Posts Tagged ‘search engines’

Making Money Online Is Still Easy

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Even when the overall real world economy is falling there’s always money to be earned online by anyone willing to work for it, and the process is amazingly simplistic. It just requires that you put in the effort, which is where most people I’ve seen give up failed.

I don’t care what you do or sell, or whether you monitize your site with sales or advertising, there is a basic formula to making money online with a web site that is basically universal:

Your web page plus some way to earn money on it (sales or advertising), plus quality content and backlinks from other sites to yours will equal indexing and ranking in the search results and traffic–which will bring you revenue.

It doesn’t get easier than that, and it really isn’t more complicated than that either. Yes, there’s a zillion little things that you can learn and do to improve your site’s performance on-page and off-site, but those are all just “in addition to’s” and not the core formula.

It all starts by having the above basic things in place. Once you have those you should be earning money with your site. And once you’re earning money with your site you can amplify each thing and start playing with those “in addition to’s” to make more money.

Web page

I’ve written plenty about building web sites and pages already, feel free to browse and search around here for those postings. Here I’ll just gloss over this by saying you just need to pick something you’re interested in and start building a site about it.

It can be a static HTML web site or a blog, whatever you want to do. Grab a domain and hosting and get the ball rolling.

Pick a way to make money on your site

Depending on what topic or niche you decide to build a web site about there may be affiliate products or programs you can join and promote on your site for commissions.

There is also always contextual advertising through Google’s AdSense program and the publisher’s network on Yahoo!. And there’s a bunch of other contextual ad networks too that you can look into and decide from.

Finally, there’s always direct advertising sales too. You can offer other webmasters and site owners graphic or text based advertising on your site pages by contacting them directly or having an “Advertise Here” page on your site for them to find you.

Direct advertising is great if you have a lot of traffic already on your site, but can be nearly impossible for a new site so I’d suggest keeping this method on the back burner when starting your site but be sure to revisit the idea down the road once you have steady traffic coming in.

Content

Some people find this to be an obstacle, but you need quality content on your site pages; and if you want the best reach for search engine traffic then you’re going to need lots of quality and fresh content.

Recently I’ve made a free tool available here for help with creating lots of quality article or blog posting content that may help you. It’s called Article Factory and you can access it from the forum of this site.

Article Factory is good for static content, but people and search engines love dynamic and constantly updated content even more so there’s another tool you can use that builds large pages of fresh content instantly based on your topic and keywords called NIMS (Niche Instant Mashup Sites).

Exactly what kind of content you’ll want to use and which of the tools will be better for you to use is going to depend on what you are building your site about and what visitors to your site might expect to find there, but the tools above should give you plenty of help to get your web site up and running fast.

Backlinks

Links drive the web. Everything is based on links and that’s why the search engines place such high value on the links pointing to a page when determining where to rank it in their indexes.

And links don’t connect web sites, they connect web pages. It’s important to think of it that way because a lot of people spend all of their time building links to their home page and then get frustrated when that doesn’t seem to help them very much with their search engine rankings.

The search engines don’t see links as connections between sites, they see them as connections between pages, so you have to look at it that way too in order to develop a strong link building strategy that will work out.

What you need to do is build links to your individual pages. All of them! If you really want to climb the search engine rankings (assuming your pages have quality content on them).

So, by looking at links as connections between pages rather than sites it helps you to view the link building process from the right perspective. It’s also good to think of link building as a multi-purpose process.

Every link you get has 2 purposes for you, first to hopefully bring you some human traffic and second to help support your on-page keyword targeting for search rankings.

I like to see link building as a sort of hour glass with my site at the center point and with each link existing both above and below my site. The top half represents my “reach funnel” from which human traffic can be obtained and guided to my page–and the bottom half represents a rising foundation of support for lifting my page up in the search rankings. Hopefully that isn’t too confusing, and here’s an illustration of what I mean:

Hourglass Link Building

The yellow block is my page, and each link I get for it is represented by a gray block above and below my page showing the dual purpose I see each link as having.

There’s plenty of places to gain legitimate links from such as: social bookmarking, web directories, article marketing, web 2.0 publishing platforms, blogs you comment on, forums you participate in… the list is endless for the creative.

There’s also several posts on my forum under “Link Building” with over 100 different resources for high quality link opportunities on low and high ranking sites, many of which you can use to get deep links to your individual pages rather than just home page links so that should give you a good start in developing a link building plan.

SERPs and Traffic

It’s easy to miss this, but your search engine rankings and traffic don’t “just happen” because you’ve put the things above into place.

By creating pages with content and getting links to those pages you have built your rankings and traffic.

In other words, at the end of the day it is you and not the search engines who is in control.

So it’s vital to spend some time learning the basics of keyword research in order to have the best chance of ranking high for the right terms.

You don’t need to become an expert, just get a handle on how to pick decent keywords to focus on from your pages and then use what you learn as you build more new pages for your site.

$$$

If you’ve done everything above, created a web site with some form of revenue earning, filled it with good content and developed lots of backlinks for your pages then you should be getting some targeted traffic very quickly…and some of that traffic should be converting into revenue for you.

I don’t care if you earn $0.01 or $10,000.00 — the point is once you’ve earned some revenue then you know that you have the foundation pieces in place. Now you can move on to expanding on them, tweaking what you’ve been doing, playing with all of the “in addition to’s” I spoke of early… testing and improving your site performance.

And all of that will be easier once you’ve realized that the biggest hurdle, learning how to make money online, wasn’t really that big of a hurdle at all. It only takes a willingness to do the tedious grunt-work required for getting those key factors like content and backlinks in place.


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Is Rewriting Your Own Articles Ethical?

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

The question has come up several times in the past few days due to my last posting which discussed a tool for helping you to create multiple unique versions of a single article. Is rewriting and publishing your own articles ethical?

I talked a little about the ethics of this particular article factory tool in that thread, and ultimately I really believe it comes down to each individual’s perspective for themselves.

However, I also think it only fair to again point out that the tool I discussed does not create or add words to your own writings on its own. The machine is not writing the articles in this case. The user is creating every word, jot and tilde being put out in the multiple versions, so it is really no different than the user sitting down and manually writing multiple versions of their own article, it’s just faster.

And after some of the discussions I’ve been having with others on the subject recently I think it’s also only right to examine why exactly such a tool even has a purpose. In other words, if there wasn’t a need for publishers to have multiple versions of the same content then maybe they wouldn’t create them, manually or through automated tools.

You see, as I view it the publishers aren’t the problem here. Not even marketers who are shooting for sales.

The problem begins with the search engines, specifically the “how and why” of their index results ranking systems.

Here’s an example of what I mean. If you search Google for “declaration of independence” (without quotations) and check out the first result displayed (I’ve linked to what it was at the time of this writing since rankings do change regularly) you will see that nowhere on that page is there a readable version of the Declaration of Independence. What’s up with that?

The top result is relevant to the term, I’m not disputing that. And it even links to a text version of the right document, but that’s an added step for the user who was most likely expecting to find a copy of the text when they made their search, yet it didn’t appear in the top result… why?

Because the ways that Google and other search engines rank what’s the most relevant or important content for any given search term are severely lacking.

That isn’t to suggest they aren’t doing the best they can, I think they probably are, but there are limitations on just what can be done and on how intuitive an algorithm can be designed; not to mention that there is after all, only 1 top spot for any given term.

And that’s where the breakdown between search engines and publishers occurs. Search engines want to serve the best results to their users, and publishers who feel their content is the best result for a given search term want to have their page served first.

Unfortunately, because the methods being used by search engines to determine “the best” or most relevant content have flaws; publishers are forced to take additional steps beyond just creating great content if they want their pages to appear first. They have to also wear the hat of promoter for their content.

Publishers have to publish great content, AND then apply some strategy to that published content for assisting it in climbing the ranking systems of search engines. Which might explain why I didn’t find a text version of the Declaration of Independence in the #1 spot on Google… since Jefferson isn’t around to do any link building for his document.

If he were then surely the 2nd result from Google (at the time of this writing) would have been propelled up to #1 with just a tiny effort. Heck, if Jefferson had just had a Delicious or Digg account to bookmark the second result from it probably would have jumped up to the top spot easily.

Of course the flip side to publishers trying to promote and aid their works in ranking better is that the search engines are at the same time trying to prevent them from aiding their works to rank better. Because the search engines, despite the flaws in their systems, don’t want outside interference or “manipulations” being applied–which is completely understandable on their part.

It isn’t that they don’t want the best material reaching the top, they simply don’t want individual publishers each determining what is or isn’t the “best” material.

The whole thing is an ugly catch-22 where publishers and search engines act like opposing candidates in a heated election race. They shake hands and smile warmly to one another for pictures, but deep down neither trusts or likes the other very much.

And this all brings us to the real reason of why a publisher would need (not want) to create multiple versions of the same basic content.

As a publisher and having been online since the early 90’s I know of a lot of ways to help a piece of content rise in the search rankings. But, most of them are dubious at best, and some are down-right nasty; so I tend not to use them in my business model.

On the other hand, there is something publishers can do to improve their chances for reaching searchers looking for a specific topic (by keyword term) that isn’t nasty at all, and doesn’t seem very dubious either. Instead of trying to “game” the search rankings they can try to saturate them.

As long as each piece of content is topical, relevant and somewhat unique it’s possible for a publisher to reach more searchers in this way. So, by creating multiple versions of the same core content publishers gives themselves a wider and longer “reach” among searchers for their topic.

That doesn’t mean publishers want to waste their time rewriting the same thing over and over, and it certainly isn’t helpful for the search engines who are trying to “get it right” for their users… it’s simply an effective method for publishers who believe searchers for a specific term and their content should be connected.

I’m sure some puritans will say that rewriting and creating multiple versions of the same thing is spammy, but I think that’s a silly argument. It’s like saying that Ford should only be allowed to run the commercial for their latest car model 1 single time only.

A better argument against creating multiple versions of the same content, and the one I stand behind, is that it doesn’t actually benefit anyone in the end. Publishers waste their resources creating it. Search engines waste their resources filtering and indexing it, and the end user searcher only needs to find a single version of it to be happy. The entire dance, regardless of being effective for connecting content consumers with material, is horribly inefficient for everyone.

Still, publishers, whether commercially motivated or not, are just trying to reach people to consume their content. Just as Ford is trying to reach the most people possible with their commercials. And just as Ford will purchase as many runs for their commercial as they can budget for, content publishers can and will place their content in as many venues for exposure as they possibly can as long as that’s what it takes to make those consumer to content connections.

Publishers aren’t intentionally trying to overload networks or platforms with multiple versions of the same content with any malice. Trust me, as a publisher I’d like nothing more than to spend all of my time creating truly new content.

But unfortunately, everyone must live and work within the rules and parameters of their environment, and as long as there are flaws which prevent the perfect match of search index results to search term publishers are going to need to continue playing the duel role of promoter for their work and using whatever methods that exist and are effective for helping them reach the largest audience.

And tools, like the one I spoke of in my last posting, which don’t change the process but do speed it up and save publishers a little time in their promotional work will continue to have a purpose.


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