Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Boom Bust Bloggers



Why do you blog?   Are you hear to make a quick buck?   If you have investors in you then you stand to make an immediate living in it.     For the ones that aren't making their dream income, do you continue writing for the hope of eventually getting a pay day?   Would you still do it if you knew it was never going to come?

The reason I ask is that I noticed one of the sites that I followed last year was in a nomination to being one of the best new blogs.   As of March 25th the site has not seen an update.   I know one of the writers and I haven't asked him about this, but I do know he is actively working on a new site.

I understand about stoppping when you run out of funding, but do you make a run at something build up equity and leave it hanging?  Your readers none the wiser about what has happened?

I understand blogging can be a business, but one thing your readers want from you is to be informed.   If you disappear and they notice you started another blog without telling them, how long are they going to continue to trust you?

This is the wolf in sheeps clothing, they made thair money and moved on to the next project.  I'm not going to preach that there is anything wrong with that, but I will state that it isn't the nicest thing to do.

Your opinions?


Original From: Boom Bust Bloggers

Monday, April 14, 2008

My total Earnings after 4 months of Advertising....

$1.29, Yes this is about the the journey to get paid.  It is quite a journey.  I won't be falling back on blogging as a full time career anytime soon.   I didn't think I would make much and honestly I never thought I would make anything.   As I come up with scenarios and writings I will keep you updated on journeytogetpaid.com


Orignal From: My total Earnings after 4 months of Advertising....

Friday, April 11, 2008

Google's Next Service Should Be - Google Reporting.


Google is all about consolidation of data, there whole mantra is behind it.  They have released oodles and oodles of services that I utilize (yes I'm a google whore - there I said it), but only minimal correlation between the tools other then a common login.   Many of their tools generate reports or data that could be transformed into reports.  Some of their services it's almost brain dead that they haven't integrated the services.   Let's go through the services and how I would design "Google Reports".


The most obvious Google "products" I would lump together would be Google Analytics, Google Webmaster Tools, Google Adsense, and Google Adwords.  All four of these products are usually used together - so why can't we get reporting for all three on one page?  All of these products can give a webmaster an overview on where his site(s) are going and what he can work on.   There is absolutely no reason to go through four different interfaces to get this information.   Yes I can set up email reports from some of them - but a singlular report and page to view them at a quick glance would be great.   If I click on something to drill down on it could then take me to to the specific related products page.  While we are the subject of Google Analytics - a listing of recent page views ala the way statcounter does it would be great.   To be honest that's the only reason I still use my statcounter account.


Those were the four products that prompted me thinking about this in total from the beginning.   Now let's move on to the other products, video for example.   Google Video and Youtube both fit different niches in the google video structure.   Youtube allows you to upload video more quickly but has time and size limits, Google Video however allows downloads and unlimited sized and no time limits when you use their external (non browser based) uploader.  Now Google Video's reporting very frequently fails to work - loosing view and download counts so this needs to be addressed.   But a report that would include subscribers, views, and downloads would be fantastic.


Feedburner should be tied into analytics also for the amount of information it gives you and stats, while I'm on a mini rant here when are we going to be able to inject adsense into our feedburner items?



Now let's break into the quickies:


Google Base - ok I still don't understand this product so I have no idea.


Blogger and Page Creator would tie in easily with Analytics - so there is no reason not to make this automated.


Browser Sync - The number of synchronizations and all machine that you ahve synchronized against.


Calender - Ok trickier but the number of appointments from a given day/month/week


Docs - Number of edits, number of documents, space they take up, and how many of your colloboration documents have had edits.


Gmail - Number of emails received, sent, spam caught, most frequent contacts, amount of free disk space.


Groups - could tie into Analytics if your the group owner but beyond that - number of members and messages - how many new messages if your just a reader.


Igoogle - um no clues


Reader - number of stories read


Picasaweb - how many times each photo was viewed, who has linked to it, and any subscribers


Finally webhistory - the amount of searches performed, and a concise list of sites embedded in the reports.


I would want to see report being able to be generated automatically on a daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly basis.   The ability to customize reports by date or time period would also be great.   The ability to atomically email them to you at a preset time would be fantastic.


The last feature I would add is an open API so we could plugin new reports and send them to google to collect and have other programs able to fetch and manipulate the data on a client side.  I know I'm asking pie in the sky at this point.


Google literally has all this data on us and more.  They are preaching data portability and openness so why don't they consolidate and show us more of the data they are holding.  I'm not asking for all of the secret sauce just what's relevant to me.  Combing the original few things before I went into quickie mode though would be utterly fantastic and an excellent starting place.





Orignal From: Google's Next Service Should Be - Google Reporting.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Does Data Portability Hurt You in Google?




Yesterday on my main blog I wrote a quip on my battle for the search term "creeva" in google and how many hits it brings back.  It flucuates up and down and was more of a joke then anything.   However I started thinking about it a little more deeply last night.

I'm a huge crossposter, I don't deny it.  My friends can track me down and find me whereever.   I manage to get new readers by utilizing diffferent sources to store my data.   When I wrote a blog post on my main blog, it gets copied or notification goes to many other sites.   The path it takes is that I write an article when I click publish it sends out the article to my myspace, my live spaces account, my vox account, my tumblr account, my suprglu account, my facebook news, my old blogger page, my xanga account, my livejournal page, my multiply account, and a google group for back up (that one is private though).   On top of that livejournal also sends it on it's way over to my dandelife account.  I'm also copying things over to www.creeva.net which is my by beta testing blog.

If I listen to a song that get's scrobbled to my last.fm account, upload a picture to my flickr account, digg a story, favorite a video, share an RSS news item, write an article on a blog other then my main (like this article) or mark something down in all consuming; these all get pulled into my main blog, which at that point goes through the data dissemination process all over again.

This is data portability at it's finast (at least for the content side of the equation) and I work it well.   Some people prefer to go to a single location and that's fine, that is what I have a main blog for.   Get everything from everywhere all in one location.   Google loves the idea of everything in one place, it's their whole mantra.   However you will get penalized in Google for having duplicate content.   So my google score will drop theoretically the more places I cross post to that it indexes.

So by disseminating my content to everywhere in the world Google will penalize me in it's search ratings.   It seems my main blog still gets the most traffic and it's hits don't suffer.   So all and all I don't truly mind.   However I'm sure that sometimes I do suffer when my vox account for example rises to the top instead of my main account.

How can Google truly and actively support data portability when it's anti ethical to it's search rankings?  I can understand that it's an attempt to fight spammers and such, but we all end up hitting pure spam BS blogs all the time.  The crap floats and rises to the top while the rest of things drown in the data deluge.   I don't think that google necessarily needs to adjust it's algorithm but in the coming months or years it will need to take it into account.

Orignal From: Does Data Portability Hurt You in Google?

Monday, April 7, 2008

Journey To Get Paid upgraded to Wordpress 2.5

While I've been playing with 2.5 on Creeva's World 2.0 for a little over a week now I haven't really dug into the rest of my blogs and managed to upgrade them yet.   Journey to get paid is the first I'm playing with outside of my main blog.

I need to start going through the hassle of all the unique plugins on this blog to make sure I don't have any of the issues I had with my main.


Orignal From: Journey To Get Paid upgraded to Wordpress 2.5

Friday, February 8, 2008

Journey To Get Paid's Week In Review 02/08/2008

This Week We've Discussed a Few things:

Real world expectations on click through advertising - Click Through Advertising - The Evil Truth

Other ways of getting advertisers are available - A Reader's Interesting Strategy on Getting Online Advertisers

How to protect your Social Security Number from Online Advertisers - How To Never Give Advertisers your Social Security Number

What are we going to discuss next week? Stay tuned to find out.


Orignal From: Journey To Get Paid's Week In Review 02/08/2008

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Choosing a Domain Name Can Be Heart Wretching.


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So you have your own blog but it's something such as creeva.blogspot.com or creeva.wordpress.com, Both of these are acceptable, but if you read my previous about brand management you'll know that building your audience to your personal brand can help get you a larger following.

Do I need a domain name?

In all honesty I can't fully answer that question for you. What I can do is give you some pointers on how to choose a domain that can be personal or directed towards your target audience. There are a few questions you should ask yourself before you register any domain name:

  • What are you trying to do with your site? Is it a personal site? Is it a tech site? Is it a business site? Now none of these really have any bearing on if you'll ever make money - or at least that is out side of the scope of this article.

  • While some people are just trying to drive massive traffic to their site, what do you want to do? There are loads of spam blogs out there that just show ads and may get thousands of hits a day. I think this people have ethically sold out, but I'm not here to judge you so pay me no attention. You could register a name based of typos and drive traffic that way or come up with something unique that helps you stand out from the crowd. The more unique the site is the more cliquish and faithful your users may become, but this is at a sacrifice of larger traffic goals. This is one of the things you need to consider if your going to be driving traffic to your site. The name is part of the brand and can make or break some sites.

  • Is it worth the cost to you? There are many benefits to owning a domain name. Essentially at under ten dollars a year it really is a cheap investment, you can host your website, have personalized e-mail, and build upon your brand name in ways that aren't really possible with blogger or wordpress hosting your site without owning your own domain to redirect them to these sites. Over time I'll be writing more articles on what you can do with your own domain name and choosing the correct hosting service


How do you choose a name that's right for you?

The questions here are similar to those from above so I won't rehash them. My suggestions is make it memorable so no omgihavefreestuff.com. Choose something that something something about you or at least your site. Your brand is something you'll build. Do not choose anything too long, this makes it harder for people to remember your address and it will effect traffic from return users. The shorter the better.

I personally know the agony of choosing a domain name for a project. A couple weeks ago for a project I was working on with some others I spent a good 10 hours running domain names by other people. We had a few that could work and others they thought were great for personal blogs, in the end it's still an ongoing discussion - and we're looking how we are going to proceed with that project. Not all of my domains that I have purchased have taken this long. I settled in on journeytogetpaid.com in a matter of minutes and had it all set up with the blog running within an hour of conception. Your strategy and length of time it takes to decide on a domain name is only limited by your creativity and your ideas.

Who do I buy from and how much do I pay?

Like everything else this is a personal choice, but let's look through what I look for. First and foremost I check out price. I would not pay more then $9.99 for a domain name in this day and age and most people look at that as too high of a price. With coupons and cheap registrars there is no reason you need to pay $9.99 a year. The prices I usually go for is between $6.99 and $7.99.

Normally I register all of my domains in one spot and this is with goDaddy.com and they've served me well. Some people have issues with goDaddy.com, namely there are stories of yanking a users registration at a drop of a hat if there is a complaint (spammers be warned your domain will be yanked for e-mail spamming from what I'ver heard). Because of this I decided to track down another registrar that is not goDaddy but also is offering domains for $6.95 (not a bad deal, huh). The second company is Blackbeltdomains.com. This should give you two choices to choose from at around the same price range. The latest goDaddy coupon code I've used "OYH3" - this will get you $6.95 .com domains.

Hopefully I have given you something to think about now go ahead and grab youself a domain.




GoDaddy.com Hosting & Servers



Orignal From: Choosing a Domain Name Can Be Heart Wretching.