Monday, July 21, 2014

Make Money with Your Website

There are several lists with "ways to make money with a website" on the Internet, but none of them seem to be complete. That is why I decided to create this one. If you know a method that is not listed below, just let us know and we'll update it.
waystomakemoneywebsite.jpg
Notice that ways to make money with a website are different from ways to make more money from it. Methods to increase your traffic or click-through rate will help you make more money, but they do not represent a method of making money per se.
For example, one could suggest that blending AdSense ads with the content is a way to make money from a website. In reality it's not; it's just a way to make more money by improving your ad click-through rate. The real monetization method behind it is a PPC ad network.
The list is divided into direct and indirect methods, and examples and links are provided for each point. Enjoy!
Direct Methods

1. PPC Advertising Networks

Google AdSense is the most popular option under this category, but there are also others. Basically you need to sign up with the network and paste some code snippets on your website. The network will then serve contextual ads (either text or images) relevant to your website, and you will earn a certain amount of money for every click.

The profitability of PPC advertising depends on the general traffic levels of the website and, most importantly, on the click-through rate (CTR) and cost per click (CPC). The CTR depends on the design of the website. Ads placed abode the fold or blended with content, for instance, tend to get higher CTRs. The CPC, on the other hand, depends on the nice of the website. Mortgages, financial products and college education are examples of profitable niches (clicks worth a couple of dollars are not rare), while tech-related topics tend to receive a smaller CPC (sometimes as low as a couple of cents per click).

The source of the traffic can also affect the overall CTR rate. Organic traffic (the one that comes from search engines) tends to perform well because these visitors were already looking for something, and they tend to click on ads more often. Social media traffic, on the other hand, presents terribly low CTRs because these visitors are tech-savvy and they just ignore ads.

List of popular CPC advertising networks:
Google Adsense
Yahoo! Publisher Network (YPN)
BidVertiser
Chitika
Clicksor

2. CPM Advertising Networks

CPM advertising networks behave pretty much as PPC networks, except that you get paid according to the number of impressions (i.e., page views) that the ads displayed on your site will generate. CPM stands for Cost per Mille, and it refers to the cost for 1,000 impressions.

A blog that generates 100,000 page views monthly displaying an advertising banner with a $1 CPM, therefore, will earn $100 monthly.
CPM rates vary with the network, the position of the ad and the format. The better the network, the higher the CPM rate (because they have access to more advertisers). The closer you put the ad to the top of the page, the higher the CPM. The bigger the format (in terms of pixels), the higher the CPM.

You can get as low as $0,10 and as high as $10 per 1,000 impressions (more in some special cases). CPM advertising tends to work well on websites with a high page views per visitor ratio (e.g., online forums, magazines and so on).

List of popular CPM advertising networks:

Casale Media
Burst Media
Value Click
Advertising.com
Tribal Fusion
Right Media

3. Direct Banner Advertising

Selling your own advertising space is one of the most lucrative monetization methods. First and foremost because it enables you to cut out the middleman commissions and to determine your own rates. The most popular banner formats on the web are the 728×90 leaderboard, the 120×600 skyscraper, the 300×250 rectangle and the 125×125 button.

The downside of direct banner advertising is that you need to have a big audience to get qualified advertisers, and you will need to spend time managing the sales process, the banners and the payments.

Related links:
How to Find Advertisers for Your Website
Finding Advertisers for Your Blog
Direct Advertising Sales for Beginners
Openads Ad Server
OIO Publisher Ad Platform

4. Text Link Ads

After Google declared that sites selling text links without the nofollow tag would be penalized, this monetization method became less popular.
Many website owners are still using text links to monetize their sites, though, some using the nofollow tag and some not.

The advantage of this method is that it is not intrusive. One can sell text links directly through his website or use specialized networks like Text-Link-Ads and Text-Link-Brokers to automate the process.

Text link marketplaces and networks:
DigitalPoint Link Sales Forum
Text-Link-Ads
Text-Link-Brokers
TNX
LinkWorth

5. Affiliate Marketing

Affiliate marketing is a very popular practice on the Internet. Under this system you have a merchant that is willing to let other people (the affiliates) sell directly or indirectly its products and services, in exchange for a commission. Sometimes this type of advertising is also called CPA (cost per action) or CPL (cost per lead) based.

Affiliates can send potential customers to the merchant using several tools, from banners to text links and product reviews.
In order to find suitable affiliate programs you can turn to individual companies and publishers like Dreamhost and SEOBook, or join affiliate marketplaces and networks.

List of popular affiliate marketplaces and networks:
Commission Junction
ClickBank
Azoogle Ads
Link Share

6. Monetization Widgets

The latest trend on the web are widgets that let you monetize your website. Examples include Widgetbucks and SmartLinks. Some of these services operate under a PPC scheme, others behave like text link ads, others yet leverage affiliate links.

Their main differentiator, however, is the fact that they work as web widgets, making it easier for the user to plug and play the service on its website.

List of companies that provide monetization widgets:
WidgetBucks
ScratchBack
SmartLinks

7. Sponsored Reviews

PayPerPost pioneered this model, with much controversy on the beginning (related to the fact that they did not require disclosure on paid posts). Soon other companies followed, most notably Sponsored Reviews and ReviewMe, refining the process and expanding the paid blogging model.

Joining one of these sponsored reviews marketplaces will give you the opportunity to write sponsored posts on a wide range of topics. Not all bloggers are willing to get paid to write about a specific product or website (because it might compromise the editorial credibility), but the ones who do are making good money out of it.

If your blog has a big audience you could also offer sponsored reviews directly, cutting off the commissions of the middleman.

List of sponsored reviews and paid blogging networks:

PayPerPost
Sponsored Reviews
ReviewMe
BlogVertise
Smorty

8. RSS Feed Ads

With the quick adoption of the RSS technology by millions of Internet users, website owners are starting to find ways to monetize this new content distribution channel.

Feedburber already has its own publisher network, and you can sign-up to start displaying CPM based advertising on your feed footer. Bidvertiser recently introduced a RSS feed ad option as well, with a PPC scheme.

Finally, some blogs are also opting to sell banners or sponsored messages on their feed directly. John Chow and Marketing Pilgrim are two examples.
Related links:
Feedburner
BidVertiser
Pheedo

9. Sponsors for Single Columns or Events

If you website has specific columns or events (e.g., a weekly podcast, an interview series, a monthly survey, a special project) you could find companies to sponsor them individually.

This method increases the monetization options for website owner, while giving advertisers the possibility to target a more specific audience and with a reduced commitment.

Mashable illustrates the case well. They have several advertising options on the site, including the possibility to sponsor specific columns and articles, including the "Daily Poll" and the "Web 2.0 Invites."

Problogger also runs group writing projects occasionally, and before proceeding he publicly announce the project asking for sponsors.

10.Premium Content

Some websites and blogs give away part of their content for free, and charge for access to the premium content and exclusive tools.
SEOMoz is a good example. They have a very popular blog that gives advice and information on wide range of SEO related topics. On top of that visitors can decide to become premium members. It costs $48 monthly and it grants them access to guides, tools and other exclusive material.

11. Private Forums

While the Internet is populated with free forums, there is also the possibility to create a private one where members need to pay a single or recurring fee to join.

SEO Blackhat charges $100 monthly from its members, and they have thousands of them. Obviously in order to charge such a price for a forum membership you need to provide real value for the members (e.g., secret techniques, tools, and so on).

Performancing also launched a private forum recently, focused on the networking aspect. It is called The Hive, and the monthly cost is $10.
These are just two examples. There are many possibilities to create a private and profitable forum, you just need to find an appealing angle that will make it worth for the members.

List of popular forum software:
vBulletin
Simple Machines Forum
phpBB
Vanilla

12. Job Boards

All the popular blogs are trying to leverage job boards to make some extra income. Guy Kawasaki, ReadWriteWeb, Problogger you name it.
Needless to say that in order to create an active and profitable job board you need first to have a blog focused on a specific niche, and a decent amount traffic.

The advantage of this method is that it is passive. Once you have the structure in place, the job listings will come naturally, and you can charge anywhere from $10 up to $100 for each.

List of popular job board software:

JobThread
Web Scribe Job Board
SimplyHired Job-o-matic
Jobbex

13. Marketplaces
Sitepoint is the online marketplace by excellence. Some websites and blogs, however, are trying to replicate that model on a smaller scale.
Depending on your niche, a market place that allows your visitors to buy, sell and trade products could work well. Over the time you could start charging a small fee for new product listings.

The problem with this method is that there are no standard software on the web, so you would need to hire a coder to get a marketplace integrated into your website. You can see an example of a marketplaces being used on EasyWordpress and on Mashable.

14. Paid Surveys and Polls

There are services that will pay you money to run a small survey or poll on your website. The most popular one is called Vizu Answers.
Basically you need to sign up with them, and select the kind of polls that you want to run your site. Most of these services operate under a CPM model.

15. Selling or Renting Internal Pages

Million Dollar Wiki made this concept popular, but it was being used on the web for a long time around (check Pagerank10.co.uk for instance).
These websites sell for a single fee or rent for a recurring fee internal pages on their domain. Usually they have either high Pagerak or high traffic, so that people purchasing a page will be able to benefit in some way.

Implementing this method on a small blog would be difficult, but the concept is interesting and could be explored further.

16. Highlighted Posts from Sponsors

Techmeme probably pioneered this idea, but somehow it has not spread to other websites. The tech news aggregator displays editorial posts on the left column, and on the sidebar they have a section titled "Techmeme Sponsor Posts."

On that section posts from the blog of the advertisers get highlighted, sending qualified traffic their way. Considering that the monthly cost for one spot is $5000 and that they have around 6 sponsors at any given time, it must be working well.

17. Donations

Placing a "Donate" link or button on a website can be an efficient way to earn money, especially if your blog is on a niche where readers learn and gain value from your content. Personal development and productivity blogs, for instance, tend to perform well with donation based systems (one good example being Steve Pavlina).

A small variation of this method appeared sometime ago with the Buy Me a Beer plugin. This WordPress plugin enables you to insert a customized message at the bottom of each article, asking the readers to chip in for a beer or coffee.

18. In-text Adverting

In-text adverting networks like Kontera and Vibrant Media will place sponsored links inside your text. These links come with a double underline to differentiate them from normal links, and once the user rolls the mouse over the link the advertising will pop. Should the user click on it the site owner will make some money.

Some people make good money with this method, but others refrain from using it due to its intrusiveness. It is also interesting to note that very few mainstream websites have experimented with in-text advertising.

19. Pop-ups and Pop-unders

Pop-ups are a common yet annoying form of advertising on the Internet. If you are just trying to make a much money as possible from your website, you could experiment with them.

If you are trying to grow the traffic and generate loyal visitors, however, you probably should stay away from them. Just consider the hundreds of pop-up blockers out there: there is a reason why they are so popular.

Ad networks that use pop-ups:

Tribal Fusion
PayPopup
PopupAd
Adversal

20. Audio Ads

Also called PPP (Pay Per Play), this advertising method was introduce by Net Audio Ads. the concept is pretty simple: play a small audio advertising (usually 5 seconds) every time a visitor enters into your website. The user should not be able to stop it, creating a 100% conversion rate based on unique visitors.

The company is still rolling tests, but some users are reporting to get from a $4 to a $6 CPM. Regardless of the pay rate, though, this is a very intrusive form of advertising, so think twice before using it.

21. Selling the Website

Selling your website could be your last resource, but it has the potential to generate a big sum of money in a short period of time.
Market places on online forums like DigitalPoint and Sitepoint are always active with website buyers and sellers. Keep in mind that they most used parameter to determine the value of a website is the monthly revenue that it generates, multiplied by a certain number (the multiplier can be anything from 5 to 30, depending on the expectations of the seller, on the quality of the site, on the niche and other factors).

Some people also make money trading and flipping websites. They either create them from scratch or buy existing ones, and after some revamping they sell them for a profit.

Related links:
How To Buy A Website And Flip It For Profit
How To Sell A Website – How Much Is Your Website Worth?
Where to sell a website? How to go about selling it?
Indirect Methods

22. Selling an Ebook

Perhaps one of the oldest money making strategies on the web, using a website to promote a related ebook is a very efficient way to generate revenue.
You could either structure the website around the book itself, like SEOBook.com, or launch the ebook based on the success of the website, like FreelanceSwitch did we the book How to be a Rockstar Freelancer.

Related links:
Writing an ebook for your blog
How to sell ebooks
Processing payments for your ebook
How to sell digital products online
List of ebook selling software

23. Selling a Hardcover Book

Many authors and journalists leverage their blogs or websites to sell copies of hardcover books. Examples include Guy Kawasaki, Seth Godin and Malcolm Gladwell.

While most of these people were already renowned authors before they created their website, one could also follow the other way around. Lorelle VanFossen did exactly that with her Blogging Tips book. First she built her authority on the subject via her blog, and afterwards she published the book.

List of self publishing and publishing services:

Lulu
Self Publishing
iUniverse
WordClay

24. Selling Templates or WordPress Themes

As more and more people decide to get an online presence, website templates and WordPress themes become hotter and hotter.
On this segment you have mainstream websites like TemplateMonster, as well as individual designers who decide to promote and sell their work independently.

Brian Gardner and Unique Blog Designs are two examples of websites that make money with the sales of premium and custom WordPress themes.

25. Offering Consulting and Related Services

Depending on your niche, you could make money by offering consulting and related services. If you are also the author of your blog, the articles and information that you will share will build your profile and possibly certify your expertise on that niche, making it easier to gain customers.

Chris Garrett used a similar strategy. First he created a highly influential blog on the blogging and new media niche, and afterwards he started offering consulting services to clients with related problems and needs.

26. Creating an Email List or Newsletter

Email lists and newsletters represent one of the most powerful marketing and money making tools on the Internet. They offer incredible conversion rates, and the possibility to call people to action in a very efficient way.

Creating a big list is a difficult task though, so if you have a popular website you could leverage it to increase the number of subscribers on your list.
Yaro Starak is a famous Internet marketer, and if you visit his blog you will notice that right on top he has a section encouraging visitors to subscribe to his email newsletter. Yaro generates five figures in revenues each month from his email newsletters, proving that this method works.

List of software to manage email newsletters:
AWeber
SendStudio NX
PHP Autoresponder
Constant Contact

27. Mentoring programs

People are willing to pay for someone or something that will teach them and give them knowledge (as opposed to mere information). Education is one of the biggest industries in the world, and the online landscape behaves in a similar way.

Creating a mentoring program related to the niche of your website could be very profitable if you manage to structure and promote it adequately. There is a wide range of media and tools that you can use to deliver the information, from text articles to audio and video lessons.

Brian Clark leveraged the success of Copyblogger to launch a mentoring program teaching people how to build membership and how to sell content online. The program is titled Teaching Sells, and it costs $97 monthly. Sounds expensive, but they have over 1,000 members.

28. Creating a conference around the website

If your website takes off and becomes an authority on its niche, you could create a conference around it. Depending on the size of your audience, the event could attract thousands of people, and you could make money directly from conference passes and sponsors.

Search Engine Land, for instance, created a series of conferences that visit several cities on the United States and on other countries as well. The conferences are called Search Marketing Expo, and the tickets and passes cost thousands of dollars.

Increase Your Blog Traffic

One of the most common complaints that I hear from bloggers is the fact that no matter how hard they try, they can't grow their blogs past 100 or so daily page vies. Those early days are indeed the hardest, because you need to put hard work in without the certainty of achieving results.
If you are in that same situation, here is a simple strategy that will certainly increase your blog traffic and make you break the 1,000 daily page views mark. In fact, the strategy could be used even if your are already over that number but have reached a traffic plateau lately.
Just make sure to execute the 4 steps as planned and to spend the two hours and a half every day (obviously if you have more time available you can expand the time spent on each of the four steps proportionally).

First Step: Killer Articles (1 hour per day)

Spend one hour brainstorming, researching and writing killer articles (also called linkbaits, pillar articles and so on).
Notice that your goal is to release one killer article every week. If that is not possible aim for one every 15 days. So the one hour that you will spend every day will be dedicated to the same piece. In other words, expect killers articles to take from 5 up to 10 hours of work.
If you are not familiar with the term, a killer article is nothing more than a long and structured article that has the goal of delivering a huge amount of value to potential visitors. If you have a web design blog, for example, you could write an article with "100 Free Resources for Designers". Here are some ideas for killer articles:
create a giant list of resources,
write a detailed tutorial teaching people how to do something,
find a solution for a common problem in your niche and write about it, or
write a deep analysis on a topic where people have only talked superficially

When visitors come across your killer article, you want them to have the following reaction: "Holy crap! This is awesome. I better bookmark it. Heck, I better even mention this on my site and on my Twitter account, to let my readers and friends know about it."

Second Step: Networking (30 minutes per day)

Networking is essential, especially when you are just getting started. The 30 minutes that you will dedicate to it every day could be split among:

commenting on other blogs in your niche,
linking to the posts of bloggers in your niche, and
interacting with the bloggers in your niche via email, IM or Twitter.

Remember that your goal is to build genuine relationships, so don't approach people just because you think they can help to promote your blog. Approach them because you respect their work and because you think the two of you could grow together.

Third Step: Promotion (30 minutes per day)

The first activity here is the promotion of your killer articles. Whenever you publish one of them, you should push it in any way you can. Examples include:
letting the people in your network know about it (don't beg for a link though),

letting bloggers and webmasters in relevant niches know about it,
getting some friends to submit the article to social bookmarking sites,
getting some friends to Twitter the article, and
posting about the article in online forums and/or newsgroups.

If there is time left, spend it with search engine optimization, social media marketing and activities to promote your blog as whole. Those can range from keyword research to promoting your blog on Facebook and guest blogging.

Fourth Step: Normal Posts (30 minutes per day)

Just like a man does not live by bread alone, a blog does not live by killer articles alone. Normal posts are the ones that you will publish routinely in your blog, between the killer articles. For example, you could publish a killer article every Monday and normal posts from Tuesday through Friday. Here are some ideas for normal posts:

a post linking to an article on another blog and containing your opinion about it
a post informing your readers about a news in your niche
a post asking a question to your readers and aiming to initiate a discussion
a post highlighting a new resource or trick that you discovered and that would be useful to your readers

While killers articles are essential to promote your blog and bring new readers aboard, normal posts are the ones that will create diversity in your content and keep your readers engaged.

Advertisers for Your Website

Direct advertising sales is arguably the best method to monetize a website. Finding advertisers for your site and actually closing the deals, however, is not as straight forward. Over the past 6 months I had more than 10 high profile companies sponsoring Daily Blog Tips, and through out this article I will share what I have learned along the way.

The Pros
  • More money: The first advantage of selling your own ads is the fact that you will cut the middlemen out, increasing your revenue potential. Suppose you sell text link ads on your sidebar through a certain company, and the text links sell for $50 monthly. Since you are using the company network to sell the ads, they will eat 50% of the price, and you will end up earning only $25 monthly for each text link. If someone is willing to pay $50 for a text link on your site, though, it means that they are getting $50 of value out of it. Why, then, should you share that with someone else?
  • Independence: Sure, large advertising networks have access to a wider pool of advertisers, and they have more credibility to close the deals. But if you have all the requirements in place (see the section below) and spend some time looking at the right places, I am sure that you will be able to sell your own ads just as efficiently as the larger networks.
  • Flexibility: The third advantage of selling direct advertising is that you will have much more control over where and how the ads will be displayed (i.e., you can avoid intrusive advertising). Google Adsense is nice, but unless you blend it with the content — annoying some of the readers — you will get terribly low click-through rates.
  • Credibility: Finally, having sponsors and direct advertisers on your blog might help your credibility. Even small and poorly crafted blogs can stick some Adsense units here and there. Having established companies that are willing to partnership with your site, on other hand, can signal that your content has quality and that the site is somewhat professional.

The Cons
  • Time consuming: While selling your own ads has many advantages, it is no panacea. The first drawback of this monetization option is the time that it will consume. This time will be spent optimizing your website for the ads, finding potential advertisers, negotiating with them, and handling the administrative matters (e.g., making payments, tracking statistics, delivering reports and so on).
  • Many requirements: Selling direct adverting is not as easy as making money from Google Adsense. As you can see from the section below, you will need to have a popular blog, a professional looking design, special software and the like.
  • Unstable: Unless you close deals for very long periods, which is unlikely, you will find your self looking for new advertisers or optimizing your website to attract new ones every other month. The opposite is true for most advertising networks, where you just need to plug some code and they will do the rest of the work. (If your site or blog is just a hobby, therefore, direct advertising might not be the best option)
What You Need to Have in Place
  • A popular website: Before landing direct advertising deals you will need to have a good amount of traffic on your site. There is no "magical" number here, but a good rule of thumb would be 1000 daily unique visitors. If you are below that mark you should focus on building traffic instead of looking for advertisers. Other factors like Google Pagerank, RSS subscribers and Alexa rank might also help. (Notice that small websites might also be able to sell direct advertising, but usually the time spent on that will not justify the results)
  • A clear focus: You might have the most popular site on the Internet (well, not as extreme as that, but you get the point), but unless your site also has a very clear niche and a defined audience, advertisers will not find it very attractive. This means that you should avoid rambling about 100 different topics on the website. Advertisers want to deliver a message to specific people, and the more specific the better.
  • A professional looking design: If you are planning to monetize your website through sponsors, you probably should invest some money into a professional looking design. Advertisers will be associating their product or service with your website, and not too many of them would be willing to get mixed with an ugly, MySpace looking site.
  • Give visibility to the sponsors: This point is connected to the previous one. Not all templates and themes will be suitable for selling direct advertising. Preferably you want to have an idea of what kind of advertising you will sell (e.g., 468×60 banners, 125×125 banners, text links) and design your website according to those objectives. Advertisers want visibility, so reserve a good spot for them.
  • Adserver software: In order to serve your ads, rotate banners and track statistics you will need to install an Adserver. If you are looking for a simple solution you should try WP-Ads. This WordPress plugin will serve ads for specific ad zones that you create. The only drawback is that it does not count clicks (only impressions). If you need a more sophisticated solution check OpenAds. You will need to spend some time learning how to use it, but it offers virtually all the features you will ever need.
  • "Advertise Here" page: It is very important to have an "Advertise Here" page. On this page you want to give some details about the website, like audience, traffic and any other factor that might be of the interest of potential advertisers. Secondly, make sure that you have some link to that page on the navigation bar and if possible close to the zone where the ads will be displayed. You can see a perfect example of such layout on Copyblogger.com.
  • Standard letter to approach advertisers: While some advertisers will contact you after reading your "Advertise Here" page, the rest of them will need to be directly approached by you. In that case, it is a good idea to create a standard letter to contact the advertisers. There is no "one size fits all" solution here, but you can follow some general guidelines:
    1. Introduce yourself and quickly explain what the email is about
    2. Explain why you decided to contact them and what they have to gain
    3. Give details about your site (traffic, subscribers, topic, audience)
    4. Give details about the advertising options (location on the site, max number of advertisers, monthly price)
    That is it, after that information the advertisers should be able to decide if they are interested or not. If they reply, then you will fix the details. Bear in mind that all the info I mentioned should be contained in 2 or 3 paragraphs. If you send an essay to potential advertisers they will just skip it altogether.
  • Accepting payments: You might have everything in place, but if you are not able to cash payments — or more importantly, if advertisers are not able to pay easily  you will end up losing deals. PayPal is the best option here. Notice, however, that a personal account will not suffice. You will need at least a premier account to be able to accept credit cards.
Where to Find the Advertisers

Once you have your direct advertising program established, you will start to receive inquiries from people. On the beginning, however, you will need to hunt advertisers down. Do not get discouraged if get turned down initially, provided you have all the aforementioned requirements, sooner or later you will find someone willing to take a shot on your site.
  • People linking to your site or articles: If a company is willing to link to your articles or to add your website under its "Links" or "Resources" section, it is also probably willing to discuss about advertising on your site. Keep track of those incoming links.
  • People leaving comments/e-mails: The same principle applies to people leaving comments on your blog or sending you e-mails. If among them you see an employee or the owner of a company that could be interested on your website, bingo! Contact him or her and get the conversation going.
  • AdWords advertisers: Through out your search for advertisers you will notice that most of the established companies are not aware of the benefits of online advertising. If a certain company is already spending money on Google AdWords, however, it is very likely that it would also be open to other forms of online advertising. Think about some keywords that are related to your topic and Google them. Check the sponsored links that will appear and contact them. (You can also check the advertisers that appear on the Adsense units of related websites)
  • Other advertising networks: While Google AdWords is by far the largest advertising network on the Internet, there are many others that could be useful. Check the companies that are spending money on AdBrite, Text-Link-Ads, BlogAds, SponsoredReviews and so on.
  • Banner advertisers on similar sites: Check out popular websites on your niche and see what companies are advertising there. Provided you offer them an interesting deal (i.e., a reasonable price for your size), I am pretty sure they will be interested.
  • Create a "Potential Sponsors" bookmark folder: This technique produced outstanding results for me. I have a bookmark folder on my browser called "Potential Sponsors." Every time I come across a company or website that could be interested in sponsoring my website, I bookmark it. Currently I have over 100 bookmarked sites on that folder, and I have not approached half of them yet.
How Much to Charge
  • You need to provide value: It is all about value. A potential sponsor or advertiser will want to see some returns for the money he will be spending on your site, and this can be seen as visibility (impressions) and leads (clicks and possible sales). Make sure, therefore, that your advertising deals will deliver.
  • The numbers: Remember that there are some pretty cheap advertising options out there (e.g., Google AdWords), and you will need to be competitive. Provided you reserved a good spot for the sponsors (sidebar or header, preferably) you could start charging a $0,5 CPM (cost per 1000 impressions). If your blog is generating 100,000 monthly page views, therefore, a banner spot on your sidebar should cost around $50. Start low and build your way upwards. Popular blogs (e.g., TechCrunch) have a higher CPM, sometimes as high as $10, but you will need a huge credibility to arrive there.
  • Cross-check: You can easily check if you are charging a suitable rate by using Adsense units on the places where you will sell direct advertising. Analyze how much you would gain with Adsense, and adjust your rates accordingly. Secondly, you can also check similar sites that are already selling direct ads.
  • Be flexible regarding the terms: Flexibility is key. First of all make advertising agreements on a month-to-month basis. People don't like to commit to something they are not completely sure about. If someone proposes you a longer deal, offer a discount in exchange.
  • Offer test periods: Unless you have a very popular website, you will find potential advertisers reluctant to spend real money. If you are confident that the deal will create value for both parties, however, you can use that on your favor. Offer a free test period whenever needed. Some of the times the advertiser will turn you down after it, but other times they will confirm the deal. Either way you have nothing to lose.

Traffic Generation Tips

First of all a big "thank you" for every one who participated. As I said before the number of entries surprised me (and the quality as well, I will definitely apply some of those tips myself).
Now, without further delay, the 30 Traffic Generation Tips:
  1. Sridhar Katakam
    Keep track of blogs and leave comments on them. A good way to keep the conversation going is to install a MyBlogLog widget and visit the blog of people visiting your site.
  2. Ian Delaney
    Nothing creates long-term traffic more than value. Consider writing posts with resources or explaining how things work. Useful things get linked to and they get onto del.icio.us, which is far better long-term than a digg front page.
  3. Scott Townsend
    Inform search engines and aggregators like Technorati (using the ping functionality) when your blog is updated, this should ensure maximum traffic coming from those sources. (check the List of Ping Services)
  4. Kyle
    Simplify. Pay attention to complex issues in your field of work. It may be a big long publication that is hard to wade through or a concept that is hard to grasp. Reference it and make a shorter "for dummies" version with your own lessons learned and relevant tips. When doing this, I have been surprised to find that the simplified post will appear before the more complex version in search results. Perhaps this is why it results in increased traffic; people looking for more help or clarification on the subject will land on your blog.
  5. Grant Gerver
    Try to be polemic. I write obsessively about all-things political from the left-wing perspective in the form of humorous, sarcastic one-liners.
  6. Daniel
    A simple tip that will probably boost your page views: install a translator plugin. I decided to use a paid plugin for this, but if I am not wrong there are some free ones as well. The translation is not very good, as you can imagine, but it helps to attract readers that are not fluent in English.
  7. Rory
    Submit articles to blog carnivals (http://blogcarnival.com) that are related to your niche. Your article almost always gets posted, and it must generate a handful of visitors, at least.
  8. Ramen Junkie
    Newsgroups. I always see a spike when I post a review to a newsgroup.
  9. Eric Atkins
    Create a new design for your website. Not only will it be more attractive to your regular readers, but you can submit it to some CSS gallery showcase sites that feature great designs. This will give you exposure on those sites while generating a lot of traffic and backlinks from those types of sites.
  10. Megan Taylor
    Participate in conversations on related blogs. Start conversations on your own blog. Don't just post about a story and leave it at that, engage your audience, ask questions and call to action.
  11. 11. Guido
    Comment on blogs, write useful content and make good friends on forums.
  12. Brian Auer
    You must be active to generate traffic. I post comments on other blogs that are related to mine, and I post my site link in my signature at the forums. Spread the word about your blog and it will certainly attract readers.
  13.  Shankar Ganesh
    Just browse around MyBlogLog.com and you will surely get visitors to your blog. Also try to join as many communities as possible that are related to your topic.
  14. Andrew Timberlake
    A great tip for generating traffic is off-line by including your url in all your off-line liturature from business cards, letterheads, pamphlets, adverts through in-store signage if applicable. I even have our website on my vehicle.
  15. Cory OBrien
    Read lots of other blogs. Leave trackbacks. Make sure your blog is optimized for search engines. Leverage social bookmarking sites like digg (both for new ideas and for traffic).
  16. Jester
    Leave comments on other blogs. If you're already reading them, it takes just a couple of seconds to leave a message agreeing or disagreeing with the author, you get to leave a link to your site, and you will almost ALWAYS get traffic from your comments.
  17. Goerge Manty
    Post 3-5 times a day. Use ping services like pingomatic or set up wordpress to ping some of the ping services. Engage your readers. Put up polls, ask them questions, give them quizes, free tools, etc. Make them want to come back and tell their friends about you.
  18. Engtech
    Community. It's one word but it is the most important one when it comes to blogging. The only "blog metric" that makes sense is the vibrant community of readers it has. Building a community around your blog will bring you increased traffic, but how do you start? The boilerplate response to building traffic is always "SEO, social networking sites, and commenting on blogs" but it can be simplified to "be part of a community". The easiest way to seed your blog is with an already existing community. But the only way to do that is to be part of the community yourself.
  19. Chris
    Squidoo Lenses are a good way to generate traffic. By using a lense, you can generate your own custom "community" of webpages, including some
    of the more popular pages in your "neighborhood." Including your own webpage in such a list is a good way of generating traffic.
  20. Splork
    I've had good success writing articles and submitting them to EzineArticles. Articles that have been written from well-researched keyword phrases and accepted by EzineArticles tend to rank very high in Google for that search term. Placing anchor text in the footer of those articles so the reader can visit my relevant website has always increased my site traffic.
  21. Jen Gordon
    I came upon some unexpected traffic when my blog popped up on some css design portals like www.cssmania.com and www.webcreme.com. If you can put some time into the concept behind and design for your blog, I'd recommend submitting your site to a design portal not only for
    additional traffic but to build an additional community around your site.
  22. Kat
    I've recently gotten involved with several "MySpace-like" community sites that focus on my target audience. I share my thoughts in their forums, post intros to my real blog on their system blog and I've even created a group for my specific niche. It's been very, very successful for me.
  23. Inspirationbit
    Well, obviously everyone knows that social bookmarking sites like Digg, del.icio.us, etc. bring lots of traffic. But I'm now submitting some of my articles to blogg-buzz.com (a digg like site for bloggers), and I always get not a bad traffic from there.
  24. Mark Alves
    Participate in Yahoo Answers and LinkedIn Answers where you can demonstrate your expertise, get associated with relevant keywords and put your URL out there.
  25. Tillerman 
    Be the first to write a post about the 'Top Ten Blogs' in your niche. The post will rank highly in any general search for blogs in your niche and other bloggers in your niche write about the post and link to it.
  26. Nick
    Participating in forums is a great way to get loyal readers. Either link baiting people in your signature or posting great advice and tips will give you high quality traffic, which will result in return visitors.
  27. Brandon Wood
    A simple trick I've used to increase traffic to my blog is participate in group writing projects. In fact, that's what I'm doing right now.
  28. Alan Thomas
    Don't forget your archives. I just posted a roundup of all interviews I did over the past seven months. One of them generated a new link and a big traffic spike from a group of users that look like they will be loyal readers now.
  29. KWiz
    Write something controversial. I don't think it's good to write something controversial just for the purpose of getting traffic necessarily (especially if it's only for that purpose and you're being disingenuous), but it works.
  30. Dennis Coughlin
    Find the best blogs on your niche and contact the authors. Introduce yourself and send a link of your blog. This might help them to discover your blog, read it and possibly link to it.

Speed Up Your Site

The load time of websites is one of the most important factors affecting its usability; most Internet users will just skip a site altogether if it fails to load within a couple of seconds. Below you will find the summary of the "Speed Up Your Site" series. Those are simple yet effective ways to make sure that your website is running fast. You can click on each point to read the article with comments from the readers.
  • Optimize Images: always use the "Save for the web" feature included on image editing software. Images represent the heavier load on virtually any website so make sure you are optimizing them. Alternatively you can also turn to an online image optimizer.
  • Image Formats: apart from optimizing images it is important that you choose the right format. JPEG format is suitable for photographs or true-color images. The GIF format should be used with flat-color images like logos or buttons. PNG works very similar to GIF but it supports more colors.
  • Optimize Your CSS: most websites are designed with CSS nowadays. Make sure to aggregate and clean your CSS. CleanCSS is an online tool that will merge similar selectors, remove useless properties and remove the whitespace from your code.
  • Use a Slash on Your Links: when a user opens a link on the form "http://www.domain.com/about" the server will need to figure what kind of file or page is contained on that address. If you include a slash (/) at the end of the link the server will already know that this is a directory page, reducing the load time of the site.
  • Use the Height and Width Tags: many people forget to add the Height and Width tags on image codes. Those tags will make sure that the browser knows the size of the image before loading it. The result is that it will reserve a spot for the images while loading the rest of the page, speeding up the whole process.
  • Reduce the HTTP Requests: when opening a web page every object (images, scripts and the line) will require a round trip to the server. This latency can add several seconds to the load time of your site. Make sure to reduce the number of objects and to combine CSS files and scripts together.

What Is Success?

This past weekend I was browsing through my RSS reader, and I came across an interesting post titled What is success? Impact.

The author is basically questioning what should be considered success (on a professional level), and he comes to the conclusion that success should be measured as the positive impact his work will have upon the lives of other people.

The article caught my attention because I have the exact same opinion.

Obviously I don't think there is right or wrong as to how we define success. The term itself is a subjective thing, so what success means to you might be different from what it means to me or other people, and this is perfectly fine.

That being said, I think it is useful to discuss about such definitions, because it helps us to analyze whether or not we are moving in the right direction.

For example, most people tend to equate success with money. That is, the more money you make, the more successful you are. But under this definition one could argue that a drug dealer who makes millions of dollars annually is a very successful person. I don't agree with this. I could give you that such drug dealer is a savvy businessman, but I wouldn't call him successful, because the impact he has on the life of other people is actually a very negative one. The same thing could be said about online spammers, scammers and so on.

Now take Linus Torvalds as another example. He is the founder of the Linux movement, which created one of the most successful open source projects to date, and enabled millions of people to use a free and very reliable operating system. I am not sure how rich he is, but even if he was broke I would call him a successful person, because he had a huge impact on the lives of people from around the world.

Note that these things are not mutually exclusive either. In other words, it is possible to make a lot of money and have a positive impact in the lives of many people at the same time (and often times they go together). Just think about Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos, Larry Page and Sergei Brin.

But, I suspect that these folks were first and foremost motivated by the possibility of making something big that would impact many people. As Steve Jobs say, by the possibility of putting a dent in the universe. Sure, they were no philanthropists, so the money was welcome too, but I don't think it was the only nor the main thing they were pursuing.

Promote your Site with a Bit of Money

Some time ago I wrote an article titled "Are you marketing your blog?" where I argued that there is a myth around the Internet that bloggers and webmasters should not spend money on advertising. The myth comes in great extent from the success stories of people that managed to create popular websites without spending a dime on advertising or other paid promotion techniques.

The reality is that most of those successful websites were pioneers on their niche, hence why they became popular without spending money on advertising. Now a days the market is crowded and you have thousands of websites and blogs even for small segments. As a consequence paid promotional techniques are becoming an important factor of any successful marketing strategy.

Below you will find 7 ways to promote your website or blog with a bit of money. You can use them to generate raw traffic, improve your search engine rankings, gain visibility on your niche and so on. Despite the initial investment most of those techniques will pay off on the short to medium term. If you are expecting to make money with your website there is no reason to assume that you will not need to spend some as well, right?
  • AdWords: Google make billions of dollars every year from the AdWords-AdSense combo. Why is that? Because they work. Adwords is probably the most efficient method to generated raw traffic for your website. In order to get started you should create an account, add lots (by lots I mean hundreds if not thousands) of keywords that are related your site and set the maximum Pay-per-Click rate at $0.01. After that raise the rate by $0.01 every week or so until you start getting the desired amount of daily clicks. Notice that at lower bids the keywords will be reported as "Inactive for Search". Do not worry about it, it just means that your ads will not appear on the search network (Google's search results), but they will appear on the content network (websites of people that use AdSense).
  • Site-Specific AdWords: if you pay attention to the AdSense units you will see that most of them have a link titled "Advertise on this site". This feature enables AdWords advertisers to create customized ads that will be displayed only on specific websites. Those ads work on a CPM (cost per 1000 impressions) rather than a CPC (cost per click) basis, but they can generate a good amount of very targeted traffic since you will be in control of where the ad will be displayed and of the message. You can get even better results if you use some creativity when designing the ads, click here for some examples.
  • StumbleUpon Ads: StumbleUpon is a very innovative social bookmarking site that allows users to discover great websites by using a browser toolbar. When the user clicks on "Stumble" he will be delivered a website that people with similar interested rated positively. The user is also able to give positive and negative ratings to any website that he visits on the Internet. StumbleUpon also offers advertising campaigns, called StumbleUpon Ads, where you can deliver your website directly to those "Stumblers". It costs $0.05 per page delivered, but since the websites that appear on StumbleUpon usually have a high quality it is very likely that part of that paid traffic will convert into regular readers.
  • Text Link Ads: if you are trying to increase your search engine rankings to leverage organic traffic you should consider buying some text link ads. While those text links can also generate direct traffic the biggest benefit you will have is an improvement on your search rankings, specially if the links are placed on authoritative and relevant websites. There are several places to buy text links, including specialized companies like Text-Link-Ads and Text Link Brokers or online forums like Digital Point's market place.
  • Direct Banner Sales: most established websites sell banner ads or sponsorship plans directly. Those advertising deals usually are structured with weekly or monthly fees, regardless of the number of impressions or clicks that you will get. Despite this characteristic a banner placement can represent good value for money because apart from the direct traffic you will also create visibility and brand awareness. Readers of the website where you will display your banner will associate the message on the banner with your site or blog. Should they come across that banner or message two or three times it is very likely that they will get curious and decide to check what the buzz is all about. Another advantage of banner placements is the fact that people will unconsciously think that the author of the website endorses your content or product.
  • Sponsored Reviews: buying some sponsored reviews is a good way to kick-start a website. They will bring backlinks, traffic and RSS subscribers. There are many market studies confirming that "word of mouth" is the most efficient way to capture people's attention, and that is just what you get with sponsored reviews. You can either pay a low price (sometimes as low as $5 per review) to get a large number of reviews from small sites or you can focus on large players (which can charge several hundreds of dollars for a single review) that are authorities on your niche. The best way to purchase sponsored reviews is through sites like SponsoredReviews.com, ReviewMe or PayPerPost.com.
  • Blog Networks: there are several blog networks founded around a traffic exchange principle. Basically you create an account for you blog and you earn credits by surfing other members' blogs. Afterwards you can use those credits to make people visit your blog or to display your banners around the network. The interesting part is that most of those blog networks allow users to purchase credits with money, and the price is really convenient. You should be able receive hundreds of visitors or to get thousands of banner impressions for less than 10 dollars. Some blog networks that sell credits include Blog Explosion, Blog Soldiers and Blog Advance.

How to choose a blog name

There are three simple rules to follow when choosing a blog name:
  • It must describe your blog: it is probable that lots of people will see a link to your blog before having the chance to actually read it (in search engines, for instance). Guess what, if just by looking at the name they can figure what the blog is about they will be more likely to visit it.
  • It must be easy to remember: suppose your blog talks about cycling, fitness and health advice in general. Naming it "The Cycling, Fitness and General Health Advice Blog" would offer quite an exhaustive description of the blog, but would it also be easy to remember? Stick with simple names.
  • It must be equal to the domain name: this rule is often ignored by people, probably because finding a suitable domain that has not been registered yet is a difficult task. Still if your domain name does not match the blog name you will probably lose some readers along the way. When people visit your blog through a link they will just read the name of the blog. Should they decide to revisit the site a couple of days later they will just type that name followed by a dot com. If they do not find your blog once they hit enter they will just go somewhere else.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Adsense positioning

So far we have already covered how to improve the Adsense targeting (read here) and how to optimize the Adsense units (read here). The next step to increase your overall earnings is to find the best spots on your sites to place the ads.

The first thing to consider is to what extent the Adsense units will complement your content with relevant links without annoying your readers. Placing some ad units right on the top of your website will certainly generate many clicks, but over the long term it could hurt your traffic if readers stop visiting your site due to the advertising intrusiveness.

The smooth way

In order to decide what is the optimal Adsense positioning for your blog you need to define your priorities. If Adsense is not your main source of income or if you are concerned that intrusive ads might disturb your readers you probably should place the units separated from the main content.

A good place to insert Adsense units without affecting the user experience is at the end of single posts. You can use either the large rectangle (336×280) or the banner (468×60). Alternatively you can also try adding a Skyscraper to your sidebar or a Leaderboard to the footer.

Maximum click-through

People looking to maximize their Adsense earning will find that ad units close to the header or blended with the content usually perform better. On single post pages you can add a large rectangle right below the post title, either above the content or floating next to it.

On the Homepage you can add the Adsense units between posts and leverage link units. Link units look very similar to menus or navigation bars, therefore if you place those units on the right spot you could generate a very high click-through rate.

Every blog is unique

Understanding that your blog is unique is quite vital for placing ads successfully. You should always analyze what kind of responses you get from your visitors by placing the ads on different spots.

Finally, remember that readers are the most important asset for a blog (i.e. think twice before getting a couple of Adsense clicks in exchange for an upset reader).

What Is A Blog?

It is 2008; do we still need to ask ourselves what a blog is? I think so, and for two reasons. First of all we still have many misconceptions about blogging floating around the web. Pretty much every week I get at least one email from someone asking if I believe blogging has a future. My answer is always "as long as the Internet has a future, blogs do too." You will see why I answer that below.

You also have countless articles being published every week where the author suggests that blogs are obsolete, and that the next big thing is micro blogging, or lifestreaming or something else. Again I don't agree with any of those predicted trends.

The second reason for trying to define what a blog is in 2008 (many people have already done that in the past after all) is because blogging is a social phenomenon. As such, it is constantly evolving, and what was true two years ago might not be anymore.

Blogs Aren't Necessarily Personal

The main misconception regarding the definition of blogs comes from people that associate blogs with their content. More specifically from people that associate blogs with the content from one particular type of blog: personal blogs.

In other words, those people think that blogs are online diaries where people share their opinions, ramblings and personal events.
Wrong!

That is just one of the things that you could do with a blog.

Today blogs are being used for all sorts of purposes. You have companies that use blogs to communicate and interact with customers and other stake holders. Newspapers that incorporated blogs to their main website to offer a new channel for their writers. Individuals that created a blog to share with the world their expertise on specific topics. And so on.

Separate The Content

If you separate the content from the website, it becomes much easier to work with the definitions.

Consider a person that wants to publish a Questions & Answers column online. She could use several types of websites for that purpose.

She could create an online forum, for example, where each thread would be an answer to a specific question. She could create a static HTML website and publish all the questions and answers on a single page. She could create a wiki where users would be able to edit the questions and answers directly. Finally, she could also create a blog where each post would contain a question and its answer.

As you can see, the content is not attached to the website. The picture below illustrates that (note that only four types of websites were used, but there are many more).


Obviously one type of website will be more suitable for a certain purpose than others. It would be easier for a company to use an online forum on its customer support section, for instance.

So What Is A Blog?

A blog is basically a type of website, like a forum or a social bookmarking site. As such it is defined by the technical aspects and features around it, and not by the content published inside it.
The features that make blogs different from other websites are:

content is published in a chronological fashion
content is updated regularly
readers have the possibility to leave comments
other blog authors can interact via trackbacks and pingbacks
content is syndicated via RSS feeds

Keep in mind that it is the bundle of those features that should define a blog. An online forum could also offer an RSS feed for example, but that would not make it a blog.

What Is Your Definition?

As I mentioned on the beginning of this article, blogs represent a social phenomenon, so they are in constant evolution. The Internet itself is changing very fast, so pin pointing a single definition for blogging is a hard task.
The definition above is my personal one, and I am sure that other people will want to add or remove details to it. Some might even completely disagree.
That is why I decided to turn the mic to the readers. I want to hear what you think a blog is. What characteristics define it? Is the definition changing over time?

What Is Bounce Rate?

Today I was going to write about why new websites can display very misleading bounce rates, but I realized I had never covered the bounce rate concept before, so I'll stick to the basics today, and expand on the topic over the coming weeks.

If you already know the term, consider this post a refresher.

What Is Bounce Rate?

Bounce rate is a very important metric for website owners. It basically tells you what percentage of your visitors are "bouncing" away after landing on your site (e.g., they just visit one page and leave before clicking on to a second page inside your site). A bounce can occur for several reasons, including:

The visitor hit the "Back" button on his browser.
The visitor closed his browser.
The visitor clicked on one of your ads.
The visitor clicked on one of your external links.
The visitor used the search box on his browser.
The visitor typed a new URL on his browser.

All the actions above would cause the visitor to leave your site. Provided he did any of these actions right after arriving at your site (and before clicking on to a second page), it would be counted as a bounce. In fact the formula for finding the bounce rate on your website is:

Bounce rate = Visits that left after one page / Total number of visits

For example, if during a certain month your site received 120,000 visits, out of which 80,000 bounced after visiting just one page, your bounce rate for that month would be 80,000 divided by 120,000, which equals to 0.66 (or 66%). Notice that you can calculate the bounce rate of your whole website or of single pages inside it.

Obviously the lower the bounce rate on your website, the better, because it means that visitors are getting engaged by your content and design, and that they are clicking to visit a second (third and so on) page on your site.

How do you know the exact bounce rate on your site? A web analytics program like Google Analytics will automatically track the numbers for you.
Next week I'll talk about what is considered to be low and high bounce rates, as well as about the misleading numbers you can get from new websites. Stay tuned.

Smarter Blogger

If you're spending hours and hours every week working on your blog, and not getting much traffic or many new subscribers as a result, it's time to start working smart instead of hard. And in case you think that means you won't succeed, here's a question for you:

Wouldn't it be great if you could do half as much work as you do right now and still get the same results?

Well, there's a good chance you can. Here are the three biggest steps I suggest:

Write Less Frequently
If you're currently posting once a month at best, this tip isn't for you. But many bloggers are posting more often than they need to, especially when their blog is new.
For most niches, you can post once a week or even once every two weeks and still get good results. (Boost Blog Traffic, for instance, typically only has a new post once a week – yet it's a very popular and well-regarded blog.)
If you've come across advice to post daily, it's probably outdated (or just plain wrong). 

Develop a Writing System
Do you find yourself struggling to come up with an idea when you're due to write a post? Do you ever spend an hour writing a couple of paragraphs, only to change your mind and scrap the whole thing?
You need a writing system that lets you produce posts like clockwork. A good way to do that is to:
Come up with a bunch of ideas all at once (try to list, say, 20).
Plan out several posts at a time, with a list of bullet points to cover in each.
Set aside dedicated writing time, where you won't check emails, social media, etc.
Allow plenty of time to edit, so you're not pressuring yourself to write a perfect first draft.
If you haven't tried separating these different steps of the process before, you might want to watch my (totally free) video training on The Writing Process for Bloggers.

Cut Back on Social Media
When you "quickly check Facebook", does it turn into a half-hour browsing session after you just have to check out that link to a Buzzfeed quiz? Social media can be a great way to build relationships and to share your blog with others, but it can also be a huge time sink.

Don't feel that you have to read every status update / tweet / etc. Perhaps you're worried about missing out but the truth is, if you're spending too much time reading and chatting on social media, you're missing out on the opportunity to grow your blog in more effective ways.

Limit your social media time to, say, 15 minutes every morning and 15 minutes every afternoon. If you want to post updates throughout the day, try using a tool like Buffer to schedule them in advance.

Writing an Ebook

You probably know the benefits an ebook could have for your blog (and your business).
It could be a free incentive that helps nudge readers to sign up for your newsletter.
It could be your first paid product … and perhaps the start of a whole series of products.
It could be a valuable resource that impresses the A-Listers in your niche.

It's easy to end up wasting a lot of time writing an ebook that no-one's going to read, which means avoiding some dangerous (and very common) mistakes.

I've got you covered. ;-) To find out exactly what not to do — and what to do instead — check out my guest post 21 Common Mistakes You Must Avoid When Writing Your First E-book, on Boost Blog Traffic.

This is my first time guest posting on BBT, which is one of my favourite blogs, so I'm pretty excited. 

Here's the first mistake:

1: Choosing a Topic You Know Little About

If you want to create a premium e-book , you can be tempted to pick a "hot topic" thinking that's where the money is.

Likewise, when creating a sign-up bribe, you might think you need to entice readers with the latest information about an emerging topic.

And if you're publishing on Amazon, it's easy to think you need to target one of the most popular categories.

But picking a topic like this is a BIG mistake.

If you know little or nothing about your chosen topic, creating an e-book will be a huge amount of work. You'll have to do a ton of research, interview experts, and perhaps even pay a real guru to get you up to speed.

How to Fix It

Write about something you actually know about – which almost certainly means tying your e-book to your blog's core topic. You'll not only save a ton of time on research, you'll also have a ready-made audience for your writing.

Blog Indexed by Google in 24 Hours

Whenever you create a new blog, you always want your blog to get noticed by people easily. The best way people can find your blog is through search engines like Google.

But you'll have to make sure that Google indexed your blog that means Google shows your blog on its search listing. Normally Google sends Googlebot to crawl your blog and add it to Google Index. Sometimes it takes much time.

As a blog owner you will always want your blog to get indexed by Google as soon as possible. In this post, I will show you how to do it within 24 hours or less.

Before moving further, I would suggest you to check if your blog has already been indexed or not. Just to go Google.com and type site:yourdomain.com on search box. If there is no results, it means Google hasn't indexed your blog.

What is Google Crawling and Indexing?

Terms like crawling & indexing might seem new to you if you've just started blogging.
Crawling is the process where Googlebot (search bot software) visits interlinked pages on the world wide web and collects information of pages and sends them off to the Google Indexer.

Indexing is the processing of the information collected by Googlebot through crawling. By this process Google adds your pages on search listing.

So now the question is how Google bot can find your blog? Googlebot discovers new blog through sitemap and links. That means if Googlebot finds your blog links on any webpage, it will collect the information and send it to the Google indexer.

How to Get Your Blog Indexed By Google Quickly

Now let's see how you can help Googlebot to discover your blog quickly. Here are some great ways. These will also help you to get some traffic to your blog.

1. Submit your Blog Sitemap to Google Webmaster Tools. And Submit your Blog URL to Google.

Google Webmaster Tools (GWT) is a free web service by Google. It allows you to check indexing status and crawl rate of your blog. It will help you to understand what's going on with your blog.

The first thing you need to do is verify your blog ownership in Google webmaster tools. Then you'll have to submit your blog sitemap to GWT. For extra credit, you can also submit sitemap to Bing.

If you don't know anything about sitemap, here are some information for you. Sitemap is  an XML file that contains all URLs of your blog. It helps Googlebot to crawl and index your blog.

Along with GWT, I would also suggest you to set up Google Analytics for your blog. It helps you to track your traffic.

Another thing you can do is, submit your blog URL to Google. Though a lot of people think that it's not so helpful, But I would suggest you to do that cause it takes only a moment. Just go to Submit URL and enter URL & captcha. Click on 'Submit Request'.

2. Add your Blog link to your Social Profiles. And Verify Google+ Authorship for your Blog.

Every social media site lets you to add your website link to your profile. Just edit your profile and add your blog link. This includes your Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Youtube profiles etc.

Once you've added your blog link to your social profiles, now share your blog with your friends in a status update. It will help you to get some social signals for your blog and your friends will know about your blog.

Next thing you'll need to do is, verify your Google+ authorship. It will add author name on Google search listing.

And don't forget to create social accounts for your blog. It will help to connect with your readers. And it will help crawlers to find your blog easily.

3. Update WordPress Ping list. Manual Pinging is also helpful.

Ping service allows you to notify search engines that your blog has been update.
WordPress has a default ping update service. When you publish a new blog post, WordPress automatically notifies the ping sites.
To update your ping list, go to WordPress Dashboard > Setting > Writing. Scroll down and you'll find the ping list.
If you want to add more ping sites on the list, here is list of working ping sites for you.
You can also ping your site manually through Ping service sites. Here's how to use ping service.

4. Start Building Backlinks. Blog Commenting is the easiest way.

One of the best ways to get high rank in search engine is building high quality backlinks. Forget about high ranking, now our job is to get indexed by Google.

Backlink is the incoming link of a website from another website. Whenever you've a link on other site, there is chance that Googlebot will crawl the link and find your blog. And finally, index your blog.

Here are some best ways to build backlinks.

Guest posting.
Blog commenting.
Posting on online forums, Yahoo answer etc.
Article submission.
And writing quality posts so that others link back to your blog.

Among them I would suggest you to do blog commenting as it's very easy. It will help you to build relationship with other bloggers. Just make sure you are not spamming on others blog.

5. Submit Your Site to Bookmarking sites, Blog Communities.

As I said Googlebot needs to get your site via links, it's your job to spread your links on several site. Here some sites that you can use to spread your links.

Bookmarking Sites Submit your blog to social bookmarking sites like Delicious and StumbleUpon.
Blog Directories Submit your blog to blog directories like Technorati and Blogcatolog.
Website stats program. There are some sites that keep your domain stats on their directory. You can use  IMT Website submitter to submit your blog on those sites.

What Makes Your Blog Stand Out?



There are so many blogs online that you might think it's not even worth starting (or continuing) yours. After all, your niche almost certainly has lots of well-established blogs with plenty of readers.

So why would they come and read your fairly new blog instead? And how can you distinguish yourself from every other new blogger out there?

Well, there are three key ways to make your blog stand out. You don't have to hit all three; one is often enough (so long as you can do it well).

They are:

* Your Design
* Your Content
* Your Writing Style

Your Design

Some blogs are instantly impressive because of their design – K.M. Weiland's Helping Writers Become Authors, for instance.

While looks aren't everything, most readers will judge websites (at least to some extent) based on how "professional" they look. If you're using a free theme with a header you designed yourself, and every widget in existence cluttering up your sidebar, it might be time for a re-design.

Ideally, get a designer involved so you can have something truly unique and professional; if that's outside your budget, look for a premium theme for your blog (these typically cost between $10 an $100).

Your Content

You've almost certainly heard that "content is king" – and it's true that great content can be the foundation for an extremely successful blog, even if your blog's design isn't especially exciting.

A good example is Glen Allsopp's Viper Chill. While there's nothing wrong with Glen's design, I wouldn't say it was particularly outstanding or beyond what other bloggers in the online marketing niche are doing. And while Glen's a clear, engaging writer, his writing style itself isn't the reason I read his blog.

What makes Glen stand out is the quality of his content. He writes seriously long, in-depth posts that give tons of detail. Glen really knows his stuff, and it's clear that he researches his posts carefully and spends a lot of time working on them.

Your Writing Style

Some bloggers make a name for themselves by having a particularly engaging writing voice. It might be snarky, funny, outlandish, or warm-hearted. A great example of a blogger with a very strong writing style is Naomi Dunford of IttyBiz.

While some of her advice on marketing is probably stuff I could get from other marketing blogs or books, the clarity, humour and personality of her writing is what make me read IttyBiz instead of those other sources.

It takes most bloggers several months, even years, to find their true voice, so don't worry if you feel your content doesn't stand out in this way yet. Also, don't feel that you have to copy someone else's voice – it's important to find your own (otherwise you'll just seem like a copy-cat).

Affiliate Links Related Ads

You might have noticed that sometimes Google Adsense Ads show some irrelevant, competing sites, spammy looking or common ads on your site. But you don't want Adsense to show such type of Ads.

If you are on this situation, then you are lucky enough that Google has an option that lets you block those Ads. In this post  I will discuss about how and what kind of ads you should block on Adsense. So lets start.

What Kind of Ads you should block?

Common Ads: One of the most common ads is Facebook Ads. Almost every internet users are aware about Facebook. So people don't have any interest on Facebook ads and you have less chance to get click on those ads. Other than Facebook, there are some more Adsense ads that seems unattractive to me. So it is better to Block those ads.

Affiliate Links Related Ads: You will face this problem if you are an Affiliate Marketer. For example, you have written a nice review or a tutorial post on Hostgator Web Hosting. Obviously you did it to generate some sales. But Adsense Ads can be a problem if it shows Hostgator Ad on that post . If your customer click on that Ad instead of your affiliate link, you will miss the sale for few cents. So affiliate marketer should block the ads related with their affiliate links.

Competing Sites Ads: Sometimes you may notice some competitive sites ads on Adsense. Most of the time those sites are Blog site and they pay few cents for click. So it's better to block those sites.

Others: You may find some products Ads that you don't want to promote on your blog or that are irrelevant ads.

How to Find the URL of Ads

Once you've determined the ads that you want to block, now you need to find the URL of the Ad. If it is text ad then you will get it easily from the links under Headline of the ad. But the problem is Banner Ads. As Google doesn't allow you to click your own ads you have to find other way to determine the URL. Here is a quick way for you.

Just put your mouse cursor on the ad and do Right Click. Then Copy link Address from there.

URL of Adsense AdsOnce you copied the link, paste it to the WordPad. At the end of the link you'll get the URL of Adsense Ad.

Link of Adsense AdsFor Flash ads, this trick may not work. Additionally you can use AdSense Publisher toolbar. It is a Chrome extension that lets you view the income information of your Adsense Ads.

After installing this extension, you'll find an Overlay on your Ads. Just click on the overlay and you will be able to get the destination URL.

How To Block Specific Google Adsense Ads
Once you have collected the URLs of the Ads which you want to block, Login to your Adsense account.

After login on your account, click on "Allow and block ads" tab. You may have several sites having Adsense Ads. Choose the proper site from where you want block these ads. Select the site from left bar.

Now click on the 'Advertiser URLs' and put the URL on the box. And click on the Block URLs. Follow the screen shot.

Block ads on Google AdSense

That's it. Now Google Adsense won't show the Ads of blocked site.

High Paying Keywords for Google Adsense (2014)

If you are an Adsense Publisher, you always want to increase your earning through clicks. Sometimes it happens that you have good CTR, I mean you are getting a good number clicks from Adsense but your estimated earning is low. For example, you gave got 40 clicks and your estimated earning was $0.77! It's really an unexpected earning.

You aren't responsible for this low earning. Actually Low CPC (Cost Per Click) is responsible for it. You might have noticed that Adsense shows Ads according to post contents. Specifically we can say that Ads are related with post's keywords. CPC is related with these keywords.

Google won't pay you an average rate for clicks. Sometimes you will earn $3 for a click where sometimes they won't pay you $3 for 50 clicks. Here is the point. It depends on the Ads that people clicked. If people clicked on a high paying ad then you'll get a good payment. As I said Ads are showing according to your content's keywords, if you have high paying keywords in your post you will get high CPC.

So you want to know which are high paying keywords? Wait, in this post I'll share 70 high paying keywords for Adsense. Before we move to the keywords here some advise for you.

It's obvious that all of these keywords won't be suitable for your niche. Just find the keywords that are related with your blog and try to use them on your blog post. Never abuse these keywords.

Amateur Blog

Does your blog make an instantly good impression on visitors? Or do they get the impression, within seconds, that you're an amateur?

While there's nothing wrong with being a hobbyist blogger, you probably want to be taken seriously (even if you're not trying to make money blogging).

We all make snap judgements, though, and if your blog doesn't look like a reputable, high-quality read, visitors won't come back.

They may even be put off linking to you (despite your great content) if your blog looks particularly amateur.

So what can you do to give a better impression? Simply avoid these four mistakes:

Mistake 1: Leaving the "Meta" Widget in Your Sidebar

When you set up WordPress, by default it includes certain widgets in your sidebar. One of these that I've never seen on a large blog is the "Meta" widget. It doesn't add much value to you or readers.

It's incredibly easy to remove a widget:

* Login to your WordPress Dashboard
* Go to Appearance à Widgets
* Drag the "Meta" widget from your sidebar into the "Active Widgets" area

Make sure readers still have an easy way to subscribe to your blog (the Meta widget includes your RSS feed link). We recommend promoting email rather than RSS subscriptions. Of course, you can still give the RSS link too.

Mistake 2: Using the "Uncategorised" Category

All WordPress posts have to have a "category" – normally a word or short phrase that covers an aspect of your topic. For instance, on DailyBlogTips, our categories include things like "Domain Names," "Social Media" and "WordPress".

WordPress comes with one default category, "Uncategorised". Remove or rename this. Many bloggers use something like "General" as the default category, in case they forget to add one when posting, or in case they create a post that doesn't really fit anywhere.

When naming categories, it's helpful to give them all names of a similar length. You'll see that all ours are one or two words – we don't have any long phrases. This looks neater in your sidebar or any other place where you list your categories.

Mistake 3: Allowing Spam Comments to Infest Your Blog

All blogs – even ones with very little traffic – attract spam comments. If your posts end up with lots of spam comments after them, readers will get the impression you're not maintaining your blog. Worse, you may even lose a reader who clicks on a spammer's link.

The best way to avoid spam is to install the Akismet plugin, which will weed out most spam comments before they ever hit your blog. You'll also want to review new comments regularly, ideally on a daily basis, to delete any that are spam.

While you're at it, you'll probably want to turn off comments on pages (e.g. your About page and Contact page). You don't want these pages to become cluttered – plus it doesn't make a lot of sense to have comments on pages that are likely to change over time.

Mistake 4: Sticking with the Default, Unmodified Theme

While WordPress's default themes look good and may well be a good fit for what you want, using an unmodified theme means your blog will look like any other new blog out there.

A little customisation – perhaps adding your own header, tweaking colours, or even choosing a different free theme that's less used – will help your blog stand out.

Premium themes cost anywhere between $10 – $200 and often give you greater functionality and more options to choose from. They're a good half-way point between a free theme and a custom-made theme, which could cost you thousands of dollars.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Deliver Better Customer Service

Delivering excellent customer service need not tie you up in knots. Here are 6 ways to quickly and easily upgrade your customer service:

Target a Niche

Occupying a niche means you won't be competing with a lot of similar businesses solely on price. And because you will be selling products and services that are customized to the specific needs and predispositions of a select group of people, you can often charge more. Your products and services serve a market that can't easily find alternatives.

Connect with Your Community

Take a page from the original premium ice cream mavens Ben & Jerry. The original scoop shop became a community favorite thanks to its rich ice cream and creative flavors. Ben and Jerry also made it a point to connect with the community, hosting a free film festival and giving away free scoops on the first anniversary of the store, a tradition that still continues. In 1980, the duo began making pints to sell to local grocers. In 1981, they expanded this operation. More inspiration from Ben & Jerry.

Create a "Red Velvet Rope" Policy

The book Book Yourself Solid argues that it's essential for freelancers and consultants to create a "Red Velvet Rope" and be very selective about working with clients. Author Michael Port believes that having only "star clients" that inspire and energize your work will help you do the caliber of work that will help you attract more star clients. The solution is to separate your clients into three groups -- duds, mid-range and stars. Cut loose your dud clients, and decide if you can develop your mid-range clients into stars. Within the book is a series of exercises on deciding what exactly constitutes a "star" client for you.

Understand Your Customer Experience from the Inside

"Hire a secret shopper service to go through your customer experience periodically. Have customers complete surveys about shopping experiences. Have employees identify themselves by name (on the phone) and with badges (in person) so customers can remember them. And don't just spy on your employees. Reward great service and retrain those who aren't delivering it," writes Mitchell York. For other ways to keep customers coming back.

Whip your Employees into Shape

Mitchell York reports the following: "My client's company has two floors in an office building, and reception is on the 3rd floor. His customer decided she'd like to see where her millions of dollars in purchases are going, so she made an appointment to visit. She went directly to the floor my client is on, the 2nd floor. When she arrived, there was no receptionist, because she was on the wrong floor (even though my client instructed her to go to reception on the 3rd floor). She roamed the halls and cubicles. No one got up from their desk to say, "May I help you?" It wasn't their job. Needless to say, this million-dollar customer wasn't very happy when she finally tracked down my client."

Get Digital

Columbia Business School's David Rogers writes: "From smartphones to social networks, today's digital tools are helping your customers connect, create, and interact with each other on a global scale. This is changing your customers' relationships with each other, and with every business, no matter the size or industry. In the past, businesses relied on a broadcast model to influence customers with mass marketing, projected out one-way, to as many consumers as possible. To succeed today, businesses need a network model, one that takes advantage of customers' ability to engage, interact, and even collaborate with your organization and each other."