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Affiliate Partnership Highlight

We are delighted to feature SungazeGlasses.com, one of our latest affiliate partners. The owner, Adam Walters, an expert in website design and search engine optimization, has integrated a remarkable strategy to magnify both our brands' reach and revenue streams. Adam is also the driving force behind Muon Marketing, his own digital marketing company, which specializes in executing data-driven strategies for a variety of clients. 

A notable aspect of our partnership with SungazeGlasses.com is their adept use of content to target what users search for on prominent search engines. Their strategic use of articles exemplifies the efficacy of their keyword targeting and content creation. 

For instance, in anticipation of the highly-awaited 2024 Cleveland total solar eclipse, they crafted an article titled "Cleveland Eclipse 2024: Times, Safety & More." This targeted approach ensures that the content ranks high in search engine results for phrases that are likely to be sought after by potential consumers in those areas.

In doing so, SungazeGlasses.com succeeds in not only attracting a high volume of organic traffic but also providing valuable information to its audience.

In addition to their SEO eclipse strategies, SungazeGlasses.com employs an extensive email outreach campaign targeted at businesses situated in the path of totality for the upcoming solar eclipse. Through this outreach, they inform the businesses about the spectacular nature of the event and its potential to attract a large audience in need of specialized eclipse glasses. 

Adam Walters is planning to take his marketing strategies to the ground by returning to his home state of Ohio in March. He intends to station himself in high-traffic areas such as grocery stores and sporting events to sell the eclipse glasses directly to consumers. 

Additionally, Adam will approach local businesses to inform them of the impending total solar eclipse and the lucrative opportunity to sell eclipse glasses to their customers. Not stopping at pure commercial activities, Adam will also make generous donations of eclipse glasses to local libraries and schools. This will not only bring about goodwill within the community but is also expected to funnel more traffic to both his and our website, thereby increasing the potential for more affiliate income.

Seize the Opportunity With Our Affiliate Program

Seize a lucrative opportunity by joining the EclipseGlasses.com Affiliate Program. By signing up, you receive a unique URL, acting as your gateway to earn a 10% commission on every sale referred.

The seamless integration facilitates effortless redirection to EclipseGlasses.com, ensuring accurate tracking and rewarding of your referral efforts. Capitalize on this celestial event by signing up for the affiliate program, and start a journey toward financial growth and community engagement.

  • Jason Lewin

American Paper Optics launches "Get Eclipsed!" Back-to-School Education Campaign

MEMPHIS, TennesseeAug. 31, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- In sync with back-to-school, Óptica de papel americana (APO) announces the kick-off of a new "Get Eclipsed!" Education Campaign over the next eight months. APO is the World's Leading Manufacturer of "NASA selected" Safe Gafas Eclipse solar. The goal is to raise awareness for the two upcoming eclipses, including the October 14, 2023 Annular Eclipse and April 8, 2024 Total Solar Eclipse, through a multi-media campaign that will include books, webinars, podcasts, apps, social media, videos and more.

Based on 33 years of experience and manufacturing over 200 million safe solar eclipse glasses, American Paper Optics experts will be educating everyone on the upcoming eclipses and where to get the best views. In addition, APO will share why everyone needs to wear safe solar eclipse glasses to watch both the 2023 and 2024 eclipses that will be seen across the U.S.

APO CEO/Founder John jurit says , "With over 32 million people living in the "Path of Totality" for the North American Eclipse (April 8, 2024), which is three times more than the 2017 Total Solar Eclipse, the time is now to educate everyone on the "Ring of Fire" Annular Eclipse (October 14, 2023), that will serve as the 'warm up act for the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse'. We don't want people to miss out on the record-breaking 2024 eclipse because there won't be another one like it until 2045."

American Paper Optics' Safe Solar Eclipse Glasses are ISO Certified, "NASA selected", and Made in the USA. APO was chosen by NASA to manufacture their custom branded Eclipse Glasses in various styles. After a successful campaign with NASA in 2017, APO was once again picked to manufacture their safe solar glasses for the upcoming eclipses in 2023 and 2024. These Eclipser™ glasses will be distributed via their public outreach programs to build awareness for these upcoming events.

The "Get Eclipsed!" Education Campaign tools will include:

1.    APO's "NASA Selected" Eclipse Safe Solar Glasses
2.    "Get Eclipsed" book by Fred Espenak
3.    Fun Facts about the 2 Upcoming Eclipses
4.    Exclusive Bill Nye The Science Guy gafas de Eclipse solares seguras
5.    Solar Snap –The Eclipse App – developed by Astronomer Doug Duncan
6.    Graphic Novel "The Moonies – Journey to The Total Solar Eclipse" by Meg Jerit
7.    Moon Pies
8.    Monthly Eclipse 101 Webinars
9.    EclipseGlasses.com website
10.    Social Media campaign
11.    FAQs with eclipse viewing safety tips
12.    Media Interviews and More

To get up-to-speed quickly, anyone can read American Paper Optics' book, "Get Eclipsed" that comes with two gafas de Eclipse solares seguras. The book was written specifically for these two eclipse events by Fred Espenak, a retired astrophysicist from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, and his wife Patricia Totten Espenak, a retired science teacher, whose traveled widely with Fred to view celestial events. Readers can find maps and charts with the "Path of Annularity" (Oct 14, 2023) and "Path of Totality" (April 8, 2024) details, "Eclipse Magnitude" in your city, and eclipse times in major cities across the US, Canadá Y México.

Lla October 14, 2023, Annular Solar Eclipse will be a partial eclipse that will be able to be seen all over the United States. The "Path of Annularity" will provide the best views in parts of Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas Y Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. Cities such as Medford, Eugene, Albuquerque, Sante Fe, San Antonio Y Corpus Christi will provide the best views of what is known as the "Ring of Fire".

For the April 8, 2024, Total solar eclipse, Jason Lewin APO CMO adds, "88% of Americans watched the total eclipse in 2017 and the April 8, 2024, total eclipse is going to be even bigger. For this 'Super Bowl of the Sky', the 'Path of Totality' will cross 13 States, with millions of people having already made travel plans." Lewin, emphasizes, "While this is set to be an historic moment, we want to make sure that everyone is preparing accordingly. Take the day off, have a plan and make sure your glasses are MADE IN THE USA!"

Major cities for the April 8, 2024, Total Solar Eclipse, including Austin, Dallas, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Búfalo, Rochester, and Montreal will experience "total darkness", as long as the weather cooperates.

For more information on these 2023/2024 eclipse events, APO's safe solar eclipse glasses and their one-stop shop for eclipse needs, visit https://EclipseGlasses.com.

And follow @americanpaperoptics3d on Instagram to find 2023 and 2024 eclipse daily updates.

MEDIA CONTACT for interviews with American Paper Optics
Liz Kelly, 310-987-7207

Media Contact

Liz Kelly, PR for American Paper Optics, 310-987-7207, [email protected], https://www.eclipseglasses.com/

  • Jason Lewin

COUNTDOWN AT AMERICAN PAPER OPTICS STARTS NOW FOR 2024 ECLIPSE

By Jane Roberts, Daily Memphian Updated: April 08, 2023 9:16 PM CT | Published: April 08, 2023 3:03 PM CT

A year from today — April 8, 2024 — one of the biggest solar eclipses that many adults will experience in their lifetimes will cross the North American skies.

Getting ready for it is nothing short of an Olympic feat for John Jerit, president of American Paper Optics in Bartlett. The company is the largest manufacturer of 3D glasses in the world.

“I hope to sell 75 million glasses. We’ve already got orders shipped or sold (for) 26 million,” he says, against a sea of 3D glasses staring a vacant gaze across his showroom.

There are glasses with a cutout of the moon moving into the sun; another pair is framed with a die-cut cowboy hat tilted at a rakish angle. And then there are the colors and the branding for planetariums, zoos, businesses, foundations, even St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

All of them are for this day next year, a shining tribute to the magic and power of the sun and the stunning, eerie sobriety when it goes dark.

After next April, the next total eclipse in the U.S. won’t come until 2045.

The last time this part of the world was activated for an eclipse was in 2017, the Great American Eclipse. Jerit remembers it like it was the last full moon.

He sold 45 million pairs of 3D glasses for an estimated 12 million close enough to the totality to need eye protection.

The eclipse on his mind now will start in Mexico and run in a northeasterly line through Canada. It will take in tens of millions of people and hit some large U.S. cities, including Dallas; Columbus, Ohio; Cleveland, Ohio; and Buffalo, New York, before it heads into the low-population territory of northern Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.

“It will cross through 13 different states. This time (as compared to 2017), the event is going to be longer (some 4.5 minutes in some locations), and the path is going to be bigger,” said Jason Lewin, chief marketing officer for American Paper Optics.

“This time, everyone knows what’s going on. So with the three countries, you have a potential 500 million being able to see it.”

That’s a lot of potential customers. And headaches too.

In 2017, millions of American Paper Optics glasses sold by Amazon vendors were counterfeit copies made by Chinese pirates.

There was no way to know if the film “lenses” that protect the eyes from the dangerous glare were safe. Amazon canceled vendors and more popped up, Jerit said.

In the end, Amazon had no choice but to cancel all the unknown vendors selling glasses, which created huge last-minute orders, thousands in a day, for American Paper Optics.

To preempt as much anxiety as it can, American Paper Optics has manufactured all its Christmas glasses (about 2 million pairs) and other promotions, saving its equipment for the large press of work this fall.

“We’re marketing and selling out there,” Jerit said. “And we do a lot of direct mail,” including 10,000 fliers that went out this week to Fortune 500 companies, agencies and drugstore chains.

The plot for American Optics is complicated for the next 12 months because there will be a lesser eclipse in the western U.S. on Oct. 14, 2023. In the path of annularity, about 118 -137 miles wide, viewers will see the sun’s ring of fire around the moon.

That will pale next to the total eclipse next April 8.

Memphis, just east of the path of totality, will see it at about 97%.

Jerit, who’s come to appreciate this eclipsing science rather wryly, has taken to calling the October eclipse the Johnny Cash (for Ring of Fire) and the second, the Bonnie Tyler (Total Eclipse of the Heart).

There’s a reason for the wry. Two eclipses may encourage people to save their glasses for the second event, which is one thing.

But it may also mean there will be two big ordering seasons, the second happening at the last minute when they can’t find the saved pair or remember they never ordered.

Jerit doesn’t have much gray hair, but the thought of that makes what he does have grow a little thinner.

He’s been in this business for 33 years, and he knows something about human behavior when it comes to 3D glasses. And there is some history.

Starting in 2017, lots of people weren’t paying attention, he says, and didn’t order on time, creating a heartache of a rush a week out or less.

“Right now, we’re getting 50 orders a day. But in 2017, in the month leading up to it, we started getting 10,000, 11,000, 13,000 orders a day in that last couple of weeks,” Lewin said.

Jerit thinks people learned their lessons, including a few retailers who missed the chance at sales completely in 2017.

“They’re all on board now,” Jerit says.

The issue is getting them to feel the urgency he does. The glasses are sold in kiosks and in end-cap spaces designed by the customer.

If they don’t get their designs in, American Optics can’t process and ship the order.

“Why don’t you guys buy these glasses for half the price and stick them in one of our little flowerpot tubes and put them on your counter and quit worrying about everything else,” Jerit half mumbles to himself. “Because that is how they are going to sell. We’ve already proven that.”

The company makes other kinds of specialty glasses, including decoders that reveal hidden messages for product promotions, glasses with custom frames and glasses that create special effects when trained on fireworks or Christmas lights.

Its sales of solar eclipse glasses account for about 10% of revenue, Jerit said. Half of the revenue comes from sales to companies that use specialty glasses for promotions, and 40% comes from retail sales of the specialty glasses.

The other challenge is convincing retailers to put up their displays right after Labor Day to catch the October event and leave them up through the busy Christmas season and after for April 8 event.

Please trust us,” he says. “We know what we’re talking about. They won’t.”

If the displays are taken down, they will have to be remade for the second buying spree, Jerit says, shaking his head.

Part of the sales talk is telling people how to make the most of the April 8 event, including getting themselves to the place where it will last the longest. Jerit does not advise driving to the path of totality on the day of the eclipse, predicting the roads and freeways will be clogged with people.

“Fly to wherever you’re going a couple of days before and just turn into a vacation. And it’s a Monday, then come back on Tuesday.”

  • Jason Lewin

Dos minutos de magia: el eclipse solar total de 2020

Alexandra Schonfeld  

En un año que ha estado lleno de muchos puntos oscuros, el eclipse total de sol dio a la gente de toda Sudamérica una razón para mirar hacia arriba (con sus seguras gafas de eclipse solar). 

El único eclipse solar total de 2020 se produjo el lunes y fue visible en su totalidad a través de una pequeña sección del Pacífico Sur, Chile, Argentina y el sur del Océano Atlántico.

Los espectadores de una región más amplia en el Pacífico, el sur de Sudamérica y la Antártida pudieron ver un eclipse parcial, según Space.com. El último eclipse total de sol se produjo en julio de 2019 y fue apodado "Gran Eclipse Sudamericano", ya que fue visible casi exclusivamente en Sudamérica, de forma muy parecida al evento de hoy.

La próxima vez que se espera un eclipse solar completo será en diciembre de 2021, sobre la Antártida.

¿Qué es un eclipse solar? Se produce cuando la luna pasa por delante del sol desde el punto de vista de la tierra. Un eclipse solar total se produce cuando la totalidad del sol es cubierta por la luna.

La gente se reunió en Chile y Argentina, ataviada con máscaras, ponchos para la lluvia y gafas para el eclipse solar proporcionadas por Óptica de papel americana - una combinación más allá de la imaginación, para ver este evento que ocurre en algún lugar de la tierra una vez cada pocos años. A pesar de la fuerte lluvia que cayó horas antes de que el eclipse fuera visible en algunas partes de Chile, se despejó lo suficiente para que el espectáculo fuera al menos parcialmente visible para los espectadores.

Desde cada punto de observación, el eclipse duró desde algo más de dos minutos hasta seis segundos, según Space.com. La luna comenzó a pasar por delante del sol alrededor de las 9 de la mañana, hora del este, y la primera visión del eclipse total comenzó aproximadamente una hora y media después.

Y en un año de noticias extraordinarias cada día, casi no sorprende que el mismo día del eclipse total de sol, sea también el día en que el Lluvia de meteoros de las Gemínidas alcanzó su punto máximo. Durante la noche del 13 al 14 de diciembre, la lluvia fue más visible desde la Tierra. La mejor hora para ver el espectáculo habría sido alrededor de las 2 de la madrugada, según EarthSky.org.

  • Jason Lewin

Mitos sobre las gafas para un eclipse de sol

Hay muchos mitos relacionados con los eclipses solares, algunos de los cuales datan de hace siglos. En las antiguas civilizaciones de todo el mundo, un eclipse solar era típicamente visto como un presagio de un desastre de algún tipo. Estas culturas a menudo se asociaban con el oscurecimiento del cielo, o la oscuridad casi total en pleno día como signo de venganza de los dioses, la presencia de demonios o incluso la deglución de la Tierra o del Sol en algún tipo de evento apocalíptico.

  • Alexander Risse