Browsing all articles from November, 2008

On Halloween, I wrote that my SERP’s (Search Engine Ranking Positions) were totally off-the-wall, with keywords that I was once ranked #2 and #3 and #4 for showing no ranking at all. My niche website had essentially disappeared from Google’s radar for these high-traffic keywords, resulting in a > 75% drop in traffic. Forums like SitePoint and DigitalPoint and WebmasterWorld were filling with posts of weary webmasters, concerned about their keyword positions changing for the worse.

Thankfully, SERP’s seem to be returning to where they were pre-Halloween, as in the last 24 hours I’ve started to regain my keyword positions. (At least for some keywords.) I expect the Google Dance to go on for another 24 hours or so, after which time things should be back to normal.

I’ll be doing a more complete write-up of this after work today, but from the reading I’ve been doing, it seems to have been a Google error, where they accidentally reverted to old indexing data.

Are you on Twitter? I am.

If you’re looking to add to your daily intake of distracting tweets, feel free to add me. You can find me under @rhansen.

TwiTip Tag CloudOn other Twitter-related news, Darren Rowse (of ProBlogger.net fame) has launched his newest blog TwiTip, with the clever tagline, “Twitter Tips in 140 Characters or More.”

The most amusing part of the site so far is his blog’s tag cloud.

Can you imagine what it’s going to look like when the blog really get’s going?! “T”-overload!

The Vancouver 2010 Olympics are just a few months away, and there will be tonnes of people flooding Vancouver looking for places to stay. The hotels will fill up, and people will be looking for private properties to rent for the 2-week Games. They’ll be scouring rental websites looking for listings that match their needs. But, before these renters start looking, Vancouver home owners will have to get their listing online for these perspective renters to find. And that’s the opportunity.

Your money making opportunity:

Rent2010.net, the #1 Google result for “Vancouver 2010 rentals”, lists Vancouver 2010 Olympic rental properties for Vancouver, Whistler, and the surrounding areas. For $25, homeowners can purchase a full-page listing on the website, complete with pictures and a customized description of the properly. This gives the homeowners access to the thousands of people that will be flocking such rental sites looking for a place to stay.

Rent2010.net offers an affiliate program that pays out $10 for each “sale”, where a sale is when a homeowner purchases a full-page listing on Rent2010.net for $25. This equals a 40% payout, which is pretty decent.

If you’re interested in learning more about the Rent2010.net Affiliate Program, check out the information on their Affiliates page.

How to advertise this opportunity:

Google AdWords may be a good advertising vehicle, so long as you target as local as possible to the Vancouver-area. But, you might have better luck through your own personal network, on Facebook, MSN, or your own email contact list.

Another strong place to advertise this opportunity is on Craigslist, specifically the Vancouver Craigslist site. Of course, you’ll have to be careful about how you script your ads, or you’ll be flagged for spam.

Good luck!

Have you seen PPC Bully? As a relative new guy to PPC advertising, to me it seems like an incredible tool for uncovering profitable niches and the EXACT ads that people are using to profit in those niches. Just input your keywords and wait a few days and PPC Bully will tell you what’s working and what’s not.

The guys behind PPC Bully have come up with this term called Profitability-Indicator. The idea is that if an ad is showing for a long period of time at a high ranking, then one can assume that the ad is profitable (because no one would keep an ad up so long, unless it was profitable).

The PPC Bully team even published their algorithm. From their FAQ:

Ad “Birthday Flowers” was seen 12 days out of 18. The Ad was last seen 2 days ago.

  • Number of Days Seen: 12 days
  • Percentage Seen: 12/18 = 66.6%
  • Number of Days since Last Seen: 2 days
  • P-Index = (12 * 66.6%) / 2 = 4

Profitable Ad is an ad whose PI is at least 7.

Similar to Aweber, the only reason I’m hesitant to sign-up for PPC Bully is because of the monthly cost. At $49 US per month, it would be the most I’ve ever paid for a web-based service subscription.

Here’s the Pros vs. Cons thinking that’s currently running through my head.

Cons: It’s $49 US (so, about $60 CDN) and I don’t even know if it works. What if I sign up and don’t like the tool? Or, worse, what if I don’t even have the TIME to use it?

Pros: But it’ll save TIME. I’ll have just to make the time to use the tool. And, as everyone knows, time is money. Using my current salary as a benchmark, it works out to LESS THAN TWO HOURS OF WORK per month to cover the cost of PPC Bully. From the looks of the demo video, PPC Bully would save a lot more time than just 2 hours per month. And with a 60-day money-back guarantee, even if I don’t like the tool, I can get my investment back.

You know, even just going through the exercise of typing out those Pros and Cons makes it clear that at the very least I should try the service. If nothing else, I’ll gain some new insight into some of the cutting-edge tools that other affiliate marketers are using to rake in the dough.

Embedded below is the PPC Bully demo from their website. Take a watch and let me know what you think.

Everyone seems to be using Aweber nowadays, from Darren Rowse for ProBlogger.net to John Chow to half the blogs I subscribe to. From all accounts, it seems to be the defacto standard for e-mail newsletter delivery.

I’ve been researching Aweber this morning to see if it would be a worthwhile service to sign-up for. It costs $19/month to use their newsletter services, but with estimates of newsletter subscribers “worth” at least $2/year each, a newsletter subscriber list of just a hundred people could already offset the Aweber annual costs. And, with A-List bloggers like Darren and John compiling newsletter subscriber lists in the 10,000 to 20,000 range, it’s clear that you could earn huge profits from a successful newsletter strategy.

The one Aweber feature that has gained a lot of attention in the last couple weeks is the ’Pop Over’ signup form, which has been proven to improve newsletter signup rates by as much as 1000%. The common usage of the Aweber ‘Pop Over’ so far has been to have the pop-up appear on page load over-top of your blog’s regular content, enticing the user to submit their email address. Testimonials suggest that accompanying your newsletter sign-up “call-to-action” with an image (such as the SLR camera photo on Darren’s photography blog ‘Pop Over’) helps to sell the idea to your site visitor.

The Aweber website also suggests you can increase sign-up rates by:

  • Changing the pop-up delay. Instead of having the pop-up appear directly after page load, try changing the delay value to 15 seconds, or 30 seconds, or higher. Of course, whether this will be successful will largely depend on the “Average Time on Site” for your user base. Google Analytics does a good job of compiling metrics like this, so I’d suggest taking a peek at that value before playing with the pop-up delay.
  • Changing how the pop-up appears. The pop-up can be configured to either immediately appear, or you can add some nice transition effects to make the pop-up fade or slide into the page. These kinds of transitions are obviously a little more intrusive, but depending on where your users are concentrating their attention on the screen, they may be more appropriate for your blog.

Of even greater value is to read over the comments section for this particular post, as newsletter owners have submitted a wealth of feedback about what has worked for them.

I haven’t yet reached a decision about Aweber, but it’s clear from Google research that they are in a class of their own for newsletter management. I just need to determine if I can build a subscriber list in a timeframe that would offset the $19/month service cost.

Are you using Aweber? What has your experience been so far?

Amazon Associates, AdSense, ClickBank, and Text-Link-Ads were responsible for my October earnings. Below is the breakdown:

Earnings
AdSense: $166.53
Clickbank: $437.58
Text-Link-Ads: $89.56
Sedo, Amazon Associates: ~$2
Paid Reviews: $22.54
Total earnings: $718.21

Costs
No AdWords costs this month.
Signed up for Findology, but have yet to start any campaigns.
Total costs: $0.00

October Earnings: $718.21

September Earnings: $335.79
This represents a 214% improvement month-over-month.

Mortgage Goal
As you may recall, my goal is to earn enough each month through AdSense and affiliate marketing to cover the cost of my monthly mortgage payment. For the sake of the experiment, we’re saying it’s $1500/month.

This month I earned $718.21 profit, which is 48% of the way there. I have until June 2009 to hit my goal, so that leaves me with 8 more months to make up the remaining 52%.

Concerns going forward
As I had mentioned in a previous post, my main contributing site has seen it’s traffic dive in recent days. By dive, I mean traffic has reduced by about 75% (natural, search engine traffic). This concerns me because unless things pick up again, November earnings could potentially be 75% lower than October earnings.