KERclink Media Kit
KERclink Direct-To-Desktop Advertising is direct Internet marketing without the intrusion or problems of other forms of online marketing. There are no delivery problems. No complaint problems. None of the online ad resistance problems or negative perceptions exist with KERclink.
KERclink Delivers Over 85,000,000 Ad Impressions Per month!
KERclink.com is a content games site that has even surpassed Microsoft's MSN Zone games website in traffic according to Quantcast:
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Demogaphics:
USA Membership
Gender:
Male: 21.07 %
Female: 78.93 %
Ages:
18 to 25: 11.36 %
26 to 35: 22.84 %
36 to 45: 28.06 %
46 to 55: 25.83 %
56 to 65: 9.84 %
Over 65: 2.07 %
Marital Status:
Single: 27.79 %
Married: 56.57 %
Divorced: 15.64 %
| Banner Sizes Available: |
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(main view size):
300x250
(available space):
468x250
(Custom Widescreen)
450xCustom Length
(available as Content Page ? surveys, etc.)
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Traffic Rank For KERclink.com

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Reach per million users: |
Page Views per user: |
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Today
1 wk. Avg.
3 mos. Avg.
3 mos. Change
40,246
66,721
64,075
10,064 |
Today
1 wk. Avg.
3 mos. Avg.
3 mos. Change
25
21
24.5
17%
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Today
1 wk. Avg.
3 mos. Avg.
3 mos. Change
6.4
2.6
1.9
46% |
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MidTen Media, Inc. is the only company offering this incredible NEW marketing approach. Delivering addictive online content - word puzzles, brain teasers, and more via Internet Explorer Mini-Browser. Our members have an enjoyable online experience along with viewing interstitial banner advertisements in-between exciting content. The member also chooses to download a small system tray notification to let them know when new content is ready for viewing. Of course, the toast has absolutely NO adware/spyware. Members are not surprised by the offers in KERclink, but actually look forward to them arriving along with our games. We often hear a desire for more advertising and requests for specific ad. Members are interactively involved. Our results speak for themselves. We have captured the audience for you!
Great for branding, retailing, lead generation and more! Don't wait. Try KERclink Direct-to-Desktop Marketing today.
KERclink - Direct-to-Desktop Advertising
- Completely Non-Intrusive
- Total Consumer Control
- Content Driven - Games
- MS Internet Explorer Mini-Browser
- All Media Capable
- Consumer Requested Registration
- No Delivery Problems
- No Complaints
- Fast And Effective
- Retail Sales
- Branding
- Lead Gen
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Prices Starting At:
Main Game Space (300x250 or 468x250 as Interstitials):
38 cent CPC and up (Standard, Flash or Video Banner)
$3 CPM (Standard or Flash Banner, Streaming Video)
468x60 (always visible to KERclinkers):
$5 CPM
24 Hours or less start of delivery for your campaign!
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Comments From a Few of are Advertisers:
You guys have something special there. You gave us a 35.5% click -to completed survey through our banner on KERclink.
Ryan
SurveyPro |
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Wow! With only 1,200 impressions, you gave SBC 5 phone orders. KERclink is surprising!
Jay (via phone)
FastClick
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Comments From a Few Satisfied Consumers:
I just want you to know how happy I am with your site. I was very
happy to receive my check today.
I even bought a Dell computer from an ad on your site. I was not
planning on buying one but just clicked the ad and decided to do it.
It should be here this week.
Thanks for the great site.
K. Cain
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| Website Inquiry:
I recently joined KERClink.
Thanks Very Much!!
This site is so much fun!! I have already applied for a credit card and am waiting to hear back!!
L. Dixon
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I am a new Kerclink member and so far I am loving it. I enjoy playing
the games and seeing all the offers.
Anonymous
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Hi. Just wanted to thank whoever created KerClink. I have so
enjoyed having it on my desktop. I love the offers provided and
especially the games. Each new one that comes out is a big treat >for me. Keep up the great work!!!
Thanks,
Jeni M.
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Hi there.
Just wanted to say thank you so much for the opportunity and hope that this program is around for a long time to come.
Sincerely,
Angel B.
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Hi Joe,
I think KERclink is a hoot. I run to the computer every time I hear the KERclink sound. OK, I'm addicted.
Thanks for the new, innovative and informative program.
A loyal KERclinker,
Jennifer S. |
I just had to write to you to tell you how much I love the program. I
have never had so much fun with any other program. Thank you so much.
Stacey
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Member Comments:
| Hi, I found out about KERclink through a chat site I was at. We were both at another game site chatting when she kept saying brb, brb. She finally told me what she's doing. I told her anyone who promises you money for playing games it's a scam, but she made me go see for myself & I'm glad I did. These games are cool & I like that most of them are short because I am a transcriptionist & if they weren't short I'd never get my work done. So hey, I can work & play at the same time! Thanks guys & more contests to win stuff would be oh so cool! Sincerely, A New KERclinker!!! |
KERclink is fun and non-intrusive to consumers!
PRESS RELEASE: SEARCHFEED.COM PROVIDING SPONSORED CONTENT ON GAMING PORTAL
BRIDGEWATER, N.J. Searchfeed.com, a leader in pay-per-click (PPC) search advertising, today announced that its sponsored ad content will be displayed through gaming portal www.KERclink.com.
By aggregating sponsored search technology through a gaming portal, we are expanding our span of content integration methods, says Christopher Cyriax, Searchfeed.com Content Distribution Specialist. This keeps inline with our dedication to bring web publisher relevant content in a variety of methods that best compliment their business model.
Sponsored ads will be displayed on the portal through a shuffling system in which relevant content is shuffled in once every 3 hours for each active Internet user. This approach differs from the usual content integration techniques, such as search boxes and category links used to distribute ads on small to mid-sized information-based websites.
KERclink leveraged off our enhanced exact keyword matching technology to rotate in terms applicable to the games being played by the user, explains Cyriax, This creates more relevant content for the affiliate portal and produces more targeted sales leads for advertisers, as potential customers can now be reached while they are actively engaged in a similar product.
Look what the news media is saying about advertising in general:
A farewell to ads?
From The Economist print edition
Personal video recorders should worry the big media firms
IF YOU are a senior executive at a media company, you may feel that your industry is built on shaky ground. First, there was digital piracy, which could yet wipe out great chunks of revenue. Now there is the personal video recorder (PVR), which allows people to watch TV programs whenever they like more easily and, crucially, to skip rapidly through all the commercials.
Fear of PVRS has stalked the industry since they appeared in 1999, but until now there have been relatively few users. In America they are in about 3.5m homes. In Britain, BSkyB, a satellite-TV company controlled by Mr Murdoch, expects that just over 300,000 homes will have them by June as part of its Sky+ pay-TV package.
Such promotions mean the use of PVRs will grow rapidly. The reason? Satellite companies think the machines will help them compete with cable TV's video-on-demand services. In turn, cable needs to compete with satellite. Both are selling PVRs cheaply and in some cases giving them away. Customers tend to stay loyal to one provider once they have a PVR. And people who use them love the control and convenience they bring to viewing. By 2006, says Forrester, a research firm, nearly 25m American homes had PVRs.
What people do with their PVRs is exactly what advertising executives had feared. A study by TiVo, an American provider of the machines, found viewers watch recorded programmes 75% of the time and skip about 60% of commercials.
According to the New York Times, a new survey by Yankelovich Partners, a market research firm, will show most people resent the quantity of advertising and marketing aimed at them. Some 70% said that they would be interested in products and services that help them to skip or block it out. They can do that with video-cassette recorders, but in practice people find them fiddly to use. With built-in electronic programme guides, PVRs make recording easy with no need to set timers or buy cassettes.
As more people skip past their ads, advertisers will refuse to pay what they now do for TV spots. A 20% drop in TV advertising in 2003 would have cut profits by one-third at Disney and Viacom. The home entertainment bit of the media industry also frets about PVRs. Because their owners can select what they want from a whole week's TV viewing, they are no longer at the mercy of schedulers, so they might buy fewer DVDs.
For now, few top media or advertising executives will admit publicly that there is a big problem coming. PVRs will make ad-avoidance more obvious and measurable, but little will really change. Another, rather desperate, hope expressed by some, is that consumers will be exposed to advertising even when fast-forwarding because they have to watch in order to pick the right spot to hit play.
The world's big advertising agencies are bound to underestimate the impact of PVRs, says Mark Ritson, a marketing expert at the London Business School. The agencies are introverted and arrogant organizations, he says, which find it hard to understand that many people dislike commercials. Much will depend on when big marketers such as Unilever and Ford figure out what is going on. That would require good data on PVR use. Nielsen, America's dominant TV-ratings firm, which profits from buoyant TV advertising, announced that it would start to monitor PVRs in 2005 but not in enough detail to show ad-skipping.
Glenn Britt, chief executive of Time Warner Cable, argues that, if PVRs do make a big impact, the media industry should adjust its business model. Most obviously, it could put more emphasis on print, radio and the internet, where people can also ignore ads but not always so obviously and measurably. One hope is that PVRs will allow firms to learn more about viewers so that they can be sent advertising that is appropriate to them: media firms will sell less airtime, but charge more for it. To stop people hitting the fast-forward button, says Sir Martin Sorrell, boss of WPP, advertising will need to become more creative, powerful and informative.
There are all sorts of devious ways to get through even to hardened commercial-skippers. Advertisers already use product placement within films and TV shows, for instance. Sponsorship slots at the start of a programme (when fingers come off the fast-forward button) will matter more. The value of live TV news and sport will rise. BSkyB has also found that people with PVRs watch 20% more TV each week. Presumably, as they can select with their PVR the best from the schedule, their satisfaction with what they watch is higher too.
But if media firms cannot find creative new ways to sustain their television ad revenues, they will simply have to charge consumers more for programming. Rising subscriptions could make viewers think more kindly of commercials especially if they were to be charged less for programmes if they agreed to sit through ads. With all the potential benefits that PVRs can provide for viewers, the entertainment industry is going to have to learn how to live with them one way or another.
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