. In essence, this creates a whole bunch of little pay per click locations (websites) throughout the Internet and hence the term "pay per click baby boom".
  Conceptually, programs like AdSense are similar to what the computer hardware folks refer to a distributed processing.  Instead of trying to draw everyone to a large pay per click  search engine site, little groups of pay per click ads are spread widely across thousands of locations (websites) all over the Internet.
  Actually, this distributed processing or propagation technique is not limited to pay per click advertising. For example, Amazon  uses a similar arrangement (called Amazon Associates) to sell the  products it carries on amazon.com and ClickBank has a sales program called CBAdwords which operates in a similar fashion.
  According my trusty Ouija board, it seems likely that most  commercial hubs on the Internet will be shifting to this  propagation concept as time progresses...all of those individual partner websites that carry the message/proposition will  constitute the vast army of worker ants that keep the queen ant alive and healthy.
  From a pay per click marketing perspective, these programs make  brilliant use of leverage while providing highly targeted  prospects for the paying advertiser.
  There are, of course, some interesting things that occur as a  result of all of this stuff. For example, consider what I call the "cross fertilization effect": Suppose a person goes to  yahoo.com and performs a search that leads them to one of my websites that happens carry Google AdSense ads and that visitor then clicks on one of those ads...the net result is that Yahoo natural search provided Google pay per click with some revenue! Aren't these fun times that we're living in?
  As these programs continue to proliferate, the individual  webmaster needs to exercise a little restraint and avoid the temptation to go overboard by plastering these ads all over your website and thereby diluting your own primary message/proposition  and confusing your hard earned visitor. When properly used,  these ads are just ancillary or complementary content that you are providing to enhance the information and opportunities that you are providing to your visitor...if something happens to  strike a responsive chord with your visitor, you might make a little pay per click money.
  If properly used, these propagation programs can result in the classical "win-win" situation. However, if you over do it, this can quickly turn into a loss for you (the individual webmaster) and a win for your pay per click partners that are distributing the ads. As in many things, moderation is important.
  The dynamic search engine marketing industry continues to evolve  as users began to take advantage of the steady stream of new  features, tools and innovations provided by the ever increasing  number of search engines offering quality search results (it's  not all about Google anymore). The evolutionary time line for  Internet marketing continues to run at warp speed. 
  An example of previous evolutionary periods (which by now may  almost seem prehistoric) would be the emergence of pay-per-click  advertising and the cooresponding rise of search-marketing firms  specializing in AdWords and Overture. As long as there are methods  for finding and retrieving information in digital databases by  using keywords or similar attributes, there will be a  search-marketing industry. How that industry operates in the  future depends on how the search engines operate and how consumer  tendencies evolve.
  It's a constant sea of change, but the good things just keep on  getting better! Stay alert, and light on your feet, and the  opportunities will just keep on coming your way.
  The above are just some observations from "the peanut gallery", but I don't think I'm far off the mark about where things are heading. With that, I'm off the soapbox and wishing you success in whatever you do online!
  About the Author 
 Kirk Bannerman operates his own successful home based business  and also coaches others seeking to start their own home based  business. For more information visit his website at  Proven Work At Home Business <     
  
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