Personnal: APPEALS LAWYER, Personnal

Keep Your Online Affiliate Identity Secure with Redirecting Posted By : Jason Pearson

Using the internet for banking and ordering with credit cards these days can be risky especially with the increase in identity theft. But are you concerned about your online affiliate identity? If not, you should be.

Conservative estimates say that anywhere from 10% to 40% of affiliate sales are lost to internet pirates. They rob you of your sales by stealing, bypassing or otherwise mutilating your affiliate link.

It is time to do something about this to stop these pirates from taking away your sales. And yes, there is something you can do.

“Redirecting” is one effective solution. It keeps your entire affiliate identity from being shown and only a domain name will be shown. What you do is set up a domain name and the redirect will show only that.. It will forward to the link you want to go to and your affiliate identity will remain secure. Redirecting will also give your business more credibility and customers will have more trust in you and your business.

When you choose a keyword-loaded domain name, you want it to be professional and appealing, something that portrays you personally and portrays your business. Also keep it simple and easy to remember.

Now, how do you choose a company that will forward or redirect for you. Here are some features to look for when deciding. A good company to use will:

- have only a one-time fee for set up of your domain name.

- not have a monthly hosting fee.

- not require you to buy software, now or in the future.

- offer domains that can be bookmarked. The customer will see your domain name when he goes back to the site and you will get the commission.

- offer unlimited sub-domains. This way you can manage several affiliate programs with one domain name.

- allow you to optimize search engine indexing. Most normal affiliate links rarely are indexed. You want a domain company that is designed to be indexed by all major search engines. This will allow you to quickly and easily change your title, mega description and keyword tags for your domain name.

- be user-friendly for your amount of skill. You do not want a company that requires expertise to use it.

E-mail forwarding is also something some companies offer. In this case your e-mail contact information will also only show your domain name.

Using these guidelines will help you to find the right company to secure your affiliate identity and help you to build a reliable business.

Redirecting is an answer to keeping your online affiliate identity secure. It will only cost you pennies a day and give you the security of not losing sales to internet pirates.

What is an arbitration clause?

“Arbitration clauses? What’s this guy talking about? I’m just an average guy, non of that stuff applies to me. Only big businesses have to worry about that arbitration stuff, not individuals like me. Right?”

Wrong. I’ll bet you’ve got at least one binding mandatory arbitration agreement (“BMA”) that applies to you right now. Many credit card agreements, automobile purchase agreements and mortgages have BMAs. If you have credit cards, a car or a house, you may be subject to several BMA agreements right now.

So what is arbitration? What is a BMA? Why should you care about any of this?

Arbitration is an alternative method of resolving disputes in which two parties present their individual sides of a complaint to an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators. The arbitrator, who is supposed to be neutral, then weighs the facts and arguments of both parties and decides the dispute. Decisions in an arbitration are usually final and cannot be appealed. In binding mandatory arbitration, a company requires a consumer to agree to submit any dispute that may arise to binding arbitration prior to completing a transaction with the company. Consumer are required to waive their constitutional right to have their dispute heard and decided by a jury of their peers (i.e. usually other consumers).

“Well, that doesn’t sound so bad. After all, I get to avoid all the hassle of a lawsuit, right?”

Here are a few things to think about. First, arbitration providers are organized to serve businesses, not consumers. All of their marketing is targeted toward businesses, and most of the arbitrators are either executives or lawyers in the corporate industry. Because only businesses are likely to be “repeat customers” of an arbitrator, there may be an inherent bias toward the business clients and against the consumer.

Also, “discovery” is greatly limited in arbitration. Discovery is the process by which the parties to a dispute obtain from the “other side” information and documents that are relevant to the case. In a regular lawsuit, discovery is a right; in arbitration it is a privilege. A consumer’s right to obtain important (and often incriminating) evidence against a business is often severely limited.

While there is nothing wrong with a voluntary arbitration agreement to which both parties have agreed and fully understand, many businesses require arbitration in the “fine print” before they will do business with you.

So what can you do? Shop around for credit cards. Find credit card providers who do not have BMA clauses in their agreements. Write to those who do and explain why you won’t be doing business with them. Likewise, when shopping for a vehicle, insurance, a mortgage, or any other major purchase, make sure ahead of time that you won’t be required to sign a BMA in order to conduct your business. Our forefathers fought to insure your right to a jury trial in civil cases. Make sure you do what you can to preserve that right!

What is an arbitration clause?

“Arbitration clauses? What’s this guy talking about? I’m just an average guy, non of that stuff applies to me. Only big businesses have to worry about that arbitration stuff, not individuals like me. Right?”

Wrong. I’ll bet you’ve got at least one binding mandatory arbitration agreement (“BMA”) that applies to you right now. Many credit card agreements, automobile purchase agreements and mortgages have BMAs. If you have credit cards, a car or a house, you may be subject to several BMA agreements right now.

So what is arbitration? What is a BMA? Why should you care about any of this?

Arbitration is an alternative method of resolving disputes in which two parties present their individual sides of a complaint to an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators. The arbitrator, who is supposed to be neutral, then weighs the facts and arguments of both parties and decides the dispute. Decisions in an arbitration are usually final and cannot be appealed. In binding mandatory arbitration, a company requires a consumer to agree to submit any dispute that may arise to binding arbitration prior to completing a transaction with the company. Consumer are required to waive their constitutional right to have their dispute heard and decided by a jury of their peers (i.e. usually other consumers).

“Well, that doesn’t sound so bad. After all, I get to avoid all the hassle of a lawsuit, right?”

Here are a few things to think about. First, arbitration providers are organized to serve businesses, not consumers. All of their marketing is targeted toward businesses, and most of the arbitrators are either executives or lawyers in the corporate industry. Because only businesses are likely to be “repeat customers” of an arbitrator, there may be an inherent bias toward the business clients and against the consumer.

Also, “discovery” is greatly limited in arbitration. Discovery is the process by which the parties to a dispute obtain from the “other side” information and documents that are relevant to the case. In a regular lawsuit, discovery is a right; in arbitration it is a privilege. A consumer’s right to obtain important (and often incriminating) evidence against a business is often severely limited.

While there is nothing wrong with a voluntary arbitration agreement to which both parties have agreed and fully understand, many businesses require arbitration in the “fine print” before they will do business with you.

So what can you do? Shop around for credit cards. Find credit card providers who do not have BMA clauses in their agreements. Write to those who do and explain why you won’t be doing business with them. Likewise, when shopping for a vehicle, insurance, a mortgage, or any other major purchase, make sure ahead of time that you won’t be required to sign a BMA in order to conduct your business. Our forefathers fought to insure your right to a jury trial in civil cases. Make sure you do what you can to preserve that right!

Keep Your Online Affiliate Identity Secure with Redirecting Posted By : Jason Pearson

Using the internet for banking and ordering with credit cards these days can be risky especially with the increase in identity theft. But are you concerned about your online affiliate identity? If not, you should be.

Conservative estimates say that anywhere from 10% to 40% of affiliate sales are lost to internet pirates. They rob you of your sales by stealing, bypassing or otherwise mutilating your affiliate link.

It is time to do something about this to stop these pirates from taking away your sales. And yes, there is something you can do.

“Redirecting” is one effective solution. It keeps your entire affiliate identity from being shown and only a domain name will be shown. What you do is set up a domain name and the redirect will show only that.. It will forward to the link you want to go to and your affiliate identity will remain secure. Redirecting will also give your business more credibility and customers will have more trust in you and your business.

When you choose a keyword-loaded domain name, you want it to be professional and appealing, something that portrays you personally and portrays your business. Also keep it simple and easy to remember.

Now, how do you choose a company that will forward or redirect for you. Here are some features to look for when deciding. A good company to use will:

- have only a one-time fee for set up of your domain name.

- not have a monthly hosting fee.

- not require you to buy software, now or in the future.

- offer domains that can be bookmarked. The customer will see your domain name when he goes back to the site and you will get the commission.

- offer unlimited sub-domains. This way you can manage several affiliate programs with one domain name.

- allow you to optimize search engine indexing. Most normal affiliate links rarely are indexed. You want a domain company that is designed to be indexed by all major search engines. This will allow you to quickly and easily change your title, mega description and keyword tags for your domain name.

- be user-friendly for your amount of skill. You do not want a company that requires expertise to use it.

E-mail forwarding is also something some companies offer. In this case your e-mail contact information will also only show your domain name.

Using these guidelines will help you to find the right company to secure your affiliate identity and help you to build a reliable business.

Redirecting is an answer to keeping your online affiliate identity secure. It will only cost you pennies a day and give you the security of not losing sales to internet pirates.