Max Visits may sound like some kind of web traffic version, but it's actually a site where you can purchase website traffic. They work directly with advertisers and publishers, they allow resellers, and they have an affiliate program. First, let's take a look at the service itself and what it offers. Then we'll cover reviews, our own experiences, and a final verdict.
What Max Visits Offers
When you first visit their site, you're greeted with a large counter proclaiming that they have provided their customers with over 1.6 billion visitors. This is roughly equivalent to a full month's worth of Facebook's usership, so it's not insignificant. Of course, that's their totality, not their monthly traffic.
The traffic that Max Visits uses, they claim, is 100% legitimate, targeted traffic. They have a broad network of sites they operate in various ways to send hits towards their advertisers. This traffic comes from:
IFrames in existing websites. Whether these are hidden and invisible, or broadly visible as advertising, I don't know.
Pop-unders on otherwise legitimate websites.
Specifically adult-targeted traffic, typically coming from a network of adult websites.
Traffic coming from expired domains; think domain parking, or expired domains picked up and registered then filled with ads to soak up residual traffic from the site before it's deindexed.
Alexa-specific traffic, that is, a specific network of people who have the Alexa toolbar installed and whose presence boosts your Alexa ranking.
Traffic coming from email marketing.
How much of this is spam versus placement in legitimate mailing lists, I have no way to tell you.
According to their marketing, Max Visits has an algorithm that sorts incoming visitors based on the category of the site they visit, and sends traffic towards their clients based on those categories. It's like basic interest targeting, in broad industry terms.
Try it and share our review with us.