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Internet Marketing

SAN DIEGO, Nov. 11, 2010 /PRNewswire/ — CUBA Beverage Company (“CUBA”) (Pink Sheets:CUBV.pkNews) partners up with Inc. 500 award winning company Digispace Solutions, LLC (www.digispace.com) for Internet Marketing Services, SEO and SEM services, and Online Sales.

Digispace Solutions, an online performance-based advertising company, offers a variety of services to assist in the development of a company’s online presence, marketing, tracking, and customer management. Digispace has seen hyper-growth and phenomenal profitability by developing and implementing proprietary technology and algorithms in the discovery, creation, and optimization of all types of online marketing.

Through their proprietary software technology and targeting products, the data and tracking tools Digispace provides gives CUBA the opportunity to greatly increase their performance in real time, as well as optimize each campaign or product launch for immediate results. Their distinct expertise in internet  and affiliate marketing is predicted to give CUBA an unrivaled internet presence as well as the ability to facilitate online sales which will bolster company revenues.

Amish Shah, Co-Founder and CEO of Digispace states, “We are truly excited to join with CUBA, our first equity-position partnership of this kind, because we believe so strongly in the product and what we can do together.”

CUBA Herbal Energy Juice ™ is an all natural herbal energy juice currently available in three unique flavors; Pomegranate-Cranberry, Wild Berry and Passion Fruit-Orange. CUBA’s products represent a healthy all-natural energy drink, with no caffeine, no taurine, no high fructose corn syrups or sugars, no preservatives and no artificial ingredients of any kind.

CUBA Herbal Energy Juice ™: No monsters, no fear, no bull, just pure healthy energy!

Safe Harbor: This release may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Statements contained in this release that are not historical facts may be deemed to be forward-looking statements. Investors are cautioned that forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain. Actual performance and results may differ materially from that projected or suggested herein due to certain risks and uncertainties including, without limitation, ability to obtain financing and regulatory and shareholder approvals for anticipated actions.

Contact:
Paula Call, Investor Relations
866-431-CUBA (2822)
www.cubabev.com

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Online Advertising Becoming More and More Standardized

Traditional print advertising and promotional offers followed a creed, a rule of transparency, for decades. Now, in the wild, wild west of the Internet world, new paradigms created new issues, and consequently updated guidelines.

In a snap shot, directly from the Federal Trade Commission’s website:

The revised Guides – issued after public comment and consumer research – reflect three basic truth-in-advertising principles:

-Endorsements must be truthful and not misleading;

-If the advertiser doesn’t have proof that the endorser’s experience represents what consumers will achieve by using the product, the ad must clearly and conspicuously disclose the generally expected results in the depicted circumstances; and

-If there’s a connection between the endorser and the marketer of the product that would affect how people evaluate the endorsement, it should be disclosed

This potentially could create a huge downsizing in the sites and blogs found through searches and ads on the internet. One could assume a flight from this type of advertising, no matter how large the ad spending is.  However, at the end of the day, the FTC will primarily target the advertisers who are not compliant. 

What do Online Advertisers need to do to be compliant and offer the online consumer the most valuable information about the products? 

Check out the in-depth FTC Endorsement Guidlines Q & A they’ve put together to help you clearly understand the revised compliance guidelines:

Are the FTC Endorsement Guides new?

The Guides aren’t new, but they’ve recently been updated. It’s always been the law that if an ad features an endorser who’s a relative or employee of the marketer – or if an endorser has been paid or given something of value to tout the marketer’s product – the ad is misleading unless the connection is made clear. The reason is obvious: Knowing about the connection is important information for anyone evaluating the endorsement. Say you’re planning a vacation. You do some research and find a glowing review on someone’s blog that a certain resort is the most luxurious place they’ve ever stayed. If you found out that the hotel had paid that blogger to say great things about it or that the blogger had stayed there for a week for free, it could affect how much weight you’d give the blogger’s endorsement.

Why did the FTC revise its Endorsement Guides to include social media?

The FTC revised the Guides because truth in advertising is important in all media – including blogs and social networking sites. The FTC regularly reviews its guides and rules to see if they need to be updated. Because the Endorsement Guides were written in1980, they didn’t address social media. The legal principles haven’t changed. The FTC revised the examples to show how these standards apply in today’s marketing world.

Isn’t it common knowledge that some bloggers are paid to tout products or that if you click a link on my site to buy a product, I’ll get a commission for that sale?

First, many bloggers who mention products don’t receive anything for their reviews and don’t get a commission if readers click on a link to buy a product. Second, the financial arrangements between some bloggers and advertisers may be apparent to industry insiders, but not to everyone else who reads a blog. Under the law, an act or practice is deceptive if it misleads “a significant minority” of consumers. So even if some readers are aware of these deals, many readers aren’t. That’s why disclosure is important.

Has the FTC been getting complaints about deceptive blogs?

No. As it happens, many bloggers and advertisers already are disclosing their ties to each other. Industry associations and self-regulatory groups advocate disclosure, too.

I’ve read that bloggers who don’t comply with the Guides can be fined $11,000? Is that true?

No. The press reports that said that were wrong. There is no fine for not complying with an FTC guide.

Are you monitoring bloggers?

We’re not monitoring bloggers and we have no plans to. If concerns about possible violations of the FTC Act come to our attention, we’ll evaluate them case by case. If law enforcement becomes necessary, our focus will be advertisers, not endorsers – just as it’s always been.

Do the Guides hold online reviewers to a higher standard than reviewers for paper-and-ink publications?

No. The Guides apply across the board. The issue is – and always has been – whether the audience understands the reviewer’s relationship to the company whose products are being reviewed. If the audience gets the relationship, a disclosure isn’t needed. For a review in a newspaper, on TV, or on a website with similar content, it’s usually clear to the audience that the reviewer didn’t buy the product being reviewed. It’s the reviewer’s job to write his or her opinion and no one thinks they bought the product – for example, a book or movie ticket – themselves. But on a personal blog, a social networking page, or in similar media, the reader may not expect the reviewer to have a relationship with the company whose products are mentioned. Disclosure of that relationship helps readers decide how much weight to give the review.

Don’t these guides violate my First Amendment rights?

If you are acting on behalf of an advertiser, what you are saying is commercial speech – and commercial speech can be regulated under the FTC Act if it’s deceptive.

When do the Guides apply to endorsements?

I’ve heard that every time I mention a product on my blog, I have to say whether I got it for free or paid for it myself. Is that true?

No. If you mention a product you paid for yourself, the Guides aren’t an issue. Nor is it an issue if you get the product for free because a store is giving out free samples to all its customers. The Guides cover only endorsements that are made on behalf of a sponsoring advertiser. For example, an endorsement would be covered by the Guides if an advertiser – or someone working for an advertiser – pays a blogger or gives a blogger something of value to mention a product, including a commission on the sale of a product. Bloggers receiving free products or other perks with the understanding that they’ll promote the advertiser’s products in their blogs would be covered, as would bloggers who are part of network marketing programs where they sign up to receive free product samples in exchange for writing about them or working for network advertising agencies.

What if all I get from the company is a $1-off coupon, or if the product is only worth a few dollars? Do I still have to disclose?

Here’s another way to think of it: While getting one item that’s not very valuable for free may not affect the credibility of what you say, sometimes continually getting free stuff from an advertiser or multiple advertisers is enough to suggest an expectation of future benefits from positive reviews. If you have a relationship with a marketer who’s sending you freebies in the hope you’ll write a positive review, it’s best if your readers know you got the product for free.

What if I upload a video that shows me using different products? Do I have to disclose whether I bought them myself or got them from an advertiser?

The guidance for videos is the same as for websites or blogs.

What if I return the product after I review it? Should I still make a disclosure?

That may depend on the product and how long you are allowed to use it. For example, if you get free use of a car for a month, a disclosure is recommended even if you return it. But even for less valuable products, it’s best to be open and transparent with your readers.

I have a website that reviews local restaurants. It’s clear when a restaurant pays for an ad on my website, but do I have to disclose which restaurants give me free meals?

If you get free meals, it’s best to let your readers know so they can factor that in when they read your reviews. Some readers might conclude that if a restaurant gave you a free meal because it knew you were going to write a review, you might have gotten special food or service.

Several months ago a manufacturer sent me a free product and asked me to write about it in my blog. I tried the product, liked it, and wrote a favorable review. When I posted the review, I disclosed that I got the product for free from the manufacturer. I still use the product. Do I have to disclose that I got the product for free every time I mention it in my blog?

It probably depends on how much you say about it. A casual remark like “I use X brand food processor” may not raise an issue under the Guides, but each new positive endorsement made without a disclosure could be deceptive.

My Facebook page identifies the company I work for. Should I include an additional disclosure when I talk about how great our products are?

It’s a good idea. People reading that discussion on your Facebook page might not know who you work for and what products the company makes. And many businesses are so diversified that readers might not realize the products you’re talking about are sold by your company.

A famous athlete has thousands of followers on Twitter and is well-known as a spokesperson for a particular product. Does he have to disclose that he’s being paid every time he tweets about the product?

It depends on whether his readers understand he’s being paid to endorse that product. If they know he’s a paid endorser, no disclosure is needed. But if a significant number of his readers don’t know that, a disclosure would be needed. Determining whether followers are aware of a relationship could be tricky in many cases, so a disclosure is recommended.

How should I make the disclosure?

Is there special language I have to use to make the disclosure?

No. The point is to give readers the information. Your disclosure could be as simple as “Company X gave me this product to try . . ..”

Do I have to hire a lawyer to help me write a disclosure?

No. What matters is effective communication, not legalese. A disclosure like “Company X sent me [name of product] to try, and I think it’s great” gives your readers the information they need. Or, at the start of a short video, you might say, “Some of the products I’m going to use in this video were sent to me by their manufacturers.” That gives the necessary heads-up to your viewers.

Would a single disclosure on my home page that “many of the products I discuss on this site are provided to me free by their manufacturer” be enough?

A single disclosure doesn’t really do it because people visiting your site might read individual reviews or watch individual videos without seeing the disclosure on your home page.

Would a button that says DISCLOSURE, LEGAL, or something like that be sufficient disclosure?

No. A button isn’t likely to be sufficient. How often do you click on those buttons when you visit someone else’s site? If you provide the information as part of your message, your audience is less likely to miss it.

What about a platform like Twitter? How can I make a disclosure when my message is limited to 140 characters?

The FTC isn’t mandating the specific wording of disclosures. However, the same general principle – that people have the information they need to evaluate sponsored statements – applies across the board, regardless of the advertising medium. A hashtag like “#paid ad” uses only 8 characters. Shorter hashtags – like “#paid” and “#ad” – also might be effective.

How do the Guides apply to affiliate or network marketing?

I have a small network marketing business: advertisers pay me to distribute their products to members of my network who then try the product for free. How do the revised Guides affect me?

It’s a good practice to tell participants in your network that if they get products through your program, they should make it clear they got them for free. It also makes sense to advise your clients – the advertisers – that when they give free samples to your members, they should remind them of the importance of disclosing the relationship when members of your network praise their products. You might consider putting a program in place to check periodically whether your members are making these disclosures.

I’m an affiliate marketer with links to an online retailer on my website. When people click on those links and buy something from the retailer, I earn a commission. What do I have to disclose? Where should the disclosure be?

Let’s assume that you’re endorsing a product or service on your site and you have links to a company that pays you commissions on sales. If you disclose the relationship clearly and conspicuously on your site, readers can decide how much weight to give your endorsement. In some instances, where the link is embedded in the product review, a single disclosure may be adequate. When the product review has a clear and conspicuous disclosure of your relationship – and the reader can see both the product review and the link at the same time – readers have the information they need. If the product review and the link are separated, the reader may lose the connection.

As for where to place a disclosure, the guiding principle is that it has to be clear and conspicuous. Putting disclosures in obscure places – for example, buried on an ABOUT US or GENERAL INFO page, behind a poorly labeled hyperlink or in a terms of service agreement – isn’t good enough. The average person who visits your site must be able to notice your disclosure, read it and understand it.

It’s clear that what’s on my website is a paid advertisement, not my own endorsement or review of the product. Do I still have to disclose that I get a commission if people click through my website to buy the product?

If it’s clear that what’s on your site is a paid advertisement, you don’t have to make additional disclosures. But what’s clear to you may not be clear to everyone visiting your site, and the FTC evaluates ads from the perspective of reasonable consumers.

Our company runs a social media marketing network. We understand we’re responsible for monitoring our network. What kind of monitoring program do we need? Will we be liable if someone in our network says something false about our product?

Advertisers need to have reasonable programs in place to train and monitor members of their network. The scope of the program depends on the risk that deceptive practices by network participants could cause consumer harm – either physical injury or financial loss. For example, a network devoted to the sale of health products may require more supervision than a network promoting, say, a new line of handbags. Here are some core elements every program should include:

-Given an advertiser’s responsibility for substantiating objective product claims, explain to members of your network what can – and can’t – be said about the product;

-Set up a reasonable monitoring program to check out what your people are saying about your product; and

-Follow up if you find questionable practices.

It would be unrealistic to say you had to be aware of every single statement made by a member of your network. But it’s up to you to make an effort to know where your people are talking about your product. It’s unlikely that the activity of a rogue blogger would be the basis of a law enforcement action if your company has a reasonable training and monitoring program.

What do I need to know about the Guides?

What are the essential things I need to know about using endorsements in advertising?

The most important principle is that an endorsement has to represent the accurate experience and opinion of the endorser:

-You can’t talk about your experience with a product if you haven’t tried it.

-If you were paid to try a product and you thought it was terrible, you can’t say it’s terrific.

-You can’t make claims about a product that would require proof you don’t have. For example, you can’t say a product will cure a particular disease if there isn’t scientific evidence to prove that’s true.

In our ads we want to feature endorsements from consumers who achieved the best results with our product. Can we do that under the revised Guides?

Testimonials claiming specific results usually will be interpreted to mean that the endorser’s experience is what others can expect. Statements like “Results not typical” or “Individual results may vary” won’t change that interpretation. That leaves advertisers with two choices:

-Have adequate proof to back up the claim that the results shown in the ad are typical, or

-Clearly and conspicuously disclose the generally expected performance in the circumstances shown in the ad

How would this principle apply in a real ad?

The revised Guides include a lot of examples with practical advice for marketers. Suppose an ad features an endorsement from “Mary G.” who says, “I lost 50 pounds in 6 months with WeightAway.” This ad likely conveys that Mary G.’s experience is typical of what consumers will achieve by using the product. If consumers can’t expect to get those results, the ad likely would mislead consumers unless it makes clear what consumers can expect to lose in similar circumstances – for example, “Most women who use WeightAway for six months lose at least 15 pounds.”

Our company website includes testimonials from customers who used our product during the past few years and mentions the results they got. We can’t figure out now what the “generally expected results” were then. What should we do? Do we have to remove those testimonials?

There are two issues here. First, according to the Guides, if your ad (in this case, your website) says or implies that the endorser uses the product in question, you can run the ad only as long as you have good reason to believe the endorser still uses the product. If you’re using endorsements that are a few years old, it’s your obligation to make sure the claims still are accurate. If your product has changed, it’s best to get new endorsements.

Second, assuming the claims are still accurate, if your product is the same as it was when the endorsements were given, you probably can use a disclosure based on the results consumers generally achieve now.

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San Diego based Media and Technology Company Sees 608% Growth in Three Years

San Diego, CA (August 24, 2010)–Digispace Solutions, an online performance-based advertising and technology company has been named one of the fastest growing privately held companies in America by Inc. Magazine.  Each year, the prestigious ranking consists of companies who contribute to outstanding achievements in their industry which set them apart and make them one of today’s entrepreneurial superstars. Digispace Solutions is proud to be among other Inc. 500 powerhouses like, Zappos.com, Go Daddy, Jamba Juice, and Oracle.

Digispace Solutions focuses on developing web based software and applications that track, report, and optimize all forms of advertising campaigns.  Originally known for its expertise in extremely targeted online media campaigns oriented towards highly profitable niches, Digispace also utilized their own proprietary web analytic software to instantly measure results and optimize their campaigns on the fly. 

“We’ve been using various systems in affiliate and internet marketing over the years and realized there were too many systems and inefficiencies in launching and managing just one campaign”, states Jose Rivera, part Founder and President of Digispace Solutions.  Amish Shah, part Founder and CEO mirrors this thinking and together Shah and Rivera pulled in their development team to design technology systems that automate the entire process of campaign development from launch to analytics.

The distinguished award will be published in the September issue of Inc. Magazine.  This editorial is seen as a pivotal financial trend report for America’s economy sought out by many top leading industry professionals.  The dynamic businesses that make up this year’s Inc. 500 list have a median revenue of $7.7 million, a median company age of 6 years, with a median three-year growth rate of 1,229.6% for 2009.

Digispace Solutions, LLC. is an online performance-based advertising and technology company focused on providing proprietary web technologies to power online advertising strategies and solutions.

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Pay per click (PPC) Advertising Tips for Online Advertising Campaigns

A ranking developed by Google, Quality Score is an algorithm that calculates how relevant your paid keywords are to the end-user you’re targeting.  Because of this, your Quality Score is just as important as your bid when it comes to where your ad will be positioned.

How does this really impact you? If two competitors have similar or equal bids, the higher Quality Score will earn a higher position.

Pretty important to understand right?

Here’s a few ways to analyze the data and create a plan to increase your Quality Score:

#1-Prioritize & Optimize

Review all of your current campaigns and sort based by:

- spend

- then > ad groups by spend

 -then > keywords by Quality Score.

In those top spending campaigns and ad groups, any keyword with a Quality Score below 7 should be the priority for Quality Score improvement.

#2-Coordinate Search Queries and Text Ads 

Since your Quality Score also factors in click-through-rates, the more you can refine your ad groups so that the keywords are highly relevant to the text ad copy, the better results you’ll see.

Make sure you have different ad groups set up based on how a user may search for your product.  If you’re selling beauty products, you wouldn’t want to have the keywords “anti-aging” and “mineral makeup” in one ad group.  You will want two separate ads to break out these products and target the ads specifically for people searching for these specific products. Hence, your ad copy and your ad groups should be aligned based on this type of user-search structure.

#3-Revise and Test Ad Creative

Now that your ad groups are aligned and organized, you need to make sure your copy is proving to be compelling and effective.  Persuasive and targeted copy is the most optimal way to get good click-through rates.

Take a look at all of your text ads now and analyze the current data.  Find your lowest performers by click-through-rate in your top Ad Groups (by spend).  Delete any non or poor performers and start to integrate and test copy that is stronger and even more persuasive.  Continue this exercise to weed out the under performers and gain higher Quality Scores.

#4-Eliminate Bad Keywords

Get rid of low performers. 

Take a look at the overall distribution of your Quality Score in your account.  If you see overall good performance, you don’t need a major overhaul.  However, this is all part of the vigilance needed in maintaining or increasing our Quality Score. 

Since your Quality Score also looks at historical click thru rate (CTR) on your keywords, you do need to review and  eliminate keywords and text ads that you see with historical low CTRs. These non-performers pull down your overall average and historical rates, which will impact your QS negatively.

Maintain and eliminate as necessary.

#5-Have an Effective and Relevant Landing Page

Your Landing Page can have a huge negative impact on your Quality Score if it’s not functioning, has irrelevant copy, broken links, etc.  If your Quality Score has been driven down, make sure to watch for the issues below and fix asap.  Because Google doesn’t look at landing pages as frequently, be patient, your improvements to your landing page will be soon be realized in a higher Quality Score.

-Pop-ups

-Landing pages that are “bait and switch” offers or that have very little to do with the ad or search query

-Very slow loading pages

Below are the factors you should have on your landing page to ensure a high Quality Score.

- Set up landing pages in Silo Structure

- Content MUST be relevant

- Have at least 5 pages of content

- Have a sitemap on your page: www.xml-sitemaps.com

And finally, include your business pages: Terms of Service, Privacy Policy,  Contact Us,  About Us

Digispace Solutions, is an online performance-based advertising and technology company focused on providing proprietary web technologies to power online advertising strategies and solutions.

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Pepsi’s Refresh Campaign Blazes New Trails with Online Marketing Technology and Advertising

Pepsi has decided to blaze its own path down the advertising super highway forgoing their iconic commercials from one of the most-watched television programs of the year, The Super Bowl.  Despite the rampant decline of television viewership due to cable and sought after Internet options, advertisers are still willing to pay big bucks for a spot on such highly watched sporting event. As you may have noticed Pepsi decided not to advertise this last February in the Super Bowl, but instead they have generated a social campaign that allows Pepsi to be in direct communication between them and consumers by initiating “The Pepsi Refresh Project”.

Pepsi spokesperson Nicole Bradley says the project’s main goal is to create an accessible discussion between loyal and prospective customers.

“The Super Bowl broadcast can be an amazing stage for broadcasters, and [PepsiCo subsidiary] Frito Lay will be there in a big way,” she tells DMNews. “But our beverage brands’ marketing strategy in 2010 [is] less about a singular event and more about a movement. We are always looking to further develop our two-way conversation with consumers.”

This hits hard on the head of social engagement, attracting consumer thoughts on sustainability.  Rather then spending the money on the ads, Pepsi has allocated $20 million to fund thousands of projects from the ideas of Americans. Since January, the Refresh Project has been giving $1.3 million for 32 grants each month from literacy projects to programs that provide tuxedos for prom. Then online voters choose winning projects.

Recently, Pepsi added an additional $1.3 million toward ideas that will help refresh the oil spill that hit the Gulf of Mexico, proving that corporate contribution and social responsibility is an action Americans want to see, moreover, become involved with. 

But from a business point of view, is Pepsi seeing the social success?

Irbtrax, an independent SEO marketing firm has been closely monitoring the Pepsi Refresh Project resulting in some interesting analysis.

According to Irbtrax founder Scott Moir,  ”At its core it’s a well planned Internet Marketing campaign based on Advocacy that is utilizing it’s existing Social Media assets to spread the word virally. Its appeal has been enhanced by perception. A perception that was fueled by the publicity and Internet chatter they created when they ‘pulled’ their Super Bowl advertising.”  Using two core on-line marketing strategies, trends and timing, Pepsi used the trend towards social media and the timing of the Super Bowl to their advantage, gaining an on and off line buzz.

A further look at the Pepsi Refresh Project from an internet marketing research and statistical perspective, Irbtrax shows the following:

- Campaigns of this magnitude generally take months to plan, develop and refine – -refresheverything.com is a stand alone website. The Domain name was apparently registered on 11/30/2009.



-The top four traffic generators for refresheverything.com are Google searches, Facebook, Pepsi.com, and Twitter. This traffic experienced a huge spike just prior to and after the Super Bowl.

 Since the Super Bowl, the site’s traffic has increased about 800% and remained consistent. The result of this traffic spike is that refresheverything.com has a United States Alexa ranking of 4,083.  About 75% of the site’s traffic is coming from the United States.

International Refresh Project coming?

- The refresheverything.com Meta Title is ‘Pepsi Refresh Project’ and contains 21 characters.

- The refresheverything.com Meta Description is ‘Pepsi is giving away millions each month to fund refreshing ideas that change the world. The ideas with the most votes will receive grants, so vote for your favorites. Do you have an idea that needs support? Learn how Pepsi can help.’ It contains 233 characters.

- The Keywords are: ‘Fund your project with a grant from the Pepsi Refresh Project!’

With two votes casted every second, more and more people have been driven to Pepsi’s site to get involved, showing an increase in website traffic, which helps direct communication with no clutter coming in from third parties. This long term internet advertising plan also could be the beginning of many marketing strategies we may see coming from corporate giants.

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Digispace Solutions Launches the Magic Bullet System

by DigiMarketing on April 30, 2010

The Ultimate Tracking and Optimization System for Media Buying

SAN DIEGO, California (April 30, 2010) – Digispace Solutions, a media and technology development company, has created an all-inclusive media campaign management system for CPA and Display Advertising.

“We’ve been using all kinds of systems in affiliate and internet marketing over the years and realized there were too many systems needed to launch and manage one campaign”, states Jose Rivera, part Founder and President of Digispace Solutions.  Amish Shah, part Founder and CEO mirrors this thinking and together Shah and Rivera pulled in their programming team to create the Magic Bullet System.

“No one had a system where you could build your website or landing page, pull competitive research and keyword groups, spy on competition, review bids and profitability scores to ensure campaign success , and then launch, track, and optimize your campaign – - all using APIs bridging the current industry standard systems and bringing them into our all inclusive system.” Says Shah. 

Digispace has been using the Magic Bullet System as their internal campaign management system for years to create and monitor their campaigns.  Because Digispace also has an ad network called yMultimedia, where affiliate advertisers can select exclusive CPA offers to run campaigns, deciding to launch a system externally, branded as The Magic Bullet System, was the next natural step to helping Digispace customers succeed with their own campaigns.

The initial soft launch of The Magic Bullet System, garnered over 500 customers in over 59 countries showing the breadth of activity and strength in international CPA advertising for affiliates and online marketers.  Digispace is committed to creating value in online media and technology systems that increase revenue internally and externally through its automated web-based apps.

Digispace Solutions, is an online performance-based advertising and technology company focused on providing proprietary web technologies to power online advertising strategies and solutions.

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You don’t have to be a copywriter to create ads that work, but it’s crucial to understand what works and the methodology behind it all.

Let’s start with what headlines should do at minimum:

 -Grab Your Attention

 -Filtering the audience (speaks to your target market)

 -Generate Curiosity

 -Promise Benefits

 -Create an emotional attachment

 -Compel the reader to read more!

Essentially, your headline is like a first impression, but there are many other factors that convince prospects to keep reading….your headline needs to draw the user in and the rest of your copy should lead them the rest of the way…all the way to conversion.

 Here’s a great list of tips from Bob Bly’s, The Copywriter’s Handbook:

  • Direct Headlines go straight to the heart of the matter, without any attempt at cleverness. Bly gives the example of Pure Silk Blouses – 30 Percent Off as a headline that states the selling proposition directly. A direct blog post title might read Free SEO E-book.
  • An Indirect Headline takes a more subtle approach. It uses curiosity to raise a question in the reader’s mind, which the body copy answers. Often a double meaning is utilized, which is useful online. An article might have the headline Fresh Bait Works Best and yet have nothing to do with fishing, because it’s actually about writing timely content that acts as link bait.
  • A News Headline is pretty self-explanatory, as long as the news itself is actually, well… news. A product announcement, an improved version, or even a content scoop can be the basis of a compelling news headline. Think Introducing Flickr 2.0 or My Exclusive Interview With Steve Jobs.
  • The How to Headline is everywhere, online and off, for one reason only – it works like a charm. Bly says that “Many advertising writers claim if you begin with the words how to, you can’t write a bad headline.” An example would be, umm… oh yes… the title of this post.
  • A Question Headline must do more than simply ask a question, it must be a question that, according to Bly, the reader can empathize with or would like to see answered. He gives this example from Psychology Today: Do You Close the Bathroom Door Even When You’re the Only One Home? Another example used way too much in Internet marketing guru-ville is Who Else Wants to Get Rich Online?
  • The Command Headline boldly tells the prospect what he needs to do, such as Exxon’s old Put a Tiger in Your Tank campaign. Bly indicates that the first word should be a strong verb demanding action, such as Subscribe to Quick Fat Loss Secrets Today!
  • Another effective technique is called the Reason Why Headline. Your body text consists of a numbered list of product features or tips, which you then incorporate into the headline, such as Two Hundred Reasons Why Open Source Software Beats Microsoft. It’s not even necessary to include the words “reasons why.” This technique is actually the underlying strategy behind the ubiquitous blogger “list” posts, such as 8 Ways to Build Blog Traffic.
  • Finally, we have the Testimonial Headline, which is highly effective because it presents outside proof that you offer great value. This entails taking what someone else has said about you, your product or service, and using their actual words in your headline. Quotation marks let the reader know that they are reading a testimonial, which will continue in the body copy.

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Digispace roots headquarters at The Art Union Building in San Diego

January marks a new beginning for Digispace Solutions, LLC. laying new roots at the historical Art Union building in the Golden Hill neighborhood of San Diego.  “We are excited to make Golden Hill our headquarters in 2010, offering us a chance to add our flavor to the creative melting pot of entrepreneurs

already making headway out of San Diego”, states Amish Shah, part founder and CEO of Digispace.

The ambiance of Golden Hill consists of an eclectic mix of the San Diego’s most historically significant pre-1900 architecture. Victorian houses, Craftsman style bungalows as well as more modern apartments, all find a home beside our new digs on upper eastside of Broadway.  Not to mention the diverse art community which has emerged in the neighborhood that adds to the already beautiful views of San Diego Harbor.

In this pedestrian-friendly area, Digispace is fortunate enough to be in walking distance of Balboa Park—providing mu

seums, gardens and performing art venues. Thus, is partially the reason why we picked the spot; simply the convenience it allows us here at Digispace to get out and connect with our community.

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This past Semptember, Puja Shah, a dentist at a private pediatric office in Riverside, CA., traveled to Uganda, Africa with the founder of Just Like My Child Foundation, Vivian Glyck, an organization whose goal is to alleviate the suffering of women, children, and families in rural Uganda. The organization uses an approach of deep development, which means empowering communities, village by village, to move towards self-reliance by creating their own long-term solutions to healthcare, education and microenterprise. The goal of this mission centered around healthcare and Puja was accompanied by her friends Lidia Trainer, an acupuncturist/herbologist in training who brought nutritional herbs for the patients of the local hospital, as well as Dr. David Smotrich, a well known IVF specialist from La Jolla, CA who helped with C section cases and consulted with patients.

The children of this area were in desperate need of oral health instruction/education and dental treatment, which was Puja’s role to provide while she was there. Since there was no dental clinic on site, Puja raised money for supplies via email blasts and even held a concert fundraiser with friends prior to her departure. With the help
of Amish Shah and Digispace, she raised enough funds to bring instruments and items to set up a brand new dental clinic at Bishop Asili Hospital in the village of Luwero, which will continue to survive via Dr. Jane Mandera, a recent dental school graduate of a university in Kampala, Uganda upon Puja’s departure. Puja also spent many hours visiting schools of local villages in the area to educate children on oral health instruction and providing them with basic necessities such as toothbrushes, toothpaste and floss, many of which they had never seen or had no access to obtaining.

Puja has been involved with a number of local outreach programs, but her long-term career goals include international outreach and education. She is also a freelance fiction writer and is currently working on a series of short stories based on women’s’ rights issues. She believes helping others fulfills not only her career goals, but also her spiritual goals, and thus creates a cycle of true development on all levels for everyone. She lives in La, Jolla, CA.

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