BlogRush - The Mighty “Phase 2″

BlogRush is about to implement a ton of changes and they're not even a month old. It's nice to see such quick action to make improvements, I know they really got slammed when they first came out since every other blogger posted an announcement with their referral links trying to get a leg up on the referrals (nothing wrong with that!). You can read about the improvements on John Reese's blog. A few of the big ones are copied below.

- Per Post Statistics & Addition Of “Buzz Meter”

Now you’ll be able to see how many times each of your posts is syndicated across the network and how many people clicked to read that individual post.

- Bonus Syndication For All Users, But Weighted Towards Low-Traffic Members

All members of our network will be receiving bonus syndication but we’ll be giving more bonus credits to our members that need it most — ones with low-traffic.

- Improved Security & Abuse Measures (We’ve already squashed 95% of the cheaters!)

We’ll be rolling out improved security measures, but we’re happy to report that we’ve eliminated about 95% of the cheaters in our network. We’re sure to continue to get a few new ones ‘trying’ from time to time, but we’ll work hard to zap them as quickly as possible.

- 100% Manual Review & New Quality Guidelines

We’ve already launched our Manual Review process… all new users as of today (and for good) will have their blogs manually reviewed BEFORE the widget will even load on their pages. Their posts will not be syndicated across the network until they are APPROVED and meet our Quality Guidelines. If they are not approved the widget will not load on their pages and none of their content will ever be syndicated on the network.

We’re almost finished with manually reviewing all the existing blogs in our network. We should be done with this massive ‘audit’ within about 7 days.

As soon as we complete this full audit there will be a MAJOR SWEEP of our entire network. All the blogs that don’t meet our quality criteria will be REMOVED from our network.

Say goodbye to all the non-English blogs, junk blogs, and any low-quality blogs you may have seen from time-to-time in the widget. (I love this one)

Can you turn your marketing campaigns on a dime?

Many people who do affiliate marketing focus on niche subjects, create their landing pages, and start selling. Most marketers have more than one site; dozens or even hundreds of sites. But, for the average person starting out, you only need a small handful in order to adapt quickly to changing trends and turn on a dime. The trick is making sure they're the right kinds of sites.

Forget about thinking of things in terms of subject or niche; its all about he demographics. You might have several websites on an array of subjects such as cars, phones and online poker. The problem with approaching sites by subject only is that they tend to overlap the same demographic and you could be wasting your time*. You can successfully market products that are unrelated to your website by focusing on the target demographic.

Below is a very simple chart of consumer demographics. This only covers sex and age to keep things simple. There are of course subsets of demographics that could be drawn in here such as race and religion, but I'm keeping it simple for illustrative purposes. The men are in blue and women in pink.

demographics

Going back to the example websites of cars, phones and poker, look at the graphic and see who you think those types of sites would target. They would generally be younger males. If you're creating websites for the purpose of affiliate marketing, you should consider every group represented in the graphic. If you do this, you'll be able to react quicker to trends and new products while not having to waste time on multiple sites that overlap the same demographics.

hearing aidLet's say, for example, Apple plans on releasing a hot new product in a few weeks and you want to cash in on it. They're releasing the Apple iHearingAid and the senior citizen community is buzzing with excitement about it. Do any of your sites target senior citizens? If you used the graphic above as a guide when creating your websites, you'll be ready to cash in on the new trend. If you have to make websites as new products pop up, you'll be one step behind.

*There's nothing wrong with creating sites that overlap demographics if they're things you're truly interested in or because you want to create authority sites on specific subjects. For the purpose of marketing, though, it can be a waste of time for beginners.

Possible Google PR update soon

For those of you who still care about page rank, there's a lot of speculation of a page rank update coming soon. There's a link in the article to this Digital Point thread where a lot of people are seeing their backlinks disappear. I've noticed this too lately. One of my PR4 sites had a couple hundred backlinks last I checked and now it's down to 1. The traffic hasn't changed though so I'm not worried about it.

My previous post mentioned app killers and  I read another article today title "Where's the Apple iKiller?" This "<app name> killer" linkbait is starting to get old. :\

Spammers will love Google video email alerts

I just read on Search Engine Journal that Google Alerts has added video alerts to their list of alert types. This will undoubtedly increase the number of videos being uploaded with fake titles and keyword-laden word salads for descriptions so certain videos will show up no matter what keywords are being searched for or entered as alert search terms. And it's not just Google videos:

Alerts for new videos related to the user’s specified topic are culled from various video uploading sites such as Google video, YouTube and other video uploading sites.

I won't be taking advantage of these alerts myself, but it would definitely be easy to upload video clips, enter a bunch of keywords for whatever the hot topic of the week is in the description along with your links at the top, of course, and then let Google do the foot-work by sending an alert out to thousands of people for you.

Giving people a reason to come back

My uncle knows I make money online and he apparently has been reading about others who do the same. Recently he bought a domain name and told me he had big plans for it. Of course I asked how. He said he was going to put nothing but ads on the page. I thought he was kidding, but he wasn't. I tried to explain that, for ads to be profitable, he needed traffic and for traffic he needs to give people a reason to read his site on a regular basis. Then he said he was going to offer free ads to get people to come. This is where I sort of gave up because he still doesn't quite get it. He's probably known about this making money online game for a couple weeks and he made the most common mistake thinking that if you build it they will come. I finally convinced him to at least put up a free classifieds script so there's some actual content and a reason for people to be on the site. So I'm going to be doing that much for him, but I don't have the time to really put much more into his site. Besides, I have a solid classifieds domain name I plan on developing soon so I'll be putting all my creative marketing juice toward my own site.

If you're wondering what reason I'm giving people to return to my blog, it's not just my ramblings and random tips; I also plan on making some of my different SEO related software available for free and it will be released on this site. I don't hype it up because it's going to be free and there's no reason to. If people want it, they can have it. If they'd rather pay someone else for the same things that probably does less, more power to them. It won't matter to me either way. More on this in the near future... :)

Effective Adsense advice nobody ever talks about

Whenever I read tips about Adsense, people are always regurgitating the same things over and over: placement, blending, etc. Even Adsense ebooks never have anything new to say. I'll never waste your time or mine by posting such tired, played out tips, but I do have one small piece of advice that I've never seen anyone talk about.

If your goal of creating a website is to make money off of Adsense or PPC ads, you need to consider mystery manyour demographic, or who will be visiting your site. For example, let's consider two types of websites. Site 1 will be about Adsense and making money online and Site 2 will be a baking site full of recipes. The likely demographic for Site 1 would be younger people who know about Adsense and can spot an ad a mile away, ironically giving them the label of being ad blind. Site 2's demographic would probably have a wider age range of older people and these people aren't going to be as ad blind as Site 1's audience. Setting aside all other factors like market saturation of each subject, if you were going to market each site equally and get about the same number of visitors, which ones do you think are going to click more ads? The ad blind Adsense-heads or grandma poking around the internet looking for a cookie recipe? Site 2 would definitely have a higher CTR than Site 1.

This is something I've learned from experience with other websites I run. Subjects with wider demographics consistently get better CTR than my blogs with narrower audiences. When I say wider demos, I don't mean more people; I mean wider age range and backgrounds. In fact, one of my higher-earning sites has a fraction of the traffic of one of my blogs, which has lots of traffic yet lower earnings. This is why knowing your audience is so important.

And here are a few things to remember. Always keep your demographics in mind for everything from website accessibility to the method of monetization you use. If you make a website difficult for older people to use, they're not going to be returning. Yet if you make websites too simple, they may seem boring and younger people may not return. Also, I used Adsense as an example, but you need to keep your demo in mind no matter what type of monetization you use. There is no one size fits all solution to monetizing a website so this is one of those things you have to figure these things out for yourself if you're going to be successful.

BlogRush moving quick to dump the junk blogs

When BlogRush went live a few days ago, many people saw the potential to get new visitors. People with affiliate pages and "junky" blogs also saw the potential and signed up, too. BlogRush has acknowledged the problem and they're moving quick to correct it by moving to a manual review process and increasing security to detect cheaters. Here's an excerpt from John Reese's blog:

1. We’re moving to a MANUAL REVIEW process. No more automation. We will be reviewing ALL blogs submitted to BlogRush. If the quality of the blog is poor, they will not be allowed to participate. We’re going to start reviewing ALL the blogs that are currently in our network and will be disabling the accounts for poor quality blogs.

2. We’re continuing to add security measures to our system and we will be mass-removing any and all cheaters that we discover. We will not rest until the cheaters are WIPED OUT and kept from abusing our network. The manual review process will help eliminate most of them as legitimate bloggers that have put in the time to create a decent blog aren’t the types that are going to be abusing the system.

And from the BlogRush dashboard area:

IMPORTANT MESSAGE: Click- through rates are very low right now due to problems with some users cheating the system. We are a few days away from removing all abuse from the system and you will see your click-rates increase. We are also moving to a Manual Review Process for all member blogs which will also increase the traffic you receive. Thank you for your patience -- we're working hard to improve this beta version of our service.

I think there's still a lot of potential in BlogRush so I plan on sticking with it for a while despite its rough start. Every big project goes through growing pains so I can't hold it against them.

Seasonal content

If you have a website that has seasonal content, now is the time to roll out your fall stuff. I've recently started adding Halloween and Fall content to one of my sites and it's beginning to get SE traffic already. Between now and the holidays, traffic will only increase so now is the time to get a jump on things.

leaves

Classmates.com knows how to get subscribers

classmatesA few months ago I signed up to become a Classmates.com gold member so I could contact an old classmate if I wanted to. Ever since then I've been getting regular email updates, which free members also receive, letting me know what's new, how many people have signed up from my old schools etc. A few updates ago the email subject said 1 person had signed my guestbook (see thumbnail). So when I open the email, the left side is telling me what all is new since the last update, the subject says someone signed my guestbook and on the right there are a couple links to my guest book and profile under the heading "You've got their attention".

So, why am I writing about this? For starters, when someone visits your profile, the default action of classmates lets you know who visited your profile unless that person has changed their default setting to keep them hidden. This profile view with the default setting is considered "signing my guestbook". They don't actually leave a message or anything, it's just a visit. It's slightly tricky making you think someone has gone out of their way to leave you a message when it's really just a default setting. No big deal. What's also tricky is that every single email update from then on has had the same subject telling me someone has "signed my guestbook" along with the link inside, but this is the old information is mixed in with new information and new updates. This means someone getting an update might think new people have signed their guest book since the last update and, if their registration has expired, there's a chance they'll renew it to see who's trying to contact them. In reality, when classmates is letting you know someone signed your guestbook, they're telling you about the same old entry over and over and over.

I'm sure this method of mixing old information in with new updates works well to pique people's interest and register or else Classmates wouldn't be doing it. I don't think I would ever do this myself on a pay site, though, because it's just a tad shady and deceptive IMHO. It's still an interesting technique none the less.

Hold the ads when launching a new site

Some time ago someone mentioned that when you have a brand new website to promote, you should leave all advertising off of it for a while until you begin to establish solid traffic. I think it was Shoemoney who said this, but I'm not 100%. Anyway, when I read that it gave me a little reassurance that my instincts were right because I've been doing that all along. When some people have a new website, the first thing they do is get all their ads, like Adsense, to look just right. The only problem is, when you go to start marketing it, if the first thing people see is a bunch of ads, they'll figure it's another MFA site and not pay much attention to it.

Here's how I deal with this using PHP... First, when I'm designing the site, I will go ahead and add the space for advertising or throw in the adsense ads so everything looks how I'll want it to when the site is running full-bore. Then I use a simple PHP snippet to hide the ads until I'm ready to show them.

Most sites I have use a config file for database connection stuff. If I don't have a config file, I'll use any file that gets included with every page or make one just for this. Inside that file, I'll put a simple variable like:

$show_ads = 0;

Then, wherever I have ads, I'll use a simple check to see whether they should be displayed or not, like this:

if($show_ads){
//show ads here
}

Obviously you would replace "//show ads here" with your ad code or an include or however you show ads. By doing it this way, I can do site design all at once, getting it to look just right, then hide the ads while I market the site. A few weeks or so down the road, I just switch the $show_ads variable to 1 and voila, advertising suddenly appears throughout the entire site.

Next Page →