Mar 25

Are you blogging to have a voice in this new age of information?

Are you blogging just to make money?

Maybe it’s a little of both?

Whatever the reason; be honest, to yourself and to your readers.

I started building websites in 1994, why, because it was the next logical step in software for me. I was developing database systems and desktop applications. It wasn’t about the money, it was the artistic side if you will, just to do it. 10 Years later, blogging was the next logical step. A blog is a website, but a website is not a blog. So, I jumped in and started working with it.

Now, what was next? Yep, making money. I had already developed a couple websites that generated income and I could easily see the potential in blogging, and it has been a lot of fun.

So here I am and it has gone full circle. I now get to do some of both. This site is not intended to be a profit center, but a place where I can share my experience with others. I have blogs and websites to make money with, and I am doing very well with those, so I thought I would try to slow down a little and see if I could help others, which is something I have always loved to do.

This site is intended to help new and experienced bloggers alike. I would love for you to bookmark my site and subscribe to my feed. I am here to help. If you should have any comments, questions… please don’t hesitate to ask.

Best Regards,
David “CyberCoder” Cooley

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Mar 22

studiopress.jpg

* AdSense-ready: The theme comes with three units integrated already. A 468×60 unit on top, a 336×280 unit on top of the sidebar and a 120×600 unit on the bottom of the sidebar. You just need to copy & paste the AdSense code on the specific php files.
* Widget-ready: The theme supports widgets, so just drop the ones you use. (more…)

Mar 21

Posted by inflatemouse

Note from Rebecca: Carlos del Rio is working with us on some conversion and landing page testing, and he agreed to author a few blog posts about the topics. Also check out his previous post in the series, “Can the Long-Tail Hurt Your PPC Campaign?”


Doing business on the Internet means you have an unlimited audience — it also means you have many competitors. Thankfully, you also have numerous options to build your personal path to success on the web. They fall into two rough groups: Traffic and Customers.

Building Traffic

Traffic is all the people that see your site or pass on your brand to another person.

Web Traffic can be built through Search Optimization, both paid and organic. Increasing your volume through the search engines’ results can be a very time consuming process and requires a high level of maintenance. Your results are only as good as your current situation. There are regular changes to the search engines and ad distribution systems, and your many competitors will also be changing to take visibility for themselves.

A search campaign will include a combination of:

  • Research to find keywords, link opportunities, and current positions
  • Site changes to improve architecture and content
  • Link acquisition through content creation, link buying, and link baiting
  • Measuring results
  • And then repeat the process

It is important to remember that the purpose of search optimization is traffic. Some people become obsessive about rank – that is a mistake. If you build your business on a handful of phrases, you are building a tower on wheels.

Search is a great option if you are already doing well, it will help you grow incrementally and increase your position to weather things like search engine changes.

Web Traffic can also be built through offline marketing like television and print. The Internet is not an island, and we are nearly immune to banners. Kia earlier this year aired a commercial that featured a man turning the pages of a book that was titled Kia.com, and every page of the book said in large letters Kia.com. The same goes for Burger King, who recently aired a commercial that ends with www.whopperfreakout.com. Both Kia and Burger King have successfully leveraged TV into web traffic; BK has even manufactured a query space around Whopper Freakout. And this isn’t BK’s first web venture; do you remember the Subservient Chicken?

If you already have an advertising budget, you should be incorporating your websites.

Going Beyond Traffic

If you’re in a position where you already have traffic, or if you don’t have time to wait, you may find a long distance to your next milestone. Traffic begins to degrade very quickly when not attended. If you focus on what you offer, you will find sustaining and growing easier, because a good offer does not disappear while you build traffic.

Unless your only goal is to capture a phrase for vanity, you should start your SEO changes by asking, “What am I going to do with these people once they get here?”

Building Customers

Customers are people that use your site: download, contact you, buy something, etc.

Where Traffic building is largely focused on distribution and visibility, Customer building is focused on people. Building customer base can be approached from a standpoint of retention or acquisition.

Retention means loyalty, giving each customer a reason to come back. Take, for example, Zappos — they have a 365-day return policy. This keeps the customers coming back time and time again – because there is very low risk in purchase. The service level is so high that many people buy multiple pairs of shoes and return them many times. One of my friends bought five pairs of shoes in one work week and returned all but one pair.  Zappos is so customer-centric that they will even send flowers if your mom dies.

Zappos has such good service that these repeat customers ignore the poor usability and low success rate in finding a shoe that fits. While good customer service can be labor intensive, it is something you have control over and can create word of mouth traffic.

Also, you can grow through customer acquisition. For the Internet we call this conversion optimization. But what exactly optimizes your conversions?

Really anything that you control can improve your conversion of Traffic to Customers:

  • The colors you use
  • The service that you offer
  • The brand feeling you create

To improve your bottom line you need to make a clear path of action and show clearly where visitors should go and what you want them to do. Making sure that the action that is important to your business becomes valuable to your visitor is the key to successful customer acquisition.

The positive of conversion optimization is that it focuses on things that are in your power. Google changing their algorithm can’t take away your message, guarantees, or loyal customers. Changes that are made for your traffic building campaigns run parallel to changes that affect your conversions — so it makes sense to do them both at the same time.

Kia builds brand, Zappos decreases barrier to entry, and Burger King offers entertainment; all get the same end, more Traffic. But these new thousands of people are no more likely to become customers than the previous thousands.

If you are changing content to optimize for a keyword, you should also be making changes that improve your path to action. When you are building traffic you will quickly find increasingly difficult barriers to scale. Pouring thousands of visitors into a leaky sieve is going to make improvement slow. So, how do you improve quickly?

  • Change your return policy
  • Change the way you handle abandoned purchases
  • Change what you put at the top of your page
  • Think about what you want when you are a customer

If you are currently considering SEO, you should also be considering why you need more traffic. If you need more traffic because you aren’t selling well, you are taking the long road. If you need traffic because you need to scale up, you might as well consider how you can reduce friction for your customers at the same time.

By reaching for the low-hanging fruit in Traffic building and Customer acquisition at the same time, you will reap the most benefits from both.

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Mar 17

One of the problems with Wordpress is that it creates a lot of duplicate content, and there have been a lot of conversations on whether search engines, especially Google penalize you for duplicate content. It seems that it is not a penalty but a filter.

If you create a standard Wordpress site you will have same post display under the specific post, Archives, Categories, Feeds and Trackbacks. And the Archives and categories can create several duplicates by themselves depending on the site settings.

When a crawler visits the site it must decide which of these pages is most relevant, and the majority of time it does not pick the one you would. I have tested this on several sites and found that the Category pages usually get listed ahead or in place of the actual post.

There are 2 ways to cure this. One is with a robots.txt file and the other is with an IF statement in the code. The downside to using only a robots.txt file solution is that it is a blanket being thrown over a specific problem and sometimes you can trap a good page by accident.

A robots file should be used to block out some of the core files in Wordpress, as follows.

User-agent: *
Disallow: /category/
Disallow: /wp-admin/
Disallow: /wp-includes/
Disallow: /wp-admin/
Disallow: /wp-
Disallow: /about/trackback/
Disallow: /wp-register.php
Disallow: /wp-login.php
Disallow: /trackback/
Disallow: /feed/

Now to stop all the other duplicate content place the following statement in the header file right before the first occurrence of Meta…

<?php if(is_home() | is_single() | is_page()){
echo ‘<meta name=”robots” content=”index,follow”>’;
} else {
echo ‘<meta name=”robots” content=”noindex,follow”>’;
}?>

This will make all pages that are not the Home page, or a post page or a static page tell the Robots NOT index, but follow all links.

With these changes the site should get a very clean and accurate index listing.

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Mar 17

Tomorrow brings the unusual combination of “Super Tuesday” as well as “Fat Tuesday”. Some will be blowing it out in New Orleans, getting all of their sins out of their system before lent. Others will be voting in primary elections. Maybe they’re the same thing (hey - it’s an easy joke!). For me, Mardi Gras always meant rugby.

It has been 22 years since I made my first trip down to New Orleans for the annual LSU Mardi Gras Rugby Tournament. I never really intended to go to Mardi Gras (I didn’t even know what it was), much less play rugby. But I didn’t get much playing time during the Saturday football games and my roommate was helping to start the first Rhodes College rugby team. I went to one or two practices, just for fun, but didn’t give it much thought. It seemed like backyard football to me.

One Sunday morning in the fall of 1985, after having too much fun at some late night party, Rock ‘em Sock ‘em Rusty B. barged into my room and announced that I was needed for that day’s rugby game. We were playing Ole Miss. I quietly complained about the noise, the light and my pounding headache. Clearly, that was not the right answer. Rusty yanked me out of bed, tossed my cleats in my direction and said something along the lines of, “Get yer ass up and get dressed - you’re playing!”

Rusty was about 6′3″ and weighed in at 275 lbs. He was a starting offensive tackle on Saturdays. At the time, I was a strapping 162 lbs. and, although I was speedy, I couldn’t escape his demands.

Within an hour, I was reluctantly on the field. The Ole Miss game quickly had me sweating, however, and I felt less crappy as the game went on. I didn’t know the rules and was called for a number of penalties such as diving on a loose ball and ‘knocking on’ - i.e. dropping a ball forward. I was certain that this would be my last game. I really didn’t enjoy penalizing my team every few minutes.

The game was tied 0-0 and the clock was winding down. Ole Miss was getting ready to score and it looked like we were doomed. But one of the Rebel players tried to turn the corner on my side when I tackled him, picked up the ball and sprinted the distance of the field for a try. The whistle blew and we won 3-0. I was hooked!

A few weeks later, we took the ultimate road trip to Baton Rouge where we played rugby by day and went to Mardi Gras parades in New Orleans at night. That was my first trip to the Big Easy and many more were to follow. The LSU Mardi Gras Rugby Tournament became a staple road trip. Here’s a great video one of my old teammates just sent me comparing rugby to soccer. I don’t remember it being quite so much like the UFC, but the home team always did supply the keg.

Mar 13

Internet Marketing Toronto AKA Christopher Kata Yahoo! has turned down Microsoft’s buyout proposal!

Not much more to say about it - the Yahoo! board turned it down citing that it was not in the best interest of shareholders. Not sure how more money is not in their best interested, but we’ll see what happens over the next few weeks.

So what do you think of the buyout - should Microsoft buy Yahoo!?

Mar 11

Eragon is a fantastic book, written by a 15 year old genius, Christopher Paolini. If you know the Wheel of Time series and Dune you know that Christopher borrowed a lot from them (and of course Robert Jordan borrowed a lot from Frank Herbert, so that is not really a point). While the events sometimes seem “scripted” (what you expect to happen happens) it’s still a fantastic novel, without all the woman-man discussions of Wheel of Time, and it also comes much faster to an end :)

The audiobook is read by Gerard Doyle, who makes this excellent story even more shining. He gives his best to mimick the different tongues of all the characters. This would probably fun even with a lousy story …

So I encourage you to click through and download it! It’s unabridged of course, I wouldn’t bother you with anything else.

Eragon: The Inheritance Trilogy, Book 1 (Unabridged)

Mar 10

The other day, I came across Thisisby.us, a User Generated Content (UGC) driven site where they share the revenue with with their writers. I signed up for it pretty quickly; several months ago I had contemplated launching a similar project, and I was interested in seeing how well the concept worked from a user’s perspective.

The concept is very solid. The deal is they share 50% of their daily revenue with their authors. An author gets paid based on the share of ‘Current Goodness’ his articles and comments generate on a given day. ‘Current Goodness’ is determined by a simple formula give over 24 hours:

Current Goodness is based on views and votes received in the last 24 hours. Current Goodness is equal to (1+Views received in the last 24 Hours)*Votes received in the last 24 Hours.

It is a good system - it is much fairer than other sites such as Digital Journal who pay by the vote alone, regardless of the page views. this system rewards writers who cover controversial topics which generate a lot of reads; under other systems, the writer may not receive any votes, since many of his readers will disagree with him or her.

To test it out, I created a generic content piece titled, ‘The 5 Worst Types of Drivers‘. Once the piece was published on the site, I submitted it to Digg, Reddit, Stumbleupon, Del.icio.us and Netscape.

My article rapidly rose in the daily ranks on the site, and is currently sitting as the #2 article in the last 24 hours with 1072 views, 14 votes, and a ‘Current Goodness’ score of 15,022 current goodness at the time of this writing.

So, as the second most popular article, one would think I would walk away with a decent share of the site’s daily rewards. Think again.

The #1 article on the site for the last 24 hours is ‘Tempur-Pedic Beds and Sex Do Not Mix‘. This article has gone successful on Reddit & Digg, and is currently at a Current Goodness score of over 800,000.

So it will be getting the lion’s share of the profits from today. Not that I am bitter - I am not doing this for the monetary gain! Rather, I was curious how well the concept worked.

Having looked at the sites advertising, it appears that the site makes ~$150 / day from Blogads, and probably another $100 or so from CPM advertising. So, assuming a $250 daily budget, $125 of the goes to the authors. Assuming that the site authors get ~845,000 total ‘Goodness’ cumulative today, the #1 author is on track to get ~95% of the day’s earnings, about $118. Me, at #2, am on track for ~1.75% of the earnings, about $2.20. The remainder (~$4.80) will be split up among the site’s countless other authors.

The best conclusion to take from this is if anybody is writing articles on a site like this for the monetary aspect, you better hope your article becomes successful on a social network. If anyone else does, you will not make anything.

On the positive side, it quickly became apparent that the site has a rather vibrant community. People are very free with commenting and discussions. While there is criticism within the users, it is generally of a constructive sort, especially within the ‘fiction’ area.

If you enjoy writing, I would strongly recommend checking out Thisisby.us. It’s a very friendly, writer-oriented site with a helpful, accessible community. Don’t go with the intention of making money unless you think you can make it on a social network; you won’t make much, and you would likely be better off running your own site anyways.

Edit: Just to confirm what I said above about it not being for the money… well.. I just got back the results for this article, and I have made $0.48, far less than the $1.20 I estimated. C’ est la vie.

Mar 8

51847hkqxl_aa240_.jpgI’ve been given a copy of Jaimie Sirovich and Cristian Darie’s new book Professional Search Engine Optimization with PHP: A Developer’s Guide to SEO

there are 2 parts to this : 1 the bit where I talk about the book and 2. the bit where I talk about the clever marketing they have used for this cool book.

My review

I dig it, its a really good book for someone who is a professional web developer working with PHP MySQL and has built their own CMS, or may be has inherited it and they want to get theor heads around SEO without getting into the social theory of what and why with SEO. In other words its a book for people getting their hands dirty with code.

Through my professional role as an SEO’er I’m advising a company who my employers are working with. They have a custom CMS and they need traffic since their SEO is hell (they even use an Iframe on the front page where the content goes ! ! and they wonder why google does not rank them.

Anyhow the dev guy got a load of “seo this and seo that” and all he got was bored. he wanted to know how to fix things and what things to fix. thats all. Wether the site got more traffic was almost academic to him. It was all about eh development solution. This is where this cool book comes in nicely. For more SEO you should check out the authors site SEO Egghead

The marketing thing is on a seperate post

Mar 4
  • A weird analysis of Hillary Clinton’s eating habits.
  • “Hi, I’m You. Date Me!“
  • Matt Welch thinks this election will actually be about the war.
  • A good summary of what happened in the WikiLeaks case.
  • Dick Morris says Hillary is costing herself votes with her antics.
  • Housing prices are driven up by zoning regulations.
  • The Internet is safe.

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