Archive for February, 2008

New Internets How I Increased My Blog’s Subscriber Count By Over 1000% In Less Than A Year

Admin wrote: One of the most common questions I hear from bloggers and businessesthat blog, is ‘How can I grow my blog’s traffic?’ This is a validquestion, but bloggers shouldn’t forget to focus on their blog’ssubscribers as well. Over the last year, I have seen first-hand whatcan happen when you focus on growing your blog’s subscriber count.

Like most bloggers, I keep a close eye on my blog’s traffic. I launched my blog The Viral Garden back in March of 2006. In the first few months, traffic quickly grew from 0 to around 150 visitors a day on average. But in the fall and late 2006, I noticed that the growth began to slow, and by Feb. of 2007, I was only averaging around 175-200 visitors a day.

But I also noticed something else, my number of daily feed readers had caught up with my daily traffic, and by Feb. of last year, I was actually having more daily feed readers than daily visitors to my blog. This really got my attention, because I had been doing everything possible to grow my blog’s visitors, but had spent almost no time trying to grow my subscriber base. So I quickly switched gears, and over the last 11 months, I have concentrated on growing my number of subscribers. Here’s how the growth has tracked over the life of The Viral Garden:


FBStats.jpgNotice that there’s very slow and steady growth up till just after Jan. of 2007. Then around mid-Feb., growth accelerates. A couple of things happened here. First, this was when I decided to focus more on subscribers. Up till now, I had only a couple of subscriber buttons available on my blog’s sidebar, one for subscribing to my blog’s Feedburner feed, and one for subscribing via Bloglines. Both were buried about halfway down my sidebar. I moved both buttons up to the top of my sidebar, right under my pic and contact info. Then in Feb., Feedburner started tracking Google Reader in the subscriber counts, and I saw about a 30% jump from this.

TVGSidebar.jpgThen in April, I noticed that Feedburner offered a form for your blog that would let visitors subscriber via email. I thought this was a great idea, and added this form to my blog’s sidebar under my subscriber buttons. In the last 9 months, I’ve gone from 0 email subscribers, to almost 100 now. Not a huge amount, but every little bit helps.

By mid 2007, I was helping a close eye on the behavior of my subscribers. I noticed that many were accessing my feed with Google Reader, NewsGator, and NetVibes. So I added subscriber buttons for these services, and also added a feed count widget that showed how many feed subscribers had accessed my blog from the previous day. The pic to the right shows what my sidebar subscriber section looks like now.

Now notice the huge spike around July of 2007. In spending time with Feedburner, I noticed that they offered a service for Blogspot blogs that would redirect all your blogs feed to the Feedburner version of your blog’s feed. Feedburner claimed that this would allow you to accurately track how many times your feed was accessed. I decided ‘Why not?’ and made the switch. I was stunned to see my subscriber count double immediately from around 600 to 1,200 daily subscribers! If you have a Blogger or Blogspot blog, you MUST do this, here’s the link that explains how.

Since then, I’ve continued to enjoy steady subscriber growth. Last July I had around 1,200 daily subscribers, yesterday my count was 2,352, which means it’s almost doubled in the last six months.

Now I should note that during this same time, my daily traffic to the blog has increased by about 75%. From what I can tell, around 5% of my visitors subscribe to my blog, so the growth of subscribers is cannibalizing blog traffic growth a bit. Since I don’t have any ads on my blog, I am ok with this. My thinking is that I want my blog’s readers to have as many options as possible for receiving my content. If they want to visit manually, they can. If they want to subscribe and access the blog’s feed via a feed reader, they can. If they want to receive email updates once a day, that option is also available.

But the bottom line is that you constantly have to monitor your blog to understand what is working well for you. I advise companies on how to improve their blogging efforts, but individuals can also benefit from not only analyzing their blogging efforts, but from also viewing their blog visitors as customers. By paying close attention to my subscribers, I discovered how and why visitors were becoming subscribers, and catered to these people. And subscriber growth of over 1000% in less than a year is the result.


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Brand New Impressive Wrong Techcrunch Reaction On Paid Links?

Admin wrote: 

I think this is one possibly for the water cooler on Sphinn, because I find it comical in a sad kind of way.

Ted Murphy rightly questions Google quite openly to explain why PPP bloggers are being punished for not using nofollow on links, yet many prominent bloggers post quite blatant pagerank passing links to their advertisers every chance they get.

Not only do they mention their advertisers in "Thanks To Our Advertisers" posts, but they also name drop them every chance they get as a form of disclosure.

As an example, almost every time PayPerPost was discussed on Techcrunch , either Text Link Ads or their ReviewMe service was also mentioned but rarely other services such as Sponsored Reviews who haven’t got the same advertising budget.

Buying advertising seems to generate a lot of goodwill.

If Techcrunch regard them as advertising, what reason would they have to not include a nofollow on the links? Advertising has very little if no editorial value.

I get a penalty because I sometimes spend 10 HOURS writing a review of a company for a measly $130, but then I also get other revenue, it is more additional compensation and a discount on what I could charge for consulting for having it public, much like you can get building work cheaper if it can be a show home.

All these advertisers have done is paid Techcrunch money.

The juice Techcrunch passes might be worth 100+ paid posts.

Why Such A Strong Reaction?

So today Duncan trys to defend Techcrunch stating that the links are disclosed and they are not distorting the trust with advertorial content.

That means Techcrunch are selling pagerank

It doesn’t take any time to post a list of 8 links to advertisers. Google’s issue is with PageRank passing links. It is nothing to do with disclosure.

Wouldn’t they like to see Google make a statement of exactly why "thanking your sponsors" kind of advertising links are OK, and PPP links are not?

No, because if Google closely examined Techcrunch in the same light as paid reviews, they would probably find that these "thanking the advertisers" links are distorting their rankings more than paid reviews from D list bloggers.

Techmeme - It Seems Techcrunch Have To Link To You To Be News

The news is actually 2 days old already, and Techmeme have only picked it up because Techcrunch linked to them.

This story was news 2 days ago. My post which included a link to PayPerPost has already been linked to by both Search Engine Land and Search Engine Round Table, two of the highest authorities on these kinds of issues, but it seems Techcrunch determines whether a story is newsworthy if it is related to search engine marketing.

There seems to be a core group of "news breakers" and if they don’t link to a story, it isn’t relevant to Techmeme.

The problem is that anything related to Google is technology news, and their primary focus is their search engine and things that have an effect on it.

It seems Techmeme place a very small weighting on search marketing blogs, despite them having more historical knowledge of Google than many of the tech bloggers, and thus can provide more detail and historical context.

I suppose I should be grateful to Techmeme for linking through to a syndicated copy of my original article on WebProNews, posted a day later than the original.

(note I don’t link through to legitimately syndicated copies of my articles because of duplicate content but I am grateful for all the articles they pick up)

This Isn’t A Pop At Techcrunch

This is really Google’s fault for their unclear guidelines that even has experts scratching their heads. I have had many renowned watchers of the search marketing space state that they don’t regard the few paid reviews I write as any kind of search engine spam, and that they have value. I have had them syndicated, linked to and achieve some success on social media sites such as Sphinn.

Want an example of a paid review? How about my Wordpress SEO Masterclass

That is about as close to the line of search engine spam as I have gone, and that gets me a -1 or -2 penalty on my PageRank.

Duncan, seriously Techcrunch should be in the PPP camp on this one, as Techcrunch have been a supporter of Text Link Ads (or supported by) for some time.

Comments

*Originally published at Andybeard.eu


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New Phpspartan What Is Cost Per Action(cpa)?

Admin wrote: CPA stands for cost-per-action. CPA essentially measures actions that are taken by the web site visitor that result in a purchase or an equivalent action such as signing up for a newsletter. An online…
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New Script Rumor: Facebook Acquiring Plaxo?

Today,  

Facebook is “one hundred percent” buying Plaxo, we’ve just heard from a source.

Wow, starting your story with that sentence certainly grabs your attention, doesn’t it? VentureBeat’s managed to make a statement of "fact" without actually saying that it has confirmed the story. Nice!

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Brand New Networking Search Engine Optimization And Marketing Analyst With Good Copywriting Approach

Admin wrote: Search Engine Marketing requires optimizing the keywords as per the competitiveness and the fitting of them in the content. An SEO copywriting involves creating informative, easy-to-read content with …
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