Abstract:
A system for implementing a performance-based customer referral program includes a referral tracking system capable of tracking referrals of users from participant sites to a retail site, and capable of determining whether such referrals result in purchases on the retail site. The tracked referral activity may, for example, be used to determine performance-based commissions to pay to the participants. The system may also include an enrollment system that partially or fully automates the task of enrolling new participants and their sites in the referral program. In addition, the system may include a report generation system that provides the participants with activity reports regarding the referral and purchase activity attributable to their sites.

Description:
RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/961,808, filed Dec. 20, 2007, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/366,931, filed Aug. 4, 1999 (now U.S. Pat. No. 7,337,133), which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/883,770, filed Jun. 27, 1997 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,029,141). The disclosures of the aforesaid applications are hereby incorporated by reference. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates to electronic commerce. Specifically, this invention relates to information processing methods for marketing and selling goods via the Internet or other interactive network. 
     APPENDICES 
     Included as Appendices A and B are documents that illustrate a preferred of the invention. These materials form part of the disclosure of the specification. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     With the increasing popularity of the Internet and the World Wide Web, it has become common for merchants to set up Web sites for marketing and selling goods. One example of such a Web site is the online bookstore site of AMAZON.COM, the assignee of the present invention. Via this site, consumers can access and place orders from an online book catalog that includes millions of titles. 
     One problem commonly encountered by online merchants is an inability to effectively market goods via their Web sites. Because the customer cannot physically inspect the products via the Web site, and typically cannot talk to a salesperson, it is desirable that the site provide access to product reviews, product ratings, and other information that can be relied on by the customer to make an informed decision. In many cases, however, the merchant lacks the resources needed to generate or otherwise obtain such information, especially if the merchant sells a large and diverse selection of goods. For example, it would not be practical for AMAZON.COM to prepare reviews of all, or even a significant portion of, the millions of titles available on the AMAZON.COM site. 
     Another problem commonly faced by online merchants is an inability to efficiently attract potential consumers to their Web sites. One way of attracting consumers has been to market the site through television, newspaper and Internet advertisements. However, advertising a site using conventional methods can be expensive, and can consume significant human resources. In addition, it is often difficult or impossible to evaluate the effectiveness of a given advertisement. 
     The present invention addresses these and other problems. 
     SUMMARY 
     The present invention provides a software system and method for enabling an Internet sales entity, referred to herein as the “merchant,” to efficiently market and sell goods in cooperation with Web sites or other network sites of respective business partners, referred to herein as “associates.” The system and method are implemented in part by software that runs on the merchant&#39;s Web site. Through this site, an entity can enroll (via an automated registration process) as an associate, and can then disseminate catalogs (Web documents, PUSH documents, e-mail newsletters, etc.) that include the associate&#39;s reviews and/or recommendations on specific products sold by the merchant. 
     In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the associate catalog documents include product-specific hyperlinks, referred to herein as “referral links,” that allow potential customers to link to the merchant&#39;s Web site to initiate purchases of such products from the merchant. Each referral link is provided within the catalog document in association with referral information that is transmitted to the merchant&#39;s site when a user (customer) clicks on the referral link. This referral information preferably includes the unique ID of the associate (assigned upon enrollment) and the unique ID of the selected product. Referral processing software running on the merchant site uses this information to identify the associate that referred the customer to the merchant site, and to identify the product selected from the associate&#39;s catalog. If the customer subsequently purchases the selected product from the merchant site (e.g., by filling out an order form page and submitting the order), the referral processing software automatically credits the referring associate for the referral by, for example, applying a commission to an account of the associate. In one implementation, the referral commission is automatically generated based on a fixed percentage of the merchant&#39;s selling price, and is paid to the associate electronically on a periodic basis (such as every calendar quarter). 
     In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the merchant site implements an automated associate enrollment process for allowing individuals and business entities to register as associates. The enrollment process is implemented in part by Web pages that are transmitted to the computer of the associate applicant, and by enrollment software that runs on the merchant site. During the enrollment process, the applicant is presented with an online business agreement (in the form of a Web page) that sets forth the terms and conditions of doing business with the merchant In addition, the applicant is presented with an online form that requests various information, such as the name, payment address and e-mail address of the applicant and a description of the proposed associate Web site. In one implementation, the enrollment software includes text scanning code that automatically scans the completed form for pre-specified words and phrases (vulgarities, etc.) that may give rise to a rejection of the application, and flags the application for further (human) review when such a word or phrase is found. 
     As part of the online registration, the application is processed (either automatically or by a staff member of the merchant), and the enrollment software generates and assigns a unique associate ID to the applicant, and stores this ID (together with other associate information) in an associate database of the merchant site. In addition, the enrollment software generates and sends an e-mail message to the associate with instructions for placing referral links within catalog documents. 
     In a preferred, the merchant site includes code that maintains a unified shopping cart data structure (“shopping cart”) for each ongoing customer shopping session. For each ongoing shopping session, the shopping cart maintains a record of at least: (i) the products that are currently selected by the customer for prospective purchase, and (ii) the referral source (if any) of each such product. In one implementation, each shopping cart persists on the merchant site for an extended period of time (such as one week) following the most recent access by the customer, thereby allowing the customer to conduct extended shopping sessions. To purchase the products represented within the shopping cart, the customer proceeds to a “check out” area of the merchant site and submits an order. Software running on the merchant site then uses the information collected within the shopping cart to identify, and appropriately credit the account of, each associate that provided a corresponding referral. 
     An important benefit of the shopping cart feature is that it allows the customer to select products from multiple different sites, and then perform a single check-out to purchase all of the selected products. Another benefit is that it provides an efficient mechanism for crediting the accounts of the associates at the time of purchase. Although the use of a shopping cart provides certain advantages, the referral tracking and crediting features of the invention can be implemented without the use of a shopping cart. 
     In one implementation, the various components are provided on the Web site of AMAZON.COM as part of the AMAZON.COM Associates Program. Through this program, an individual or business entity can register as an AMAZON.COM associate, and can then set up a Web site to market customized subsets of the books (typically in a particular area of expertise) available from the AMAZON.COM site. For example, a computer company can set up a site (or add an area to an existing site) to recommend and sell selected books on computer programming languages, and a Cajun chef can set up a site to recommend and sell selected books on New Orleans style cooking. The associate is in turn paid a commission or other consideration based on the referrals that result in actual purchases. Because AMAZON.COM handles the various tasks associated with processing orders from customers (including shipping, collections, and customer service), the associate need only be concerned with the administration of the associate Web site. 
     An important benefit of the invention is that it allows the task of marketing the merchant&#39;s products to be efficiently distributed among entities that have established reputations and exposure within their respective fields. Another benefit is that it provides an efficient mechanism for exposing the merchant&#39;s Web site to the public, by encouraging others (associates) to set up outgoing links to the merchant&#39;s site. 
     Because the associate enrollment and referral tracking/credit functions are automated in whole or in part, these benefits can be realized with minimal supervision by the merchant. In addition, because the compensation provided to the associates is performance-based (e.g., based on the number of referrals that result in actual sales), the merchant need not be concerned with the existence of large numbers of associates that provide relatively small numbers of referrals. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       These and other features and advantages of the invention will now be described with reference to the drawings of certain preferred embodiments, which are intended to illustrate and not to limit the invention, and in which: 
         FIG. 1  is a high-level architectural drawing illustrating the primary components of a system that operates in accordance with the present invention. 
         FIG. 2  is an architectural drawing and flow diagram illustrating the enrollment function of the system. 
         FIGS. 3   a - 3   c  are respective screen displays further illustrating the enrollment function. 
         FIG. 4  illustrates a URL format used to embed referral links within Web documents in accordance with the invention. 
         FIG. 5  is an architectural drawing and flow diagram illustrating a referral transaction sequence in accordance with the present invention. 
         FIG. 6  is a screen display illustrating an HTML catalog document of the associate&#39;s Web site. 
         FIG. 7  is an HTML listing illustrating a preferred method for embedding a referral link within a catalog document of an associate&#39;s Web site. 
         FIG. 8  is a screen display illustrating an HTML catalog document detail page of the merchant Web site. 
         FIG. 9  is a screen display illustrating a preferred shopping cart processing method in accordance with the present invention. 
         FIGS. 10   a - 10   c  are screen displays illustrating HTML documents of the merchant Web site. 
     
    
    
     In the drawings, the first digit of each reference number indicates the Figure number in which the referenced item first appears. 
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     To facilitate a complete understanding of the invention, the description of the preferred is arranged within the following sections:
         1. GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ACRONYMS   2. OVERVIEW OF SYSTEM COMPONENTS AND OPERATION   3. ASSOCIATE ENROLLMENT FUNCTION   4. REFERRAL TRANSACTION FUNCTION   5. UNIFIED SHOPPING CART FUNCTION   6. REPORT GENERATION FUNCTION   7. CONCLUSION       

     1. GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ACRONYMS 
     The following terms and acronyms are used throughout the detailed description: 
     Client-Server. A model of interaction in a distributed system in which a program at one site sends a request to a program at another site and waits for a response. The requesting program is called the “client,” and the program which responds to the request is called the “server.” In the context of the World Wide Web (discussed below), the client is a “Web browser” (or simply “browser”) which runs on a computer of a user; the program which responds to browser requests by serving Web pages is commonly referred to as a “Web server.” 
     Hyperlink. A navigational link from one document to another, or from one portion (or component) of a document to another. Typically, a hyperlink is displayed as a highlighted word or phrase that can be selected by clicking on it using a mouse to jump to the associated document or documented portion. 
     Hypertext System. A computer-based informational system in which documents (and possibly other types of data entities) are linked together via hyperlinks to form a user-navigable “web.” 
     Internet. A collection of interconnected (public and/or private) networks that are linked together by a set of standard protocols (such as TCP/IP and HTTP) to form a global, distributed network. (While this term is intended to refer to what is now commonly known as the Internet, it is also intended to encompass variations which may be made in the future, including changes and additions to existing standard protocols.) 
     World Wide Web (“Web”). Used herein to refer generally to both (i) a distributed collection of interlinked, user-viewable hypertext documents (commonly referred to as Web documents or Web pages) that are accessible via the Internet, and (ii) the client and server software components which provide user access to such documents using standardized Internet protocols. Currently, the primary standard protocol for allowing applications to locate and acquire Web documents is HTTP, and the Web pages are encoded using HTML. However, the terms “Web” and “World Wide Web” are intended to encompass future markup languages and transport protocols which may be used in place of (or in addition to) HTML and HTTP. 
     Web Site. A computer system that serves informational content over a network using the standard protocols of the World Wide Web. Typically, a Web site corresponds to a particular Internet domain name, such as “amazon.com,” and includes the content associated with a particular organization. As used herein, the term is generally intended to encompass both (i) the hardware/software server components that serve the informational content over the network, and (ii) the “back end” hardware/software components, including any non-standard or specialized components, that interact with the server components to perform services for Web site users. 
     HTML (HyperText Markup Language). A standard coding convention and set of codes for attaching presentation and linking attributes to informational content within documents. (HTML 2.0 is currently the primary standard used for generating Web documents.) During a document authoring stage, the HTML codes (referred to as “tags”) are embedded within the informational content of the document. When the Web document (or HTML document) is subsequently transferred from a Web server to a browser, the codes are interpreted by the browser and used to parse and display the document. Additionally in specifying how the Web browser is to display the document, HTML tags can be used to create links to other Web documents (commonly referred to as “hyperlinks”). For more information on HTML, see Ian S. Graham,  The HTML Source Book , John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1995 (ISBN 0471-11894-4). 
     HTTP (HyperText Transport Protocol). The standard World Wide Web client-server protocol used for the exchange of information (such as HTML documents, and client requests for such documents) between a browser and a Web server. HTTP includes a number of different types of messages which can be sent from the client to the server to request different types of server actions. For example, a “GET” message, which has the format GET &lt;URL&gt;, causes the server to return the document or file located at the specified URL. 
     ISBN (International Standard Book Number). A numerical identifier associated with books, pamphlets, educational kits, microforms, CD-ROM and braille publications in circulation throughout the world. The ISBN is a ten-digit number assigned to each published title that provides an unduplicated, internationally recognized “identity.” 
     URL (Uniform Resource Locator). A unique address which fully specifies the location of a file or other resource on the Internet. The general format of a URL is protocol://machine address:port/path/filename. The port specification is optional, and if none is entered by the user, the browser defaults to the standard port for whatever service is specified as the protocol. For example, if HTTP is specified as the protocol, the browser will use the HTTP default port of 80. 
     Cookies. A technology that enables a Web server to retrieve information from a user&#39;s computer that reveals prior browsing activities of the user. The informational item stored on the user&#39;s computer (typically on the hard drive) is commonly referred to as a “cookie.” Many standard Web browsers support the use of cookies. 
     PUSH Technology. An information dissemination technology used to send data to users over a network. In contrast to the World Wide Web (a “pull” technology), in which the client browser must request a Web page before it is sent, PUSH protocols send the informational content to the user computer automatically, typically based on information pre-specified by the user. 
     2. OVERVIEW OF SYSTEM COMPONENTS AND OPERATION 
       FIG. 1  illustrates the general architecture of a referral system that operates in accordance with the present invention. The system includes a customer computer  108 , an associate Web site  100 , and a merchant Web site  106 , all of which are linked together by the Internet  104 . The customer computer  108  may be any type of computing device that allows a user (“customer”) to interactively browse Web sites via a Web browser  112 . For example, the customer computer  108  may be a personal computer (PC) that runs the Windows NT operating system. 
     The merchant Web site  106  is a site that provides various functionality for allowing customers to purchase products, including products selected from the Web sites of associates. Typically, this site will be operated by a business entity (referred to herein as the “merchant”) that handles the various order processing, shipping, collections, and customer service tasks associated with the sale of goods. In an implementation described herein, the merchant Web site  106  is the site of AMAZON.COM. 
     As described below, the site  106  includes enrollment software that implements an online registration process for allowing other entities (individuals, companies, etc.) to register as associates. An entity enrolling as an associate provides the merchant Web site  106  with a completed, online registration application that is processed by an enrollment software program (“SW”) at the site  106 . The enrollment software creates an entry in the associate database  160  according to the information provided by the enrolling associate. 
     The associate&#39;s Web site  100  is the site of an entity that has registered with the merchant, via the online registration process, to market a subset of the merchant&#39;s goods in return for compensation (preferably a performance-based commission). Typically, this site is owned and operated by an individual or business entity (“associate”) that is not in the same business as that of the merchant For example, in the context of the AMAZON.COM Associates Program, the associate may be an individual that is in the business of rating mystery novels. 
     As described below, because the merchant handles the tasks of processing online orders, shipping products, collecting payment, and providing customer service, the associate need not be concerned with these tasks. Thus, the associate can effectively become an online retailer immediately, by simply enrolling as an associate and setting up a Web site. 
     In addition, because the merchant Web site  106  includes software for automating the primary functions of doing business with associates (such as associate enrollment, referral transaction processing, and commission tracking and payment), the architecture allows the merchant to do business with large numbers (e.g., thousands) of associates with minimal supervision by the merchant. Further, because the commissions paid to the associates are performance-based, there is little or no downside to the merchant to enrolling marginally-productive associates that provide relatively small numbers of referrals. 
     In operation, the customer accesses the associate&#39;s Web site  100  using a standard Web browser  112 , such as Microsoft&#39;s Internet Explorer or Netscape&#39;s Navigator, which uses the HTTP protocol to communicate with a Web server  116  of the associate&#39;s site  100 . The Web server  116  accesses a local store of catalog documents  120  (in the form of HTML or “Web” documents) which can be requested, retrieved and viewed by the customer via the Web browser  112 . These catalog documents  120  include information generated by the associate about the various products featured on the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . Preferably, this information includes editorial descriptions, reviews, and/or recommendations of the products that assist customers in making informed purchasing decisions. 
     The catalog documents  120  served by the associate&#39;s site  100  include special hyperlinks (to Web pages of the merchant Web site  106 ) for allowing consumers to select products for prospective purchase. Typically, one such hyperlink is provided for each product displayed on the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . Alternatively, a hyperlink may be provided for a group of products. When a customer selects (e.g., clicks on) the hyperlink associated with a particular product, the customer is automatically connected to the merchant Web site  106 , and presented with various options (included within Web pages  136  served from the merchant Web site  106 ) for allowing the customer to purchase the selected product from the merchant. The hyperlink thus serves as a referral mechanism for referring the customer to the merchant Web site  106 . 
     As described in detail below, the special hyperlinks (also referred to herein as “referral links”) of the associate&#39;s catalog documents are provided in association with additional information (embedded in a pre-defined format within the associated URL) that is transmitted to the merchant Web site  106  in response to selection of the link. In one implementation, this information includes a unique identifier of the associate (assigned upon enrollment) and a unique identifier of the selected product (such as the ISBN of a book). A computer program  144  of the merchant Web site  106  uses this information to identify the associate that was the source of the referral, and to credit the sale (referral) to the associate if the customer subsequently purchases the product (or group of products). (In other implementations, the crediting of the associate may occur without regard to whether the product is purchased.) Commission payments can then be paid to the associates on a periodic basis (such as once a month). In one implementation, the commission payments are made electronically, via the computer program  144 , without the need for involvement by the merchant. 
     In one implementation, the merchant Web site  106  comprises a product information database (not shown) that stores product pricing information. The computer program  144  of the merchant site  106  uses this pricing information to calculate the proper commission or referral payment. 
     Although the implementation described herein uses monetary commissions to compensate the associates for referrals, other forms of compensation can be used. For example, an associate (and/or the associate&#39;s customers) could be given a discount on products or services sold by the merchant. 
     In one implementation of the merchant Web site  106 , selection of a referral link causes a product detail page  136  to be displayed on the customer computer  108 . This detail page  136  is served by the merchant Web site  106 , and includes various information provided by the merchant (price, inventory, standard product description, etc.) about the selected product. From this page, a hyperlink can be selected that allows the selected product to be added to a customer “shopping cart.” 
     The shopping cart is a customer-specific data structure that is generated and maintained (within a shopping cart database  152 ) by executable code of the merchant site  106 . The database may be any type of data repository including, for example, an SQL table or ASCII text file. The information stored within the shopping cart includes a list of the products that have been selected by the customer for prospective purchase, together with an identifier of the referring associate (if any) corresponding to each such product. In one implementation, each shopping cart persists on the site  106  for an extended period of time (such as one week) following the most recent access by the customer, allowing the customer to conduct extended shopping sessions. When the customer proceeds to a check-out area of the merchant site  106  and submits an order for the selected products, the associate identifiers stored within the customer&#39;s shopping cart are used to appropriately credit the accounts of the referring associates. Although the shopping cart implementation provides an efficient mechanism for tracking and crediting referral events, referrals can alternatively be credited without the use of a shopping cart, such as by crediting the associate at the time of, or during the same shopping session as, the referral. 
     Because the identity of the customer is normally unknown to the merchant Web site  106  at the time of the referral event, the site  106  uses cookies technology to identify the customer, so that the customer can be associated with any existing shopping cart created during previous visits to the site  106 . This process involves retrieving the cookie  140  from the customer computer  108  with the Web server  132 , and then executing a computer program  144  that compares the cookie against information stored in a customer data structure  148 . If no shopping cart exists for the customer, or if no cookie exists on the customer computer  108 , a shopping cart structure is created for the user. Any of a variety of alternative techniques can be used to identify the customer, including prompting the customer for a user ID, and/or using URL information returned by the customer&#39;s Web browser. 
     Although the described herein uses Web technology to disseminate the catalog documents, any of a variety of document types and electronic dissemination technologies can be used. For example, the associate&#39;s catalog documents may be in the form of hypertextual e-mail messages that are disseminated by a list server, or PUSH documents disseminated by a PUSH server. As interactive television, video-on-demand, and Web TV technologies continue to evolve, it is contemplated that the “catalog documents” will include video advertisements that are displayed to the customer on a television screen. Further, although hypertextual catalog documents are preferably used, it is possible for an associate to use non-hypertextual catalogs (including paper-based product catalogs) that simply instruct the customer to manually enter the appropriate URL (including the referral information) into a browser program. 
     In addition, although the system is described in the context of “the” associate&#39;s Web site, it should be recognized that a given associate can disseminate its catalog documents (using the single associate ID assigned during online registration) from multiple different sites, including sites that use different document formats and transfer protocols. Further, although the system is described herein in the context of a merchant that sells products, it will be recognized that the architecture can also be used to sell services, including online services that are provided over the Internet. 
     As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the use of the URL-embedded referral information to identify the associate allows the associate to be identified, and properly credited for the referral, with a high degree of reliability. For example, in contrast to conventional user tracking techniques, the present method allows the associate to be reliably identified even if the associate Web site  100  operates behind a firewall. In addition, the method provides a high degree of flexibility to the associate. For example, the associate can change to a different Internet service provider, and can use or switch between multiple catalog dissemination techniques (Web, e-mail, PUSH, etc.), without affecting the ability of the merchant Web site  106  to identify and credit the associate. Moreover, the associate can freely modify its product offerings—without the need for involvement by the merchant—by simply updating product descriptions and corresponding referral links within the catalog. 
     A significant benefit of the architecture is that it allows the task of marketing the merchant&#39;s products to be efficiently distributed among entities that have established reputations and exposure within their respective fields. In the context of the AMAZON.COM Internet bookstore, for example, a well-established computer company can set up an associate site (or an area of an existing site) to recommend its favorite books on programming languages; and an Italian chef can set up a site to recommend his favorite cookbooks on Italian cooking. In implementations that involve sales of other types of products (such as audio/video equipment), the associates may, for example, include testing laboratories that publish test results. 
     Because the associate enrollment and referral tracking functions are automated (in whole or in part), the referral services provided by the associates take place with little or no human supervision or intervention by the merchant. In addition, because the payments to the associates are performance-based (e.g., based on the number of sales resulting from associate referrals), the merchant need not be concerned with the effectiveness of any given associate site. 
     The system and method also provide an efficient mechanism for exposing the merchant and the merchant Web site  106  to the public by encouraging others (associates) to set up outgoing links to the merchant&#39;s Web site. For example, this may be beneficial where the merchant Web site  106  is configured to support direct sales (i.e., sales that do not involve referrals from associates), as is this case with the site of AMAZON.COM. 
     The various components and functions of the referral system are described in further detail below. 
     3. ASSOCIATE ENROLLMENT FUNCTION 
     As indicated above, the merchant Web site  106  includes automated enrollment software ( FIG. 1 ) for allowing an entity to apply, via the Internet, to operate as an associate. The registration process may include the following: (i) the presentation of an online business agreement to the applicants, (ii) the use of an automated “agent” to scan the application text for key inputted terms, including vulgarities and other terms that may serve as a basis for denying the application, (iii) the automated generation and assignment of a unique associate ID (also referred to herein as the “store ID”) to an applicant, and (iv) the automated electronic transmission of referral link embedding instructions to the applicant. 
       FIG. 2  illustrates the general flow of information between components when an associate applicant uses a computer  200  to enroll as an associate. The computer  200  includes a conventional Web browser  204  which communicates with the merchant Web server  132  using the HTTP protocol. The Web server  132  accesses a local store  136  of HTML documents (Web pages) which can be requested, retrieved and viewed by the applicant via the Web browser  204 . These documents may, for example, include information about registering online to become an associate. Access to the merchant Web site  106  and the enrollment function is available to any client computer  200 , and the enrolling associate is not required to have an established Web site at the time of enrollment. 
     As further illustrated in  FIG. 2 , the enrolling associate begins the enrollment function by selecting the proper hyperlink from the merchant Web page  136  containing online registration instructions. The merchant Web server  132  accesses a local store of HTML documents  136  and returns an online registration application document  208  (also shown in  FIGS. 3   a - 3   c ) to the enrolling associate&#39;s Web browser  204 . The enrolling associate can then fill out the detailed online application form  208 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 3   a - 3   c , a preferred of the online application form  208  is shown. The application requests information about the enrolling associate, including the Web server to be used for the associate&#39;s Web site, the associate Web site&#39;s descriptive name, and the e-mail address of the enrolling associate. Many alternative formats to the online application form are possible and  FIGS. 3   a - 3   c  are only representative of the types of information that may be requested. 
     With further reference to  FIG. 2 , once the electronic application form  204  is completed by the enrolling associate, it is sent from the associate&#39;s computer  200  to the merchant Web server  132  for further processing. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, other forms of enrollment processing may be used, including but not limited to regular mail and electronic mail. In addition, although the automated enrollment function is preferably handled by the same computer system that handles the referral processing function, these functions could be performed by dedicated, physically distinct computer systems or sites. 
     In response to submission of the enrollment form, the merchant Web server  132  initiates a computer program  144  comprising enrollment software that processes the information contained on the electronic application form  208 . In one implementation, an agent is used to scan the application text for pre-specified terms, and to flag the application for further review (such as by a staff member) if such a term exists. If no such term is found, and the application is complete, the enrollment software automatically accepts the application. 
     As part of this online registration, once the application has been processed (either automatically or with human intervention), the enrollment software generates a unique store ID to be assigned to the associate. In addition, the enrollment software creates a database entry corresponding to the enrolling associate and stores the store ID and the information provided by the enrolling associate as a unique entry in an associate database  160 . The database may be any type of data repository including, for example, an SQL table or ASCII text file. This database entry allows the merchant Web site  106  to properly track and credit associate referrals, as further described below. 
     Next, the computer program  144  automatically formats and transmits an electronic mail message to the e-mail address of the approved associate. This electronic mail message provides detailed information about setting up an associate&#39;s Web site, including instructions on how to create HTML documents with referral links. These instructions specify a predefined format for embedding the store ID and unique product IDs with the HTML link structures. In addition, the e-mail message includes the unique store ID (generated by the enrollment software), and includes instructions on obtaining unique product IDs. The associate can obtain the unique product IDs by browsing the merchant Web site  106 . Alternatively, the unique product IDs may be obtained by the associate through a specific electronic mail request, or may be provided by the merchant Web site when the initial electronic mail response is sent. A preferred set of linking instructions that are sent to new associates is included as Appendix A. 
       FIG. 4  illustrates a preferred format of a URL  400  used by an associate to create a referral link to the merchant Web site. This format is recognized by parsing software ( FIG. 1 ) that runs on the merchant Web site. The URL  400  comprises the merchant Web server information  402 , the unique product ID  404 , the unique store ID  406 , and an associate commission scheme ID  408 . The unique store ID  406  represents the information created and stored in the associate&#39;s database during the associate enrollment process described above. In the AMAZON.COM implementation, the unique product ID  404  is the ISBN of a book that is available from the AMAZON.COM Web site. The associate commission scheme ID is an optional feature that can be used to specify a commission percentage or method for calculating the referral commission. 
     Upon receipt of the special linking instructions, the associate can begin to build the content (catalog documents) of the associate&#39;s Web site, including the descriptions of the products to be featured on the site. An associate can begin to refer customers to the merchant Web site  106  at anytime; however, no credit may be given to the associate for referred customers until the associate has included properly-formatted referral links within its product catalog. Additionally, referral credit may be withheld if the merchant has not yet authenticated and qualified the associate Web site for business. 
     4. REFERRAL TRANSACTION FUNCTION 
     A preferred method for processing referral events will now be described with reference to  FIGS. 5-7 . Referring to  FIG. 5 , which depicts an example sequence of events, a customer accesses an associate&#39;s Web site  100  via the customer computer  108 . The customer computer  108  includes a conventional Web browser  112  which communicates with the associate&#39;s Web server  116  using the HTTP protocol. As depicted by events A and B, the Web server  116  accesses a local store of catalog documents  120  (Web pages) which can be requested, retrieved and viewed by the customer via the Web browser  112 . As described above, these catalog documents  120  include information about the various products featured at the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . Preferably, this information includes editorial descriptions, reviews, and recommendations generated by the associate. 
       FIG. 6  illustrates an example HTML catalog document (Web page)  120  in accordance with the present invention. The customer views the product catalog document  120  via the Web browser  112  in order to select a particular product (book) offered through the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . In this example, the catalog document  120  comprises a graphic icon  600  that is a scaled-down replica of an actual book cover. The graphic icon  600  also functions as a hyperlink, allowing the customer to click on the icon with a mouse in order to link to the merchant Web site  106 . The document  120  includes the title  602  and author of the book  604 , and includes an editorial description and recommendation of the book  606  from the associate. The catalog document  120  also contains another textual hyperlink  608 , allowing the customer to link to the merchant Web site  106  and initiate referral transaction processing. Typically, the associate&#39;s product catalog (which may include multiple catalog pages) contains several referral links (with different product IDs), each corresponding to a different product sold by the merchant 
       FIG. 7  is an HTML source code listing which illustrates a preferred format for including a referral link within an HTML catalog document. The source code of  FIG. 7  corresponds to the product catalog document  120  illustrated in  FIG. 6 . In this example, the referral link (included between the HTML anchor tags “A” and “/A”) consists of the URL http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0809232022/skinetA/ and the corresponding textual description “Click here to order Terrain Skiing!.” The URL is identified as such by the standard HREF (hypertext reference) tag. The portion of the URL preceding “skinetA” uniquely identifies a product detail page (of the AMAZON.COM site) of a book having an ISBN of 0809232022. As described below, the “skinetA” portion of the URL identifies both the referring associate and a commission scheme. The referral link is included within the document such that selection by the customer of the text “Click here to order Terrain Skiing!” causes the Web browser  112  to transmit the URL on the Internet  104  via a standard HTTP message. 
     Further referring to  FIG. 5 , upon clicking or otherwise selecting the referral link  608  of the associate&#39;s catalog document  120  (event C), the Web browser  112  communicates with the merchant Web server  132  (events D-F) to access HTML documents  136  of the merchant Web site  106 . Initially, the customer is shown a product detail page that provides detailed information about the selected product, and allows the customer to add the selected product to the shopping cart (described below). The Web server  132  also serves Web pages (including dynamically-generated pages) that display and allow the customer to edit the contents of the shopping cart, and that allow the customer to proceed to a check-out area to order the selected products. 
     Once the customer has linked to the merchant Web site  106 , the customer can use the navigational controls of the Web browser  112  to return to the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . In addition, the detail page and/or the shopping cart page may be provided with a hyperlink to allow the customer to return to the associate&#39;s Web site  100 . Another alternative is for the associate Web site  100  to be created using an HTML frame format. The bottom frame can be designated as the target area frame for the merchant&#39;s Web site  106 . The top frame can provide navigational controls for the customer to return to the associate&#39;s Web site  100  after selection of a particular product at the merchant&#39;s Web site  106 . This allows the customer to maintain an associate&#39;s Web page frame while viewing and processing product purchases at the merchant&#39;s Web site  106 . 
     Following the referral event, the customer can browse the merchant Web site  106  for additional products, and can add these products to the shopping cart. In one configuration option, the referring associate is given commission credit for all additional products thereafter selected (during the current browsing session) from the merchant Web site  106 , assuming the customer subsequently purchases these products. In another configuration option, the associate is only credited for the purchase of the product that was the subject of the referral. 
     The sequence of events that takes place when the customer clicks on the referral link  608  will now be described in greater detail. Before the product detail page  136  is sent to the customer&#39;s Web browser  112 , the merchant Web server  132  initiates a computer program  144  to conduct several processing steps. As depicted by event E 1  in  FIG. 5 , the computer program  144  executes parsing software ( FIG. 1 ) to parse the URL passed to the merchant Web server  132 . The parsing software extracts the unique product ID (ISBN), the unique store ID associated with a particular associate, and an optional associate commission ID from the URL data string. For example, if the URL string is http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0809232022/mystoreA/, the parsing software parses the string to extract the unique product ID (ISBN) of 0809232022, the unique store ID of “mystore,” and the commission ID of “A.” In one implementation, the software  144  uses the commission ID to calculate an appropriate commission (e.g. 10% of merchant&#39;s sales price) to apply to the associate&#39;s account. As described below, if the customer subsequently adds the selected product to the shopping cart, the extracted information is recorded within a shopping cart data structure that corresponds to the customer. 
     5. UNIFIED SHOPPING CART FUNCTION 
     As discussed above, the present invention provides a system for maintaining a unified shopping cart that stores product information associated with product referrals from multiple Web sites, and keeps track of the sources (associates) of such referrals. One benefit of this feature is that it enables the customer to perform a single “check out” to purchase products from multiple Web sites. Additionally, this feature allows the merchant Web site  106  to accurately track and credit each associate, on a per-product-sale basis, that has referred a customer. For example, if, upon “check-out” from the merchant Web site  106 , the customer has three books listed in the shopping cart, each of which resulted from a referral from a different associate Web site, each associate will be credited for its respective referral. While the shopping cart feature is particularly useful in the context of the disclosed referral system, the feature can also be applied to other types of Internet shopping systems that support shopping from multiple Web sites, including systems that use remote “agents” to monitor Web sites based on pre-specified selections of the customer. 
     The data structures and processing steps that implement the shopping cart will now be described with further reference to  FIG. 5 . As indicated above, the shopping cart maintains a customer-specific record of the products that have been selected by the customer, including the identities of any associate Web sites that acted as referral sources with respect to such products. Preferably, the computer program  144  maintains this information in a data structure that is stored on the Web site  106  for an extended period of time (such as one week) since the last access to the shopping cart by the user. This allows the customer to discontinue and later resume a shopping session without loss of the shopping cart data. 
     Upon customer selection of a referral link, the computer program  144  utilizes the customer cookie information  140  passed through an HTTP call to determine whether the particular customer (or technically, the customer computer  108 ) already has an open shopping cart (event E 2 ). As part of this process, the computer program  144  executes cookie processing software ( FIG. 1 ), which assigns a unique customer ID to the customer based on the cookie information  140 . If the customer&#39;s Web browser  112  does not support the use of cookies (or if the cookies feature is disabled) the program  144  uses URL information received from the Web browser to generate the customer ID. 
     The customer ID is in turn used by the software  144  to identify any shopping cart currently associated with the customer. If no shopping cart exists for the customer, a new shopping cart structure (which includes the customer ID) is generated within the shopping cart database  152 . The customer ID is also stored in a customer database  148 . The algorithm used by the program  144  to generate the customer IDs is such that a cookie retrieved from the same customer computer will consistently produce the same customer ID. Thus, assuming the customer always uses the same computer to access the merchant site  106 , and that the browser  112  supports the use of cookies, the customer will be assigned the same customer ID, and will be associated with any existing shopping cart. 
     In one implementation, once the customer has been referred to the merchant site  106  and the customer ID has been determined, the merchant site dynamically includes this ID within hyperlinks of the detail page and other Web pages that are sent to the customer computer  108 . When the customer subsequently selects such a link (such as to add a selected product to the shopping cart), the customer ID is automatically transmitted to the merchant site  106  as part of the HTTP message. This allows the merchant site  106  to identify the customer (and shopping cart) without the need to re-request the cookie from the customer computer. 
     During the process of displaying detail pages and allowing the customer to add products to the shopping cart, neither the merchant site  106  nor the associate sites have access to the customer&#39;s personal information (name, address, credit card number, etc.). Thus, the system advantageously allows the customer to shop anonymously. Only when an order is actually submitted does the merchant site  106  obtain access to the customer&#39;s information, and at no time is the information provided to the associate sites. 
     With further reference to  FIG. 5 , the shopping cart is stored as a table or data structure within the shopping cart database  152 , along with individual product selections made by customers. If the customer has an existing shopping cart, the computer program  144  will create another product selection entry within the shopping cart database  152 , as indicated generally by event E 3 . If the customer does not have an existing shopping cart, then the computer program will create a new shopping cart data structure within the shopping cart database  152 . The product selection entry within the shopping cart database  152  includes the store ID and product ID. If a product is selected directly from the merchant Web site  106 , the corresponding store ID field may be blank or encoded with merchant-specific information. Other information may be stored in the shopping cart to implement the specific business procedures of the particular merchant. 
     When the customer subsequently purchases a product or products contained in the shopping cart, the associate&#39;s unique store ID maintained in the associate data structure  160  is used to appropriately credit the associate&#39;s account. During this process (or at the time of the referral) the computer program  144  determines whether the store ID represents a valid (enrolled) associate in the associates database  160 . The processing at the merchant Web site  106  maintaining the associate&#39;s store ID in the shopping cart allows the system to obtain pricing information for a product and associate. In this way, the computer program  144  can be configured to generate special discounts or pricing incentives to the customer or associate depending on a particular business relationship. 
     The shopping cart stored in the shopping cart database  152  is maintained by the computer program  144  running at the merchant Web site  106  that monitors the open entries (non-closed shopping carts) in the shopping cart database  152 . The shopping cart database  152  includes the customer ID, the date the shopping cart was opened (open date), and the date last accessed (touch date). The shopping cart database is monitored by the computer program  144  to purge all shopping carts that have been inactive (untouched) for a pre-defined period of time, such as one week. 
       FIG. 8  illustrates an example of an HTML catalog document (Web page)  136  corresponding to the product detail page. After processing a referral URL, the merchant Web server  132  sends the detail page  136  to the customer&#39;s Web browser  112  to provide the customer with additional information about the selected product. The product detail page includes the merchant&#39;s information (price, standard description, etc.) about the selected product. The product detail page  136  is shown with the URL passed to the customer Web browser  112  from the merchant Web server. 
     The URL (shown at the top of  FIG. 8 ) comprises the unique customer ID  800  (obtained from the customer&#39;s cookie or URL information), the product ID  802  (shown as the ISBN of the Terrain Skiing book), the store ID  804  (shown as the “skinet” Web site), and the associate commission ID  806  (the letter “A”). Once the customer has reviewed the product detail page  136 , the customer can select the “Add it to your Shopping Cart” hyperlink  808 . 
     When the customer clicks on this hyperlink  808 , the merchant Web server  132  returns a dynamically-generated HTML document that displays the contents of the shopping cart. 
       FIG. 9  illustrates an example HTML document  136  (Web page) corresponding to the customer shopping cart. The customer shopping cart document  136  displays information about the products currently selected by the customer for prospective purchase. In this example, the selection item  902  is displayed to the customer as the “Terrain Skiing” book previously selected. From this page  136 , the customer may leave the shopping cart page, without proceeding to check-out, by either selecting the “continue shopping” link  904  or by using a Web browser navigational control to proceed to a different Web page. 
       FIG. 10   a  represents another associate&#39;s Web site where the customer can view products featured with editorial comments. For purposes of this example, it may be assumed that the customer proceeded directly to this site (e.g., by selecting a “favorite places” URL) from the shopping cart page of  FIG. 9 . If the customer selects the hyperlink  1000 , the merchant Web server returns the product detail page for the “Cooking with Daniel Boulud” book, as illustrated in  FIG. 10   b . The customer may then add this book to the shopping cart by selecting the “Add it to your Shopping Cart” hyperlink  1002 , and the customer will then be brought to the shopping cart Web page illustrated in  FIG. 10   c . The shopping cart now has product selection items corresponding to the two books selected by the customer during the shopping session, and each of these product selection items is stored in the shopping cart database to uniquely identify the respective associate that made the referral. When the customer selects the “Proceed to Checkout” hyperlink  1004  on the shopping cart Web page, the merchant Web site returns a form document (not shown) that allows the customer to specify payment information, shipping information, and other information needed to process the order. 
     As illustrated by the above example, one customer shopping cart can have line items (corresponding to book selections) from many different associate Web sites. In addition, the shopping cart can include line items of books that have been selected directly from the merchant As described above, because the shopping cart keeps track of each referral, the referring associates can efficiently be credited for their respective referrals upon order submission, without the need for the customer to perform multiple “check-outs.” 
     The merchant Web site includes credit generation software for calculating associate referral credit. Referral credit may be calculated in any of a number of ways depending on the associate and merchant business relationship, and may be provided to the associate on a periodic basis, such as at the end of each calendar quarter. For example, the associate may be paid a fixed percentage of the list selling price. As indicated above, commission payments may be made automatically using an appropriate electronic payment method. 
     As will be appreciated from the foregoing, the shopping cart feature of the system enables the customer to view the entire shopping experience as a seamless, automated shopping session. The seamless nature of the session allows the customer to shop for products based on the marketing expertise of the associates, while conveniently utilizing the merchant&#39;s order fulfillment resources. 
     6. REPORT GENERATION FUNCTION 
     The merchant Web site also preferably includes report generation software ( FIG. 1 ) that automatically generates and transmits associate feedback reports to respective associates, based on information stored by the merchant Web site. The software can be configured to generate the reports on a daily, weekly, monthly and/or annual basis. The information contained within these reports enables the associates to evaluate the effectiveness of their Web sites on a per-product basis. 
     One report produced by the AMAZON.COM site is the “Weekly Activity Report.” An example of such a report is included as Appendix B. This report provides information about the number of books ordered through the associate&#39;s referral links, the number of selections (hits) of each referral link, and the amount of referral credit earned on orders in the time period. 
     Various other types of information can be provided within the feedback reports to assist the associates in conducting business. For example, the reports can provide anonymous demographic data about the customers that made purchases from the associate site, including the geographic regions (as determined from shipping addresses) of such customers. Additionally, the reports can provide special notices, including notices about books that pay lower referral credit to associates, and any problems occurring with an associate&#39;s referral links. The report generation feature also may provide associates with the ability to access an on-line menu to generate custom feedback reports (such as a report of the number of referrals during a specific period of time), or to set up a report profile that specifies the content, format and frequency of the automated reports. 
     7. CONCLUSION 
     While the invention has been described herein with reference to certain preferred embodiments, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and not to limit the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be defined only in accordance with the claims that follow. 
     In the following claims, reference characters used to designate claim steps are provided for convenience of description only, and are not intended to imply any particular order for performing the steps. 
     APPENDIX A 
     Date: Tue, 24 Jun. 1997 02:11:28-0700 (PDT) 
     To: mystore@aol.com 
     Subject: Amazon.com Books: Thank you for your application 
     Cc: associates@amazon.com 
     Thanks for submitting your application to participate in the Amazon.com Associates Program. Your application has been temporarily approved. We&#39;ll contact you by e-mail once we have reviewed and approved your application. 
     *Important*: Be sure to save this email message—you will need some of the information here to properly set up your links to Amazon.com. 
     You can set up your Web site now. You have been assigned a unique Associates ID. You&#39;ll use this ID when linking your sponsoring Web site into our catalog; detailed instructions are included at the end of this message. 
     Your unique Associates ID is: mystore. 
     Using the Amazon.com Brand Name 
     As you may already know, Amazon.com has received a great deal of very positive press coverage since we opened. From The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek and the Associated Press to PC Magazine and WebWeek, mainstream and industry press alike have helped to make the Amazon.com brand name one of the more well-known among Internet sites.
 
Our extensive advertising campaign reaches users of many major Web services and search tools, and our printed ads are found in places like the New York Times Review of Books. You should consider using not only our name but one of the logos or banners found on our site at:
         http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/assoc-art.html
 
so that your visitors have the chance to recognize our name as a familiar and trustworthy Internet retailer working in association with you.
 
Suggestions for Successful Presentation:
 
We&#39;ve put a page on our Web site filled with suggestions for building a great online bookstore. These tips are taken from our most successful Associates, and we highly recommend reading them. Follow the link on our home page to “Build Your Own Bookstore”, and from there link to “Build a Great Bookstore”. You can also connect directly at this URL:
   http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/assoc-success-tips.html
 
How to Link into Our Catalog:
 
You can use any sort of book descriptions, review material and graphics that you like when describing books on your Web site. All we need is a separate link into our catalog for each book you wish to recommend. You may add or remove these links at any time without our prior approval; as long as they follow the prescribed format we&#39;ll detect them automatically when they are used.
 
Each link to our catalog will be the same except for the ISBN of the book. You&#39;ll see the “isbn=” part of the link at the end of each example below. To find the ISBN of the book you wish to list, use our Web site and search for that book with any of our search tools. The ISBN for each edition (hardcover, paperback, book on tape) is displayed on the detail page for that book.
 
Remember—you may change which books you list whenever you like. You won&#39;t need our permission and it&#39;s not even necessary to advise us of the changes—they&#39;ll be automatically detected and commissioned properly.
       

     Example 
     For each book you recommend, link it to us like this: 
     http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1234567890/mystoreA/ 
     Note: You *must* use a capital A at the end of this link, not a lower-case a. 
     Of course, the ISBN will change for each book. Do not include any spaces or dashes in the ISBN when making these links. Also, make sure to check our catalog first—we can only sell what&#39;s listed there. 
     VERY IMPORTANT: If you copy the URL of a book page from our Web site and modify it to fit the format above, be sure to remove the 19-character shopping cart ID that appears at the end of the bookmarked or copied URL. Your store code should immediately follow the ISBN as in the example above. If you leave this in your modified links, they will not work properly.
 
The information we have about your Web site is as follows:
 
Contact e-mail Address:
         mystore@aol.com
 
Contact address:
   John Doe   1234 East Road   Anytown   WA   12345
 
Payee e-mail address:
   mystore@aol.com
 
Payee address:
   Doe Enterprises, Inc.   1234 East Road   Anytown   WA   12345
 
Description of books you intend to list:
 
Business Books—How to Business Books
 
Sponsoring Web site name:
 
Sponsoring Web site URL:
 
Your Web site name, in the format we may use on our website:
   Mystore—Anytown, Wash. in association with Amazon.com Books
 
If you have any questions, you can e-mail us at associates@amazon.com and we&#39;ll be happy to help.
 
Once again, thanks for your application.
 
Sincerely,
 
Associates staff
 
Amazon.com Books
 
http://www.amazon.com/
 
2.5 million titles, consistently low prices
       

     APPENDIX B 
     Amazon.com Associates Program 
     Weekly Activity Reports 
     Every week, we e-mail our Associates a detailed activity report so that they can track the effectiveness of their efforts. A sample of the report shows what you can expect to receive weekly: 
     Sample Weekly Activity Report 
     Last Week&#39;s Sales Results 
     Note: This report includes a column labeled “ORDERED,” which is the weekly number of copies for which orders have been placed through your special links. Only after these orders are paid for and shipped will they actually count toward your referral fee. Some of these orders may later be canceled, customers&#39; credit cards may be declined, and occasional returns should be expected; in any of these cases, the referral fee will not be earned.
 
The column labeled “HITS” represents the number of times one of your visitors clicked on a book (this column can help you gauge your visitors&#39; interest in the books you are selling).
 
The column labeled “REFERRAL FEE” represents the referral fees your site has earned on orders. Please remember that we pay you based on orders *shipped*, so your actual Referral Fee may be somewhat lower than the fee stated here.
 
Look for special notices in the titles listed below. They can help you track books that may not pay referral fees and identify certain problems with the link format you may be using
 
**1** indicates that this item is currently being featured at a discount of more than 30%.
 
**2** indicates that this item is “special order” or carries no discount
 
Other notes may indicate problems with a link format or items no longer carried in our catalog.
 
Quarter-to-Date Books Ordered: 105
 
Quarter-to-Date Qualified Book Revenue: 4266.46
 
Quarter-to-Date Referral Fees: 519.04
 
Click-throughs and sales by individual book for the week of 12 Jan. 97 through 18 Jan. 97 Store ID mystore
 
                                                                   ISBN   HITS   ORDERED   YOUR FEE   TITLE               0534517072   4   2   1.70   **2** Earth Online: An Internet Guide                        2 sold at 0% off list price of 16.95       0672309599   3   0   0.00   Microsoft SQL Server 6.5 Dba Survival G       0764530038   2   0   0.00   Danny Goodman&#39;s JavaScript Handbook       0789704927   355   11   65.99   Building Delphi 2 Database Applications                        11 sold at 20% off list price of 49.99       0789704943   2   0   0.00   Using VRML       0789707500   1   0   0.00   Delphi 2 Tutor: The Interactive Seminar       1568302894   110   6   8.10   **1** Creating Killer Web Sites: The                        A sold at 40% off the list price of 45.00       Totals:   477   19   75.79                        Number of Visitors on Jan. 19, 1997   68               Number of Visitors on Jan. 20, 1997   65               Number of Visitors on Jan. 21, 1997   54               Number of Visitors on Jan. 22, 1997   59               Number of Visitors on Jan. 23, 1997   50               Number of Visitors on Jan. 24, 1997   47               Number of Visitors on Jan. 25, 1997   32               Total Visitors this week   375                    
Number of Visitors on 19 Jan. 97 68
 
Number of Visitors on 20 Jan. 97 65
 
Number of Visitors on 21 Jan. 97 54
 
Number of Visitors on 22 Jan. 97 59
 
Number of Visitors on 23 Jan. 97 50
 
Number of Visitors on 24 Jan. 97 47
 
Number of Visitors on 25 Jan. 97 32
 
Total Visitors this week 375
 
NOTE: A “Visitor” is a person who clicks on book links from your site, and is counted as 1 visitor (above) regardless of the number of different titles they click on. We keep track of this by watching their shopping cart ID, which remains the same for every book they click on.
 
A “Hit” is any person clicking on a book link, and each click is counted as 1 hit. If the same visitor clicks on 5 different titles, we record 1 visitor and 5 hits. Therefore, you should expect the number of visitors to be lower than the total number of hits.