A squeeze page is a very short sales letter (less then 100 words) with the main focus to entice the reader to opt-in or signup for a free report, ect. After the person signs up, you can hit them up with autoresponders that link back to your main web site to sell them on your product or service.
In the discipline of Direct Marketing, the subscriber list is considered the most important part of a mailing campaign. As a result, marketers devote a great deal of time and money to collecting a "list" of highly targeted subscribers. Common methods for gathering a mail list include Business Reply Cards (BRC), telemarketing, list rentals, and co-registration agreements. In the digital world, an email list serves the same purpose. A highly targeted list of email subscriber allows the owner to market his product and service with a fairly high probability of success. However, with the proliferation of spam, consumers are very careful about giving out their email addresses. To ease consumer concerns, experienced online businesses create "Squeeze Pages" that detail what the subscriber will be receiving and the businesses privacy standards. Businesses that responsibly use "Squeeze pages" have experienced substantial boosts in the visitor-to-subscriber conversion rates.
In short, a squeeze page is a page that forces a visitor to give you some personal information - squeezing info out of someone. The main purpose of squeeze pages is to get a subscriber who can then be bombarded with hundreds, if not thousands of sale emails. Hope this helps.
A squeeze page gives a first hand information about the products to be promoted. Actually, the essence of a squeeze page is to collect the name and e-mail address of a potential customer.Most of the time it comes before the sale of a product, mostly with affiliate marketing.