Spearleaf · Position Zero Playbook v11 · 2026-06-16 Start here Changelog
Reference

"Dan Kurtz - In-Page Push ads and Google Trends newsjacking"

Dan Kurtz on hijacking other people's news sites with unblockable In-Page Push ads and turning Google Trends into AI-built forced-conversion landing pages at half-cent clicks.

On this page

On Day 2, Dan Kurtz stepped outside the usual SEO conference track to teach paid ads, specifically In-Page Push (IPP): styled in-page HTML notifications that render on other people's news sites and cannot be blocked by ad blockers, iOS, or Android. His workflow newsjacks Google Trends into AI-generated advertorial "news" landing pages built in Claude and hosted on GitHub Pages or Cloudflare Pages, with menus and footers disabled so only his offers are clickable. He frames it as cheap, high-volume traffic that adapts to affiliate offers and to local lead gen alike.

Main takeaways

  1. In-Page Push ads are unblockable styled-HTML notifications. Unlike older browser push (opt-in rates falling, blocked by iOS a couple of years ago), IPP is an HTML element that loads 100% of the time as long as the device renders HTML. It avoids the opt-in entirely. Dan reports clicks as cheap as half a cent and 10x to 100x cheaper per click than normal paid sources.

  2. You run on other people's news sites, not your own. Dan describes it as "hijacking other people's news sites for fame and profit." He recommends Roller Ads ($50 minimum deposit) and MyBid ($100 minimum deposit) over Outbrain or Taboola, which he says charge $3,000 to $15,000 to set up. His files include ten total ad networks (two tested, eight untested).

  3. Newsjack Google Trends into AI-built forced-conversion landing pages. Export trending topics from Google Trends as CSV, run them through Claude agents to pick an angle and write an advertorial news page, then disable the menu and footer so the only clickable elements are the offers. Advertorial intermediary pages lift conversion from roughly 1 to 3 percent (direct) to about 10 to 13 percent.

  4. The same ad playbook adapts to local lead gen, not just affiliate. Swap the prompt to produce a state-specific storm or hurricane "preparedness" page for a roofer, with a click-to-call or a name/email/phone opt-in wired to a CRM. Dan says the same method works for AC, farmers, builders, attorneys (a GLP-1 lawsuit angle), and dietitians.

  5. Zone optimization is the single biggest profit lever in push. Cap clicks per zone (for example 100 per zone) to force even traffic distribution and avoid one publisher cluster draining the budget. A "zone" or "source ID" groups publisher sites like zip codes.

Key points

Ad type and economics

Networks and setup

Landing-page / forced-conversion build

Local lead-gen adaptation

Campaign ops, tracking, and scaling

Closing sponsor pitch

Source

Synthesized from Dan Kurtz's portion of the SEO Spring Training 2026 Day 2 session he shared with Brian Kato. Dan spoke from slides that were not provided as files (no deck file exists for his talk; the only deck from this session is Brian Kato's, which is not Dan's). The source notes live in the project knowledge folder, which is not published on the live site.