Archive for the ‘Tricks’ Category

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 27

This is a guest post by James.

If you are struggling for content or want to expand the number of posts your blog has, having regular features that highlight existing content, whether on your blog or elsewhere, is a good approach. Below are some of the most common and popular features that you can implement on your site.

1. Best or popular posts

A common feature on many blogs. It basically involves listing the best or most popular posts over the previous week or month (depending on how often you update). If you are an avid reader of the blog this may not offer much, but for everyone else it’s a great way of showcasing your best content without all the filler in between. Be sure to encourage readers to check out and leave comments on any posts they missed.

Example: Zen Habits

2. Best comments

An excellent way of boosting reader interaction as it rewards those who comment regularly. When doing a post like this try and tie the highlighted comments together rather than just picking random ones. Also, prioritize regular commentators by mentioning their name and website.

Example: Organize IT

3. A year ago

Similar to the best post feature, only this one delves into the misty past to highlight top content from a year ago. Not much good if you don’t have an old enough blog or a deep archive, but it’s still a great way of showcasing all those forgotten about posts and giving them a bit of extra life

Example: Unclutterer

4. Coming soon

Enticing readers with upcoming, intriguing content is a great way of encouraging people to subscribe to your feed. Just make sure you can deliver on it. If you are a regular poster who sticks to a solid schedule this can be a great way of creating anticipation for a new week or month. If you just post when you feel like it this may not work for you.

Example: ProBlogger

5. Interesting links

An old school technique. This feature has the added benefit of attracting the attention of other bloggers, who are usually appreciative of others linking to their posts. Just be sure to provide a solid amount of links for the reader to delve into.

Example: Lifehack.org

6. Ask the readers

A great way of encouraging reader interaction. It allows you to take the backseat while the readers provide the value with their comments. Just be sure to join in the conversation and help it along as necessary. Try combining this with a best comments feature for maximum benefit.

Example: Get Rich Slowly

7. Recap

If you feel you may struggle to provide value with the features above, why not combine them together? It’s a good way of summarizing what’s happened with the blog over the last week or month, highlighting posts, linking to interesting sites and describing what’s upcoming.

Example: Life Optimizer

8. Something a little different

Offer something a little different to your usual content. It could be a funny video, interesting picture… whatever. As long as you are providing plenty of the content your blog is known for, this feature can provide a nice break from the usual ritual.

Example: Daily Blog Tips

James is a blogger and aspiring author who covers productivity, organization and self improvement with an heavy focus on practical, actionable advice. You can check out more of his posts at Organize IT (or alternatively subscribe to the RSS feed)


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 27

I always preach that blogging and online marketing is about experimentation, so here we go with another experiment. That big arse RSS icon (I know it hurts the eyes, sorry about that!) is to remind you visitor, you that have not subscribed to Daily Blog Tips yet, that you should! Else you risk losing the simple yet valuable tips that we publish every day.

bigrss.gif

Considering that it is 7 pm of Wednesday here, I will track the results on Friday and see how many visitors we encouraged to become RSS subscribers.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 27

Bloggers and website owners are always looking to get advertisers and sponsors on board. Selling your ads directly, in fact, is one of the most profitable monetization strategies.

groupinterviewadvertisersandwebsites.jpg

How to do that efficiently, though?

Instead of answering it ourselves, we decided to ask the CEOs and marketing managers of some online companies. Who better than the people actually spending the money to give us advice on that topic, after all?

Here is the a list of the participants:

1. How much does your company spend monthly in online advertising? How is that number changing over the time?


Patrick
: Sorry I can’t put an exact figure for you but safe to say tens of thousands of dollars. It has stayed relatively stable over time as we try to just buy in places where it converts well and use a portion of the budget to rotate in and out new test sites.

Dmitry: Sorry, can not disclose. Quite a bit.

Fraser: Anywhere from $0 - $2,000. It fluctuates on a month-to-month basis as we experiment with what works and what doesn’t.

Niz: Our company spends around $2500 monthly in online advertising. This keeps on changing with time, depending upon the number of clients and work we are able to pull off. If we are overwhelmed with work, we usually drop on the costs of our PPC campaigns.

Cory: iThemes spends less than $2000 a month currently. That number will depend on how well we develop a community and client base.

Frank: I can’t give you the number but it does vary over time. We are always testing out new advertising methods. Starting up new ones and closing off ones that no longer perform.

Zac: While most projects are on auto-pilot with search and viral marketing, ad costs can vary monthly form $500-$10,000 a month depending on what I’m focusing on.

David: Our company spends around $1,000 a month in advertising costs, because we focus most of our efforts on word of mouth.

2. How is that amount divided into PPC, direct banners, single event sponsorships and other formats?


Patrick
: Roughly 50% PPC and 50% banners.

Dmitry: PPC – 50%. Direct banners – the rest.

Fraser: It’s split between PPC and 125×125 banners. We’re exploring a few sponsorship ideas.

Niz: Around $1000-$1500 are direct banners on popular websites/blogs, and the remaining is PPC. We also sometimes take few sponsored reviews now and then.

Cory: Right now, it’s just direct banners. We’ll be starting PPC soon.

Frank: We do some PPC and mostly banners/sponsorship. PPC in the web hosting world is very competitive.

Zac: I prefer to promote web sites and direct campaigns through PPC, while setting up banners, articles and contest sponsorships for blogs.

David: We spend very little in PPC and direct banners, but we really like blog contests. If I had to put some numbers, I’d say 20% PPC, 10% banners, and 70% word of mouth such as blog contest sponsorships.

3. Do you mind getting approached directly by site owners? If yes why? If no, what information should be included to capture your attention?


Patrick
: I definitely don’t mind. The biggest issue is at times the opportunities that come direct in general are of the small nature which can be difficult to manage many such deals direct at once.

Dmitry: No. Ability to test-drive the offering. The number of visitors/hits etc. is pretty meaningless per se – it’s a question of a match with audience. If I can do a 1 or 2 weeks test drive and see my clicks and sign-ups then I can know what it is worth to me.

Fraser: It depends on the format of the email. If the email from the site owner is clearly a template then it’s rarely well received. I’m okay receiving direct email if the blogger has spent a few moments to tailor the email towards our company and needs. Share as much information/stats as possible in the original email: traffic, price, options, etc. as well as why the audience of the site makes sense for our product/service.

Niz: No, we don’t mind anyone contacting us directly. You should explain to us, how you can help us in popularizing our name, so that people start talking about us. Tell us why the price you are charging is worth our money. And, even better if there is a special offer, like free for the first month or a couple of weeks or something like that.

Cory: Yes and no. No, I don’t mind if the site has good deals compared with traffic and target audience. But yes, I mind it when it’s obvious they’ve seen an ad on another competing site and email to solicit with nothing really to offer. I have noticed though that because we’ve advertised on a number of blogs, we’re getting more advertising “calls” now.

Frank: We don’t mind getting contact at all as long as the content is relevant.

Zac: When being contacted by a web site, trying to pursued me to by advertising on their site, it should never be a copy/paste email that’s sent to many other blogs and should also offer a discount or special deal, as its an un-requested offer. I much prefer to advertise with site owners I currently already know or blogs I’m already a reader of.

David: Not at all. We, and our clients, are always looking for unique advertising opportunities that aren’t publicly displayed. Clear information on terms, like pricing and length, and readership numbers would capture my attention, especially if its a good value or could have a very positive return on investment.

4. How important is the design of a blog to an advertiser? What aspects are good and which turn you down?


Patrick
: I think it is very important to portray a professional design as it gives the advertiser confidence in the quality of the property. Another important factor is where on the page the ads will appear.

Dmitry: Not very important, as long as it works for readers.

Fraser: Somewhat important, but not critical. If the design obscures the ad units then obviously it’s a negative thing. We’ve experienced some of our best results from poorly designed sites because the audience of the site was targeted for our product.

Niz: As an advertiser, we must be able to get a lot of click-throughs and exposure to our ads. If the publisher uses something like “Recommendations” instead of “Sponsors”, that is an extra positive point for us. The blog should be neat (and not messy). Also, your blog shouldn’t compromise on your actual readers’ experience, as only then it can reach a large number of people, which was the first reason we thought of advertising on your blog. There are a lot of paid premium wordpress themes available in the market which are ideal for the purpose.

Cory: Very important. If the ad is buried behind the design, then it’s not an attractive offer. As a publisher, you have to offer value to your advertisers, or they won’t continue advertising. For us, that translates into exposure and clicks. In the first five seconds I’m on a site I can tell if an ad on that site offers us value — in exposure and clicks.

Frank: The blog design is really not important to us. Content that is relative to hosting is much more important.

Zac: I would not want to advertise on a blog where the advertisements are lost or hidden. Ultimately though, it comes down to the blog user quality.

David: For us, design is particularly important. We liked to be associated with websites and brands that care about their image as well. A custom designed website and logo are a big plus and one major negative is excessively flashy advertisements.

5. What other factors do you look for when selecting the websites where you will buy advertising?


Patrick
: Where the ads will appear. How many other advertisers will appear. Who are those other advertisers. Will a sponsored post thanking sponsors be included to ensure reach of rss readers.

Dmitry: Audience matching our target niche.

Fraser: Without a doubt the best results have occurred when the ad was on a blog with an audience that was a perfect fit for our product. The readership/traffic can be substantially lower than other sites, but because the fit is ideal the results are great. RSS subscriptions are important only as a proxy for overall traffic, but not a valuable metric on its own. How active the community is (# of comments) is more important than feed subscriptions but is not a stat that’s often cited.

Niz: The following questions pop up in our heads when we buy advertising: Will it help us getting our name out there, building our brand, people start noticing us and hopefully start talking about us? Is it related to our theme? Will the visitors on the website be interested in what we have to offer? Is the website popular enough for our purpose? Will it offer any advantage(s) from SEO point of view? Is the guy/girl behind the website friendly and helpful enough to get started as an advertiser on his/her website? Is all of the above worth the money? Will I be able to pull off a decent ROI?

Cory: Target audience and cost. I’ve already mentioned exposure and the potential for clicks (traffic), but one of the first things I look for when advertising is the target audience that a blog offers. I believe you need to offer a niche audience to advertisers. It’ll make your job easier and more likely to sell out your ad inventory if you cater to a specific group of people.

Frank: I’m going to sound like a broken record but relevant content is most important. When we advertise on blogs it would make no sense to be on a political blog (as an example). Blogs about blogging, design blogs, webmaster blogs are example of places where we do advertise.

Zac: The most important factor to selecting a blog to advertise on, is choosing a blog with relevant content and that can provide readers whom my blog and relate with. Second is ad pricing. Without a balance between the two, most ad campaigns won’t succeed.

David: Some of the factors we look at when selecting a website where we will buy advertising are (in no particular order): traffic and readership numbers, content, reader demographics, number of RSS subscribers, price and length of advertising, advertisement size and placement, main source of traffic, pagerank.

6. How do you track results? Do you think reporting is an important side of the equation?


Patrick
: Yes we do and it is important. Obviously it is difficult to measure brand awareness created but measuring traffic and more importantly publisher and advertiser sign ups is key.

Dmitry: This is the biggest part of the equation! We use Google Analytics. Knowing how the blog audience changes over time is very important to baseline the data. Ability to rotate different creatives is very attractive and important.

Fraser: We track click-throughs, and then have set-up goals within google analytics so that we can track what the conversion rate is. reporting is a critical side of the equation. we’ve discovered that some low-traffic, highly-targeted sites have yielded better results than other high-traffic sites. figuring out cost / conversion is the important result to track because you can normalize a number of advertising channels (cpc, display ads, sponsorship, etc) and compare apples-to-apples.

Niz: We track the “referrer” of our each sale/lead on our website through PHP. It is very important to know where your sales/leads come from so that you can plan ahead.

Cory: Currently, click-thrus…. Reporting is very important to me. I want to see that people are arriving on our site and being exposed to our products. (Ultimately, we’d love them to become customers. But right now, we’re more focused on brand awareness.)

Frank: Tracking clicks is extremely important. On some blogs we can’t track things at all. Other blogs use tracking system and yet other let us use our own system. Our system (of course) works best for us as it tracks all the way through conversion.

Zac: Google Analytics, RSS and blog reader emails/comments are my favorite ways to track results. Nothing beats getting actual user feedback from new readers.

David: We track results via lead conversions using Google Analytics and Google Adwords. However, we also track results by number of visitors, how long they stayed, if other people wrote about our website, etc. There’s a lot more to “results” than direct leads and a lot of companies don’t realize that yet.

7. If you could give one advice for a blogger aiming to get more sponsors and advertisers, what would it be?


Patrick
: It would go without saying to increase readership is the biggest factor but in addition it would be to package in value ads like a sponsor post and possibly multiple ad unit runs on the same page to ensure the advertiser is getting seen by the visitors.

Dmitry: Be responsive and proactive in talking to advertisers. E.g. sometimes we need to change a creative – it’s important to get quick turnaround on that.

Fraser: Sell and be responsive. it blows me away that a blogger looking for sponsors or advertisers is not responsive. I’ll send emails inquiring about advertising or asking for stats and far too often I’ll get an email with too little information or, even worse, a response a week or two later. in many cases it feels like you expect us - the advertiser - to work hard to place our ad on your site, which is the completely the wrong way to approach the situation.

Niz: Ask the price which is absolutely worth it, accompanied with some special offer. Additionally, read the above answers carefully and see what we want from you and try to provide us with those things.

Cory: The one piece of advice I was give bloggers is … provide value to your advertisers and build a relationship with them. Go above and beyond to court clients. Offer incentives, bonuses. And just be responsive to their inquiries. I’ve had a couple of advertisers just point me back to their advertising information page. Then others have checked in periodically to ask how things are going, or even do posts about their new advertisers. Those kinds of publishers will most likely get more of our ad budget.

Frank: Target the right advertisers and price things properly for your web site. Don’t try to run too many ads either. Most sites need to start out small (number of advertisers and price) and then as your site / reputation increases so can your pricing.

Zac: Provide quality content and aim to please the advertiser. It’s much easier to keep one advertiser in the long run, then having to try and find a new one each month. Cater to your advertisers by making them deals, pointing them out in various posts and rewarding them with quality traffic.

David: Have a clear advertising page. Make sure it includes current readership numbers, RSS subscribes, what’s included in the advertisement, what payment is accepted, if their are openings, reader demographics, how to contact you for more information, and testimonials from current advertisers.

Key Takeaways

1. Flexible budget. Apparently the advertisers have a flexible budget, which might increase or decrease month over month, depending on their requirements and on the available opportunities.

2. 50% PPC, 50% banners. Most advertisers reported a quite balanced division between PPC and banner advertising, which should indicate a favorable scenario for websites selling banner space directly. Other advertising methods such as event sponsorships and sponsored reviews are also considered.

3. No canned emails, please. Advertisers do not mind getting approached directly, but if they notice that you just used the same template to dozens of companies they might skip it.

4. Be clear. Additionally, if you are going to contact a potential advertisers directly, make sure to include all the necessary information (e.g., price, traffic, type of audience) and possibly to include a special offer or deal (e.g., free trial period) to entice the advertisers.

5. Design is important, but not critical. Some companies might prefer stylish websites, but most of them are just concerned with the position of the ads. As long as they are in a visible position, where they will get both exposure and clicks, the companies are fine.

6. Relevant audience is vital. The most important factor for advertisers is by far the relevance of the audience and of the content. Keep this in mind the next time you decide to contact an advertisers that is not related to your niche.

7. Other factors. Other factors that advertisers might take into consideration include the price, traffic, number of RSS subscribers, and activity of the community (comments).

8. Offer additional features: The ability to rotate creatives is important to some advertisers. Secondly, writing a “thank you” post that will reach your RSS subscribers might also be a plus in their view.

9. Tracking the results. Most advertisers are concerned with click-through rates mainly. Google Analytics is a popular tool for that purpose.

10. Be responsive! The biggest turn off for advertisers is when the website or blog owner is not responsive. Answer to their queries promptly, provide sufficient details, and make sure that they are getting value out of the deal. It is about building relationships and win-win situations, after all.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 27

If you want to work on the Internet or to be an entrepreneur, I really don’t think you need to.

I always tell my friends that if I had the mind that I have today (in terms of knowing what I want to do, and what knowledge and tools I need to do that) five years ago, I would not have enrolled myself in the university.

At the time I had no clue where I was going, however, so getting a degree seemed like the smartest choice. Everyone else was doing it, after all!

I studied International Economics because it was a pretty eclectic degree, and it would allow me to work on virtually any business segment. Then 18 months ago I started working on the Internet with my own websites and with other entrepreneurial projects, and I guess I have being using 5% of what I learned in the university, if that.

Now the main argument of the university proponents is that apart from the knowledge itself, which you might or might not use later on, passing all those years studying will teach you how to gather, analyze and present information. It will give you a framework, upon which you will build on.

That is true, the university will give you that, but I don’t think that a person that starts working straight out of high school would lose that. He would also learn how to gather, analyze and present information, and he would also gain a framework, but those would come from real working experience rather than from theoretical classes and lectures.

I honestly think that if I had spent the same years that I did in the university working with my own projects and trying to make a living online, I would have learned much more (and that knowledge would have been practical rather than theoretical).

Again, this is valid only for certain classes of professionals. If you want to be a doctor or a civil engineer there is no alternative to going to the university and learning what you need to there.

Another downside of universities is that they focus on giving you knowledge, rather than making you develop competencies and attitudes. The latter two are immensely more important for your professional success.

I wrote about this sometime ago, on an article titled Knowledge, Competencies and Attitudes). Summing it up: Knowledge is practical information gained through learning, experience or association (e.g., second degree equations). Competencies, on the other hand, refer to the ability to perform specific tasks (e.g., the ability to communicate effectively). Attitudes involve how people react to certain situations and how they behave in general (e.g., whether you are proactive, arrogant, if you get along with people and so on).

Here is an example that I used to illustrate why competencies and attitudes are more important than knowledge:

Consider two different men, John and Mark, working for a financial services company. Both of them are eager to succeed so that they spend lots of time trying to grow professionally.

John uses his time gaining as much knowledge as possible: he studies balance sheets, financial reports, accounting practices and the like. He even takes related courses on the local university.

Mark, on the other hand, gets only the knowledge that is necessary to carry out his job. Other than that, he uses his time to improve his writing skills, his ability to solve problems, his ability to understand and empathize with other people and so on.

Should the financial services sector enter a downturn some day forcing both men to find another job, who do you think will have a harder time? Yeah, I am sure you have guessed it.

As you can see I am not arguing that you don’t need to go to the university because you will learn everything working. You will still need to study and go through the pain of learning and improving yourself. The only difference is that if you do this on your own you will be able to focus on the competencies and attitudes that you know you need to develop.

The knowledge that a university will give you is available for everyone, anywhere in the world. Sure, there is a difference between knowledge and information. but with the right motivation and some help from other people even a kid in Sri Lanka can absorb the information available online and transform it into knowledge.

So what should your strategy be? Focus on developing the right attitudes and competencies, and grab the necessary knowledge as you go.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 23

A couple of weeks ago I was browsing around TechCrunch when I came across some articles that were listing web startups that would be participating on a Demo event.

The idea about getting startups grouped together to demonstrate what they products or services can do is pretty interesting, but that was not what caught my attention. Instead, I could not help but think about how bad some of these domain names were. Here are a few examples:

  • Webmynd.com (browsing history tracker)
  • Insoshi.com (social network platform)
  • Omnisio (video sharing)
  • Wundrbar (improved search)
  • Qrimp.com (web apps)
  • Gwt-ext.com (widget library)
  • Twitxr.com (picture sharing)
  • Yokld.com (local business finder)

I mean, Wundrbar.com? Gwt-ext.com? For real?

Now don’t get me wrong, I don’t think that all my websites have awesome domain names. Even DailyBlogTips is a pretty average one; it is long and has 3 words. There is one big difference though: when I started these sites I had no clue of where I was going, and my startup budget was $10.

These companies, on the other hand, are trying to revolutionize their segments; to provide some innovative service that will become popular on the Internet. Usually they also have thousands of dollars backing them up (sometimes even millions of dollars…).

When I come across some of these names I get the impression that the company sent its secretary to ajaxwhois.com and told her to play around until she came out with a “cool” domain that was still available.

The takeaway message is: if you are going to launch a web startup, make sure to devote some of your time and money into finding or purchasing a good domain name. You will be stuck with it for the rest of the life of the company, after all.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 23

Recently I was creating a small static website, and I needed to insert a custom contact form there. I use WordPress as a CMS even for static websites, so I tried a couple of contact form plugins. None of them was customizable enough, though, so I went to ask a couple of programmers if they were interested in creating a custom contact form for me.

One of them (thanks Roberto) encouraged me to try a plugin called cforms II. He said that after I saw what the plugin was capable of doing I would no longer need a programmer.

Well, that was true indeed. I just couldn’t figure how I had never came across such a useful plugin before.

wordpresscontactformplugin.png

Basically cforms II allow you to create all sorts of contact forms, with how many field you desire, and with several types of input boxes. That is, you can use single text inputs, check boxes, select boxes, radio buttons, password boxes, file uploads and so on.

Additionally you can also customize the messages, the fields that are required, the email addresses to be used, and even create different contact forms to be used in different locations of the site.

As you can see, if you are looking for a customizable contact form plugin, cforms II is what you need.


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 23

Like it or not, if you want to be successful on the Internet, you will need to generate traffic to your websites or blogs. It does not matter if your goal is to make money with advertising, to sell ebooks, to generate leads to your business or simply to share your ideas; if people are not visiting your site your efforts will be worthless.

That is why I decided to start this “Website Traffic Series,” where on each post I will cover one different traffic generation strategy. Now I am not trying to reinvent the wheel, since I know that there are plenty of advice out there on this topic. What I will do is to summarize what is known about each strategy, and break it down into “Concept,” “Doest it work?” and “How to get started.” That is, I want to provide some practical advice and a reality check with my own experiences at the same time.

If things go all right this so be a long series, so stay tuned!

Part 1: Web Design and CSS Galleries

websitetrafficcssgalleries.png

Concept: There are literally hundreds of web design and CSS galleries around the Internet. Basically these galleries gather and filter creative and good looking websites from around the world (mostly CSS based, but some also feature Flash and XHTML) and showcase them for the visitors.

Some of these galleries are extremely popular, and they can send thousands of visitors your way if you get featured there. There is also a bowling effect from smaller galleries that end up picking the designs featured on the top sites, so the overall traffic boost could last several days.

Does it work?: Yes, provided you can get featured on one of the top rated galleries. Achieving that is the hard part, though. A unique design will not suffice, it must be appealing and creative.

Daily Blog Tips has a unique design, for instance, but I doubt that it would get featured on one of these galleries because the design is too simple and minimalistic.

Another point to consider is the quality of the traffic. Most of the incoming visitors from the galleries will be interested in your design, and not necessarily in your content. Should you have a good strategy to convert them (i.e. highlights of your best content, clear subscription options and so on), however, there is good chance that some of these visitors will like your site and return later for the content and not for the design alone.

How to get started: First of all you need to have a creative and appealing design. If you are good with CSS you could do it yourself, otherwise hire a professional designer. You can improve your chances by using a clever color scheme, innovative navigation menus and so on.

Once the design is in place you will just need submit it to the galleries and cross your fingers. Check The Great Website Design Gallery Roundup for a complete list of the galleries and a detailed description of the features included on each one.

Over to the readers: Have you had any experience with web design or CSS galleries in the past? How did it work out?


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 14

Finally we are inside the Technorati Top 100.

dailyblogtipstechnoratitop.png

Now I know that this is probably the result of our niche. Blogs on the metablogging segment naturally receive more backlinks, so stating that DBT is among the 100 most popular blogs in the world would probably be wrong.

Still it is nice to receive this recognition. Thanks for all the readers!


Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 13

Thinking about it now, it does make sense. They already have the largest ad network on the Internet. They have Google Analytics. They have Feedburner. An ad management application can fit well inside all that stuff.

Google Ad Manager will enable you to manage your advertising inventory, target specific visitors, produce reports and more. The interesting thing is that you can integrate banners that you will sell directly with AdSense units or even ads coming from other ad networks, and manage all that under a single interface.

googleadmanager.jpg

OpenAds announced a hosted ad management solution some time ago, but now they will have some fierce competition. I like to host my ads on my own server, mainly because I am paranoid about load time performance. But now that big G is in the business I might give their service a try. They sure must have some big pipes to make sure that everything flows smoothly.

On a side note, what is left for Google to take?

Partner: MakeUseOf.com Amazing Websites and Tools you Never Knew About

posted by W A Blog Tools on Mar 13

This is a guest post by Alan Johnson, find out how to build a long-term income generating website in 10 days by visiting TheRatingBlog.com.

It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking that all there is to being an online entrepreneur is building websites and that monetizing them is the only way to make money. Is that really all there is to it, or does being an online entrepreneur have far more potential than meets the eye?

You may not realize it but, with every project of yours, you are actually building a brand around yourself as well. Sure, you may have only been interested in branding as far as your websites are concerned but, like it or not, you are the person behind them and, as such, a lot of people, especially other webmasters will judge you based on how successful your projects are.

Why would you want to ignore this aspect and not use it to your advantage? Let’s say that your first project has been a huge success and that the community has given you credit for your achievements. As such, every new project you choose to launch will have an important advantage as far as exposure is concerned, as a result of the brand you’ve created around yourself with your first project and as a result of the contacts you have made.

Bloggers who you have been in good contact with will gladly write about your new projects and the effects will be more than worthwhile. Let’s face it, a project launched by a person who is both well-known and respected stands far more chances at being successful compared to a similar project launched by an online entrepreneur who does not yet have a strong brand associated with his or her name.

But with such important advantages also comes a great deal of responsibility because, in the end, you have a reputation to protect and it is inevitable that people will judge you based on your achievements as well as based on your flops. While they will give you credit for the things you do right, they will also show no mercy once you make mistakes and, as such, your brand might have to suffer.

Being well-known will never guarantee the fact that a certain project of yours turns out to be a huge success. Yes, you will receive more exposure and yes, that will increase your chances of maximizing results but no matter how popular you are, you will never be above failure.

In the scenario I have previously mentioned, if you are popular for being behind a successful project, there will indeed be some great advantages you can take advantage of but on the other hand, rest assured that, if you continue by launching one flop after another, your reputation won’t be what one would call stainless and, as such,
others will not be as thrilled to cover every new project of yours as they initially were.

You have to understand that there is more to being a webmaster than simply making money as a result of monetizing your websites and you have to understand how important the brand you are building around yourself can be and why taking this aspect into consideration is a must.

Note from Daniel: I agree with Alan’s points, but I think there is an even more important issue around it: integrity and ethics. If you keep your integrity and work under ethical values on all your online projects people will respect you for that. If, on the other hand, you fall short to using shady and unethical techniques, even if just once, your reputation and credibility might get damaged for good. So think twice before trying to find shortcuts to hard work. There are none.

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