Dec 03

Many newbie affiliates are swamped in the sheer amount of information when they first come in this industry. It is understandable, without a background in some sort of entrepreneurship, or at least marketing, it is too much to grasp. So, for my newbie readers, I will talk about a fine example of a minisite, and we will also learn at last what I mean when I say “SEO’d to shit”.

The student credit card niche is one that is quite competitive, and that is because there is money in it. I found this site, http://www.studentcreditcards.com which is the textbook example of how a niche affiliate site should be like. Open the site in a new tab so you can see it as we discuss about it.

First of all, the layout is simple and nice, nothing to say here other than that it works. Sometimes clean is good. The lady on the laptop is a no-copyright image, free to use. The header has links with anchor text “student cards, credit school, consolidate, credit reports and blog”. Obviously, these are the targeted keywords for this guy’s SEO campaign. All is good, but I would whore it out even more, writing the link as “credit card blog” and “credit home”.

The domain itself is amazing, studentcreditcards.com, and a newbie affiliate is unlikely to get his hands on something similar, but the important thing here is to understand the power in keyword domains for this technique. Please note that this is a special case, and the keywords in the domain are 2, yes two, “student” and “creditcard”. We have to consider it as two, although it might be in reality 3. It just goes together, you cannot say “hard” and “drive”. Again, special case, in other niches, we go for 2 (two) keyword domain names. Always. But, if you happen to fall on a 3 word domain that the phrase has a lot of traffic, by all means register it. I have a longtail keyword domain that ranks (for its own phrase)  with only a page and a title.

Ok, onto the pages now. A simple glance and you can see that there is a lot of text, that means plenty of spider food, springled with seo keywords like “fico score, negative credit profile, credit line” and a bunch of others. Please note that the page is very light, fast loading and plain html. Now, I personally would not go for plain html, I would make it a blog. Studentcreditcards.com has a blog, so that saves the problem a bit.

When we click the blog, we basically see a lot of articles, about credit report and credit cards and debt consolidation, all the classic keywords, slapped on a simple template, with a blog, used for its pinging utility. They update with a post every once in a while, which are basically more “credit report” articles, and that keeps the freshness factor at satisfying levels with minimal effort.

So, this is a good example of a niche affiliate site, please take note on the points I suggest to change, and simply make one for yourself. This site is ridiculously easy to rank for “student credit cards”. Throw a few dozen incoming links with the above anchor text, a few quality ones from nice sites, and you are done. Onto the next project.

What you need to make a site like this is:

  • A keyword domain
  • A clean theme
  • 20-30 articles
  • 50 backlinks with the keyword domain in them

The bare minimum for a site like this is 10$, if you plan to do all the writing and linkbuilding of course. A more modest price with quality work would be +50$ for the articles, and another 50$ for modest linkbuilding. There is no cap of course… A 110$ investment on a procedure that you are familiar with can allow you to pump one of these every month easily. A credit card signup is about 30$, so you will get the initial cost back very fast. Learn, adapt, and replicate.

Popularity: 37% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , ,

Nov 25

The WebWriMo challenge is near its end, only 5 days left. We all slacked. I know. Also, I was the leader up until a week ago, when a real mom joined the fray. Rebecca, is a fucking writing machine, a mom that “gets it”, has peachy cheeks, a hyperactive son and a great smile. She is also your professional internet author, ready to boldly go where no mom has gone before.

And because I like her style, here is her signature:

Quit Buying Shitty Content.
www.internetauthor.net
Rebecca Garland – Freelance Writer and Copywriter

She joined the WebWriMo challenge, took the lead, embarassed us all, kicked my ass and wrote 51000 words in a month, while taking care of her son as well. And she does that all the time. Damn!

So, practically the challenge is over, we all learned a few things about content creation, a few mustaches got bigger, I pumped out a lot of content for 4 sites including this blog, and we all go back to our normal slow content generating lives, except Rebecca. The challenge was ironically for epeen purposes, and to get a motive to generate the much needed content for our online assets. There was no real prize, but this post is both a tiny prize and a show of respect for people who manage to juggle work, raising kids and real life problems while maintaining a smile.

Are you serious about your online success? Do you really want to makemoniesonline? Then

Quit Buying Shitty Content.

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Popularity: 22% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , ,

Nov 12

…internet tool developers send you insider information without you asking for it. Jeesh, I have really gone native.

Spydermate, an seo and website analysis web tool is getting a facelift, and a bunch of new features. The penguins who are developing it are adding new analysis graphs. Here is a sneak peek:

glowleaf-sneak-peek.jpg

The green is my blog (duh!), and the red is the average of the most recent crawls for every domain ever crawled by SpyderMate.

All of the data points are percentiles of the overall data set, meaning that everything is in scale, not actual numbers. Let’s not see anyone comparing the Google PR graph with Alexa rank, shall we?

The fact that the average is dynamic, is both a good and a bad thing. This is the same case as the Alexa rank, where it skews the data towards sites in US and who are tech savvy orientated.

Same goes for this case, only SEO’s will use this tool, so this average will be derived from all of our sites, and our competition :)

Anyway, even if it misses a percentile, who cares. This is a neat feature, and coupled with the other overview tabs in Spydermate you have a complete general picture of a website. What this analysis shows is that I should have a higher PR and Google neglected me…

As I said in the review post, experienced SEO’s find the site compare ability priceless.

The tool is getting some final finishing touches as we speak, and it will be live for the public very soon, maybe within the month. Go bookmark it now.

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Popularity: 23% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , ,

Nov 07

All affiliates, at least the advanced ones, test out many micro niches at any given time. If I, for example were to consider the pokemon niche, I would do some keyword research, and come up with a good keyword list, that includes both competitive and untapped keywords.

Then, I would buy a few domains, preferrably with those keywords in them. Pokemon have lots of products, so I would go the tangible product way, setting up 10-20 Mcjiffy ebay stores. If one of the domains got some traffic, I would switch it to ppc ads just to get an idea of the bids, as well as the advertised websites.

I would also set up around 10 splogs, to test out the keyword list. And a picture gallery, as well as a video gallery filled with youtubes.

I would social bookmark all of those sites, and see which social bookmarking site performs better for the niche.

After a timeframe that gives me significant statistical data, I would print out every bit of info I had gathered, lay them all out on a table, and start brainstorming on possible utilization avenues.

Maybe the video blog performed well? Maybe I got 2 keywords that brought in lots of traffic, something like “pokemon teddy bear”? Maybe the niche needs more boobs? Or less boobs?

Simple questions really. Then I would use my experience to see what I could make on each category, with which engine, and which tools.

I have made for example, a successful anime pic gallery in the past. I used the Gallery2 engine. I already have a folder with the engine, templates and useful plugins. Cool, that is one project on the list.

I have also made a successful anime adwords campaign in the past, with deceptive ad copy. Kids are much easier to deceive… Great, that means I can do the same and get lots of cheap traffic.

Where to send it though… Hmm. I scour the CPA networks, and find 2 lead offers related to pokemon or kids. Cool. So the second project has the title “Adwords campaign, with deceitful ad copy sending traffic to a thin pokemon site, filled with the CPA I found”.

I saw that Adsense performed poorly, so I decide to leave it out of the deal.

Then I do some different kind of thinking. I have never done it before, but I know that avatar sites work well. Why not niche avatar sites then? That is my 3rd new project. Will need some research, checking out the other sites, and finding the script for the job. I will also think about bundling the avatars on torrents and uploading them, putting the site info in the torrent file. The latter is a technique that I know it works.

This process, gives me:

  • A keyword list to focus on.
  • Keyword rich domains to play with.
  • Indexed domains to play with.
  • Domains with relevant traffic.
  • 2 tried and tested methods to make money.
  • A brand new project to keep me from falling asleep from boredom.
  • About a month’s worth of data to extrapolate information.
  • Worthless sites, that can be splogged for linkjuice poured into the performing ones.

Cool. We have work to do. Pika?

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Popularity: 33% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , , , , , ,

Nov 05

I had a recent talk with an advertiser, who was interested in buying banner space on this blog. The discussion reminded me why I didn’t want to bother with individual advertisers in the first place. 

I was trying to tell him that my blog gets 400 uniques/day, and his argument against that was that my Alexa rank was not high enough, and that I was not getting that many visitors in reality. Here is my Alexa traffic rank, it is all public information anyway.

As I was saying, he claimed that a blog with a rank of 330.000 could not get so many visitors, and I was trying to explain to him, that despite the skewed Alexa data, the number you see there is the overall traffic rank. If you look at the bottom of the page, you will see a little graph that shows 65% of my visitors are from the US. And the chart right below that, shows my alexa traffic rank for the US, 73.000.

EDIT: Just to prove how irrelevant Alexa is, look at what Alexa shows as a relevant site to mine.

An analysis changes a lot depending on how you look at it. The pitfall here is when you look at the wrong kind of data. For example, people want to buy links from high PR posts omitting the new posts on authority blogs that are bound to get PR in a few weeks. Dumb, yes, but people do tend to think like that.

It is a good thing to check the numbers, but make sure you are looking at the right ones.

And now a fact I have wanted to point out for a long time: Google Analytics is scrubbing your data.

It really is. The analysis for glowleaf.net shows 1/10th of the visitors! That is a huge gap, it goes far from a simple discrepancy. Just to make sure, I used another 3rd party analytics script, and the data it showed were pretty much the same as my hosting tracking report. Losing 90% of my visitors is a crappy way to report my traffic…

Despite the crappy tracking, the Google Analytics tabs have a lot to tell me about my blog.

 

Traffic sources, all traffic sources:

 

Source/Medium Visits Pages/Visit Avg. Time on Site % New Visits Bounce Rate
1.
(direct) / (none)
468 1.77 00:05:15 49.57% 71.37%
2.
wickedfire.com / referral
91 1.32 00:01:15 52.75% 79.12%
3.
google / organic
70 1.34 00:01:17 64.29% 75.71%
4.
blindapeseo.com / referral
14 1.57 00:02:30 35.71% 57.14%
5.
forums.digitalpoint.com / referral
14 1.07 00:00:12 85.71% 92.86%
6.
cull.gr / referral
11 1.09 00:00:35 100.00% 90.91%
7.
bobit.gr / referral
8 1.12 00:03:29 75.00% 87.50%
8.
bluehatseo.com / referral
3 10.67 00:51:53 66.67% 33.33%
9.
yahoo / organic
3 1.00 00:00:00 100.00% 100.00%
10.
adbrite.com / referral
2 1.00 00:00:00 100.00% 100.00%
11.
contempt.me / referral
2 2.50 00:02:44 50.00% 50.00%
12.
insomnia.gr / referral
2 1.00 00:00:00 100.00% 100.00%

The avg time on site column is what I see as the most important, and it is worth noting that a simple comment on bluehatseo gave me a loyal reader. 5 minutes on average for the majority of my visitors are enough for me.

Visitors, depth of visit:

 

Depth of Visit Visits Percentage of all visitors
1 pages 520.00 73.97%
2 pages 94.00 13.37%
3 pages 33.00 4.69%
4 pages 22.00 3.13%
5 pages 13.00 1.85%
6 pages 2.00 0.28%
7 pages 9.00 1.28%
8 pages 2.00 0.28%

Here we see that my readers are shallow diggers, with hardly more than one page visited on average.

Visitors, Loyalty:

 

Number of Visits Visits Percentage of all visitors
1 times 384.00 54.62%
2 times 44.00 6.26%
3 times 20.00 2.84%
4 times 13.00 1.85%
5 times 12.00 1.71%
6 times 9.00 1.28%
7 times 8.00 1.14%
8 times 7.00 1.00%
9-14 times 39.00 5.55%
15-25 times 45.00 6.40%
26-50 times 40.00 5.69%
101-200 times 66.00 9.39%
201+ times 16.00 2.28%

This table on the contrary, shows us that half the visitors are repeat readers, with a nice percentage of ~20% coming back for more than 20 times. The information we derive from this table and the previous is that the shallow diggers we saw earlier are basically repeat visitors who stay updated on every post.

A thing we can do to fix that problem of shallow visitors, is to use plugins that show relevant posts etc.

Visitors, length of visit:

 

Length of Visit Visits Percentage of all visitors
0-10 seconds 522.00 74.25%
11-30 seconds 9.00 1.28%
31-60 seconds 10.00 1.42%
61-180 seconds 39.00 5.55%
181-600 seconds 49.00 6.97%
601-1,800 seconds 44.00 6.26%
1,801+ seconds 30.00 4.27%

This table shows us something interesting. While 75% of the visitors barely skim the site (maybe its the big fat smileys on top that deter them, but who cares…) we have a loyal percentage of ~20% who are definately reading the posts, and when we factor in the repeat visits from the other tables, we see that they do so often.

Traffic sources, keywords:

 

4. 5 2.20 00:08:19 40.00% 40.00%

I just had to write this, it is so funny that I cannot bear it! Average time on site 8+ minutes from the “wickedfire skittles” google search, making that keyword the biggest avg time on site on the keywords page…

All that data, gives me the information that 20% of my readers, that is 80 out of the 400 daily visitors, are my loyal readers, who keep coming back for more (no idea why…)

Sounds good enough for me. Now, where can I find an advertiser that will rent adspace based on 80 loyal uniques/day?

Screw that, I am just waiting for these guys to go live… (crappy anchor text courtesy of their non inclusion in their beta phase of my blog)

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Popularity: 20% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , , ,