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Most Recent Articles For: money

Written by Jason Pearson on April 23rd, 2008
by Jason Pearson

Blogging is writing a web log about anything you want, whether it is personal or business-related. It is simply a website that displays an individual or community diary with the purpose of educating, entertaining, promoting products or ideas, and sharing news or opinions. It is yet another way in which the internet brings people together to exchange ideas.

They also work as a platform for businesses to disseminate information about their products or company updates. One person can be assigned the task of informing customers and employees about new happenings by blogging on a regular basis. This is a more efficient than building new web pages every few days.

The speed with which new knowledge about your products and services can be transmitted to people is the biggest benefit of blogging for business. In no time at all, you can start the ball rolling and turn prospects into customers, simply through blogging. One way to boost your conversion rate is by putting a link to your website in your blog, leading them right to solutions they might be seeking.

Affiliate marketing with blogs has also become more widespread. Choosing to allow ads for related companies on your web page makes you a little money every time is it hit. It is just a matter of getting set up with a large search engine company. They will do all the work for you and send you a check when you have accumulated a certain amount of money from your pay-per-click ads.

You can then roll this money into other internet marketing pursuits. Perhaps you would also like to have ads appear on other affiliate websites. In this manner, you would be maximizing your use of blogs for minimal cost.

In the last few years blogs do not appear as high in the search engine results. This is because when people first began blogging, they naturally took advantage of their ability to gain a higher placement. When search engine results became a list of blogs instead of other websites, blogs were relegated to lower listings.

Another danger in blogging for business is the tendency to write as one would speak. This can lead to a very unprofessional looking blog, which can turn customers off in an instant. Blog readers also have come to expect new content often, which means you may end up devoting more time than you had originally planned to writing updates.

A higher conversion rate, speedy updates on your products, and affiliate marketing are all benefits that can make blogging for business a worthwhile undertaking. The drawbacks can include posting too much personal information and sounding unprofessional in the process, or not creating the buzz you had hoped after investing time in a blog. Written smartly and marketed correctly, blogs are a viable option for growing your online business.

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Written by mike on June 22nd, 2007

The first thing you’ll need to do is decide what to write about. You should choose a subject for your content site. That’s not to say you can’t write about anything you want to, but it makes sense to focus your content on a particular topic. If you try to appeal to everybody, you’ll most likely end up appealing to nobody.

Think about the things that interest you, or which have interested you in the past. Your hobbies, the clubs you’ve been a member of, the magazines you read, the books you read, the subjects you enjoyed most at school, the parts of your job that satisfy you most - any of these could be a good subject for your site. Write down a list of ten or more possible subjects. They should be topics you could envisage yourself writing a short article about every day.

Once you have your list, and assuming that you want to make money with your website, you’ll need to see if a market exists for the information you’ll be putting on your site. A market is much like a subject or a topic, but it suggests that people are buying and selling something. You might have an encyclopedic knowledge of the history of French crochet work of the 19th century, but if no-one shares your interest, there’s no market.

There are two somewhat conflicting approaches to markets. One is that you should aim at the largest possible market - for instance, golfers. Golfers spend a fortune on their sport - golf clubs, golf balls, clothing, tools, green fees, magazines, videos. But it’s an incredibly competitive market - as I write this, Google lists 318,000,000 sites which contain the word “golf”. It would be very difficult to get into the top 10 sites on Google. And most people don’t bother to click through to the next page on Google - if your site is number 318,000,001, there’s a good chance no-one will ever see it. At least not by looking it up on Google.

The second approach is to target “niche” markets. A niche is a small segment of a market. “Golf balls” might qualify - there are “only” 2,980,000 pages for “golf balls” without the quote marks, and 1,370,000 for “golf balls” with the quote marks.

A quick aside - not many people would be typing “golf balls” into Google and surrounding the words with quote marks. But without the quote marks, Google looks for the two words anywhere on the page. They could be separated by a sentence or a paragraph, like this: “His dad used to play golf every Wednesday afternoon. Terence had the red balls poised over the pockets as he…”. Putting in the quote marks makes Google look for the specific phrase “golf balls”.

So now we know what the competition is for our particular market. How do we find out what people are actually looking for?

There are a number of free tools which show the demand for any keyword phrase, as well as offering suggestions for related keyword phrases. Here are some of them:

Nichebot Classic
Wordtracker
Keyword Discovery
Google Adwords External Keyword Tool
SEOBook Keyword Tool

All of these tools use different databases, which results in dramatically different results for any specific keyword or key phrase. However, the specifics are not that important. What we’re looking for is just an indication that people are actually searching for our topic.

We also need to make sure that people are paying money for items in our market. A sure-fire way to check this is by looking at the Google Adwords ads. If people are paying Google to advertise for your keyword phrase, then there must be customers willing to pay for whatever products they’re selling.

Go to Google.com and type in the keyword phrase. Adwords ads appear down the right hand side of the page, and sometimes above the results as well. The more Adwords ads there are, the more likely it is that there’s money to be made in the market.


Written by mike on June 22nd, 2007

Content sites are websites which provide useful information to visitors. There are a number of reasons why you might want to do this:

  • Having your own website means that you can join the mass of people who share their ideas and experiences on the Internet. It’s important that you develop your ability to think critically. Reading what others have to say and commenting on it makes you a better citizen of the world - less likely to take things at face value, more likely to have your own opinions about what’s going on around you. Regular writing exercises the brain and becomes easier the more often you do it.
  • You might want to make money on the Internet. There are thousands of ways to do this. Building content sites is a core skill which will allow you to stake your claim in the virtual world.
  • Pure content sites which provide good quality information tend to get ranked highly by the search engines. Search engine ranking can account for as much as 40% of the traffic to your site, so it makes sense to give them what they want.
  • Sites with useful information are much more likely to be bookmarked by their visitors. Social bookmarking on sites like Furl, del.icio.us and StumbleUpon can provide a lot of traffic.
  • Once you have built up the traffic to a site by providing quality content, you can steer the traffic anywhere you want. Your content site can become a feeder site for sales pages or affiliate sites, or you can add text ads, Adsense or affiliate links to the site.

Not long ago, setting up a website was slow and painful. You needed a WYSIWYG HTML editor like FrontPage or DreamWeaver, and more often than not an expensive web designer. Then you’d need a graphic designer, maybe a programmer and probably an SEO expert.

Nowadays things are much simpler. You can install WordPress, a blog program, on your own web space in under 5 minutes. WordPress You can start creating content within minutes. The blog directories like Technorati and IceRocket can be notified instantly every time you add content.

WordPress is much more than just a blog program. There is a large and dedicated user community which constantly creates add-on programs - called “plug-ins” which expand the basic program’s capabilities. WordPress is flexible and easy to use.

Where do you start? This series of articles is intended to help you get your content site up and running quickly and easily, as long as you can use a web browser.