Kontera $500 Video Testimonial Contest

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Want to win $500 for making a video? Kontera Technology is hosting a video testimonial contest for all its publishers. Shoot the winning video and you could win $500 of cold hard cash ($250 for second and $100 for third)! Here’s how to enter.

Create an original video or animated flash describing your Kontera ContentLink experience and the benefits using Kontera has brought to your site or blog.

STEP 1: What you should include:

  • Length of video/animated flash: up to 3 minutes
  • Tell of how and when you started using Kontera
  • What sort of impact and benefit ContentLink made for your site/blog
  • Your name and website/company name
  • Whatever other biographical details you want to include

STEP 2: Upload your video to YouTube. Tag it: Kontera, Contentlink, In-Text, contextual, advertising, ad.

STEP 3: Send the URL to video@kontera.com

The full rules can be found at the official Kontera blog. This contest is open to all Kontera publishers or advertisers. If you’re not a Kontera member, then you can sign up for an account here. Kontera has a $25 sign up bonus going on until March 1, 2008. If you can reach 50,000 impressions during your first month, they’ll kick in an extra $25 to your payment.

Time to fire up that camcorder again. :cool:

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from John Chow dot Com

Money Quote

“Life is more important than money, but money is important for supporting life.”

I read this quote in one of the Rich Dad Books a few years ago and never forgotten it. It is one of those quotes that has just stuck with me and had become one of my favorites.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Make Money Online With Internet Entrepreneur Matt Geri

Benefits Of Updating Your Blog Part 2

The results are in! After a month of updating this blog frequently, I can finally report back on traffic patterns and monetization patterns. As mentioned earlier, I plan on updating this experiment monthly. Check out last months update for a reference. So here we go:

Traffic Stats For December 2007/Jan 2008:

Traffic (December/Jan): 1706 uniques (up 1456, last month 250)
Comments: Since my last update on 6th of December, my traffic rose by 1456 in exactly 31 days which is a HUGE increase. This is solely due to the fact that I posted on a frequent basis. These stats are also from Google Analytics. AwStats said I got double the amount of traffic.


Google Pagerank: 5 (no change)

Google Pagerank for MattGeri.com

Comments: Pagerank remained at 5. I am happy with this.


Alexa Rating: 449,698 (down 1145956, last month 1 595 654)
Alexa Links: 26

Alexa Rating For January 2008

Comments: I am probably most excited about my Alexa ranking. It is falling rapidly and last month it fell more than a million! Links in remained at 26. Next month I want to lower this ranking even more and get it into the 200 thousands.


Technorati Reactions/Links: 59 (up 28, last month 31)
Technotati Rank: 238,665 (down 438 218, last month 676 883)
Technorati Authority: 34 (up 22, last month 12)

Technorati Stats For January 2008

Comments: All my technorati rankings have bettered. This is again, completely due to the fact that I posted more and because of that, people had posts to link to and so they did. I am happy with the technorati trends on my blog.


RSS subscribers: 53 (up 14, last month 39)

Feedburner Stats For January 2008

Comments: This month my RSS subscribers increased by 14. It isn’t bad, but I feel I could have done better. I peaked at 57 subscribers this month, and then slacked off and stopped posting for a while and had a downward trend from then. This month, I hope to increase my subscribers to above 60.

Monetization Stats So Far:

Affiliate Sales: $0
Comments: I have two GoDaddy banners up on the site, but to be honest, I am not expecting to make any sales from these links. I put them there just to see what the site will look like with banners.


Banner Ads: $0
Comments: No banners placed on the site yet.


Contextual Advertising: $0
Comments: No ads placed on the site yet.


Other: $0
Comments: I had an offer this month for a person who was interested in me writing a paid review. I turned it down because I only want to promote programs on this blog that I have tried, tested and been relatively successful with. So no sales yet on that side.

Overall Comments:

December was a good month for me traffic wise. I got a lot of Google traffic and also quite a number of hits from Stumble Upon. Due to my slacking off over the holiday season, I lost some traffic, but I am looking to gain it back this month. I am happy with not making money off the blog at the moment. It is not a priority and until the blog starts getting more popular, I don’t expect to make much money from it. Like I said in my previous post, this blog is more about branding myself. I am looking forward to the next update.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Make Money Online With Internet Entrepreneur Matt Geri

Dear AdSense, You Broke My Heart - An Open Letter to AdSense

Broken-HeartAdSense have sent publishers using the AdSense referral program who live outside of the US, Canada and Japan an email confirming that the program will be retired as of 31 January (published below). The email came from a ‘noreply’ email address - so publishers have no way of feeding back their response.

As a result I’ve decided to reply here with an Open Letter to AdSense regarding their ‘Dear John’ (breakup) letter to me. I hope you’ll indulge me while I seek a little public therapeutic release.

Dearest AdSense,

I was sorry to receive your letter today which confirmed what I’d been hearing about our relationship - ie that you don’t want to see me (or my traffic) any more.

I still remember the time you began to flirt with me. It was in February 2005 when you announced a new product - a ‘referral program’ that offered to publishers like me gifts when they sent a new customer to you. You took my breath away with the idea but as your eyes passed over me back then for not living in a place that you desired your lover to live I was saddened. I wondered why me not living across your back fence worried you so much when my traffic was mainly local to you - but I lived in hope that you’d look upon me some day.

It wasn’t like I’d have to do anything that I wasn’t already doing. I’d had a crush on your for years already and was already telling the world of how great I thought you were!

All my wishes came true on November 2005 - when your previous flirtations went a step further and we stepped out on our first date.

At first I was cautious - but when you held me in your arms and whispered sweet promises of what we could be I leapt in. I’m a little ashamed to say it - but we did more than kiss on our first date - I began to send you traffic on that first day - 17 visitors to your site and 1 ‘conversion’ - a small but significant (at least for me) token of my love for you.

It wasn’t until February 2006 that you reciprocated my love for you. I’d been sending ‘gifts’ in the shape of readers to you for months to no avail - but 2 days after Valentines day you uttered the words I’d been longing to hear…. ‘here’s 100 big ones baby’.

In May you said it again and then in June twice more. Your calls were coming with more and more frequency and I began to see more potential in our relationship.

In February 2006 you became more generous with your promises - extending the period of time that you’d accept referrals from 90 to 180 days. You added new features and designs - making it easier for me to tell everyone of you.

In October you did the unthinkable and called twice in the one day and I could hardly contain my excitement.

Darren-Larry-Serge

All the while I was telling the world of my admiration and love for you. I gave them tips on how they too could be your lover, sharing the secret insights on how you worked (things I could have kept to myself), I defended you when you seemed distant from them and I continued to send you more and more gifts.

I even set up a permanent place on my blog proclaiming my love for you as well as a whole category (with over 450 posts) on my blog dedicated to breaking your news, sharing tips on how to work with you better and encouraging people to check you out - it’s the most popular category on my blog. Sure I did this partly because I wanted to win your favor and get the gifts you promised - but it was also partly because I believed in you and appreciated what you’d done for me and others like me.

In February of last year you again whispered sweet nothings in my ear and generously updated your promises to me. You gave more incentive to send you smaller lovers to you but also dangled a large reward before me to send more and more lovers your way.

I increased my efforts to please you and the results were amazing.

You began to call and say the words that I loved to hear (’here’s 5 big ones’ or ‘here’s 250 big ones baby’) more and more. There were weeks when you called almost everyday and I began to wonder where all of this was leading!

As someone so loyal to you I had half wondered if there might be special privileges one day set aside for me. I’d heard of others who’d been given more personal attention and who had been invited to get access to your palace…. perhaps one day you’d notice the efforts that I’d put in to win your affection and build something that you might find worthy of acknowledgement….

Sure I’ve taken other lovers at times. You might not want to hear it but seeing as we’re being hones, some of them even even were more generous than you in what they offered me - however you were my first love and I’ve always had a special place in my heart for you and so despite your gifts being a little small in the size department I continued to proclaim my love for you.

The big ‘reward‘ for sending many lovers in a 180 day period has been so tantalizingly close over the past few months. Surely you’ve noticed how hard I’ve been working to share with the world my love for you.

And then last week I began to hear rumors about you. People began to say that you’d changed - that something was wrong. The news began to filter out and then you broke the news on your blog. Oh I wish I’d heard it directly from you so that we could talk about it - but I guess you wanted everyone to know at once.

It seems that the gifts that I send you are not of the type that I want - for some reason because of where I live. Once again the fact that I’m not living over your back fence seems to be something you can’t get over.

The gifts I send you are largely local to you, I’ve sent thousands of them over the last two and a half years. While I’m sure others have sent more - I know that many hundreds of them have converted for you. You’ve taken thousands of lovers upon my recommendation.

When I heard the news late last week I was shocked. Then I was hurt. Then I felt taken for granted. Then I felt insulted. Then I was angry.

I got lots of sympathy from others about it - but it seems my that nothing has changed in your mind because today I received your letter.

  • You are still hung up on my location - despite my relevant traffic and audience who lives in your backyard.
  • You say that the gifts I sent you that still convert in the next 180 will no longer count after 31 January. You will profit from our relationship for many years - yet you cut me off with 3 weeks notice.
  • You apologize for my inconvenience again but your apology feels empty after years of me declaring my love for you.

You seem to want to remain friends - your letter suggests that other programs might convert better for someone in my ‘region’ - but you don’t seem to understand that I don’t want to dance with others.

Those other programs have no relevance to my audience - and to be honest I’ve never had gifts from any of them. You’re the only one for me - or so I thought.

I’m sorry to see our relationship end. I’ve danced publicly with and for you for years and now this - a slap in the face.

The time has come for the dancing to stop. I don’t want it to - you see I think you’re really great. But unrequited love has a habit of turning ugly in time - so it’s probably best I step away from the dance floor like you’ve asked me to.

I’ll still talk about you - after all I want to help my readers and continue to provide relevant information for them - but I can’t guarantee quite the same warmth in my voice when I do while I’m feeling like I do. That’s not a threat - it’s just the way life is when you break up I guess.

I’m not sure what else to say. I know there’s little that I can do to change your mind - but I guess I wanted you to know how I feel. I do look back on some of the times we’ve had with fondness - but I guess it’s time to say goodbye.

Darren Rowse
ProBlogger.net

Thanks to directeur from xhtml-css.com for the help with the image.

Following is the email sent by AdSense to ‘international’ publishers earlier today:

Hello,

We are writing to share some important information with you about
referrals to the AdSense product. As part of ongoing efforts to
optimize revenue opportunities for our publishers, we’re
constantly experimenting with new revenue-enhancing features as
well as tweaking those products already available to our
publishers. This is the case for referral units directing visitors
to sign up for AdSense. After experimenting with this program
over the past year, we’ve concluded that there are other products
that are of higher value than this program to publishers in your
region. As a result, referral units for the AdSense program will
be retired in the coming weeks. Referrals to other products and
services remain unaffected.

If you’re currently displaying referral units on your site
directing users to sign up for AdSense, read on below for details
about what to expect in the coming weeks.

In early January, the option to add referral units directing users
to the AdSense product will no longer appear in your account. You
will continue to accrue earnings for all existing referrals yet to
generate $100 until late January, at which point the program will
be fully retired. Existing referral units will continue to appear
on your pages.

By the end of January, you should remove all referral units
directing users to AdSense from your pages. Referral units
that you do not remove will continue to be displayed on your pages
as normal, but conversions will no longer be recorded. We
suggest you replace the AdSense referrals with referrals to
another product or service or an additional ad unit.

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from ProBlogger Blog Tips

Yahoo Search Marketing Partners with American Express

Some pretty hot news coming off the press here, Yahoo! Search Marketing and American Express OPEN are teaming up for a nice little partnership together. You now can receive a 5% discount to all of your Yahoo PPC if you use an American Express card. Five percent is rather nice, let’s think about that for a second. You’re a decent affiliate that spends say $500 a day in a Yahoo campaign to make $1,000 (which is entirely possible). In one month you spend around $15,000 with Yahoo. Pop in your Amex for the payment and you’ll get $750 back. That’s a big chunk of your mortgage payment for a month, or your car/medical insurance. Or just spend/save that extra money - I don’t care what you do with it. EDIT: Someone just brought up that in the fine print they state you can only get up to $500 back each year per card account. If you have a few Amexs you can still save a couple thousand I guess, and even if you don’t spend much it’s 5% back to you.

I wish I had a LinkShare account with an approved Amex program so I could pop in my affiliate URL, but it probably won’t be approved for a couple days. So I’ll just take a hit for the team in getting this news out quicker - American Express is key. How many times have I said that now?

Click here to get $25 credit from Yahoo Search Marketing.

Can we expect more than just this initial goodie?

“Yahoo! is pleased to work with OPEN from American Express to offer
savings on our award-winning Web site hosting, e-commerce and search marketing
solutions, which enable small businesses to quickly get online, sell online,
and market online,” said Todd Daum, vice president of Marketing for Yahoo!’s
Online Channel Division. “Yahoo! is also committed to expanding our
partnership with American Express as we explore opportunities to help connect
our respective companies with customers online.” [source]

It’ll sure be interesting to see what else they can come up with for us, but for now let’s enjoy some simple cash back.

Also remember that the contest is still going on. I’ve gotten some alright traffic so far but if you haven’t entered yet, it’s surely not too late. One solid link and you could be #1…trust me. Good luck!

Originally Syndicated via RSS from UberAffiliate

Blogging On Expo - a Virtual Blog Conference

Just a short post to point to an online blog conference that is happening today - Blog On Expo. It is running over 3 days with some pretty good names as ’speakers’. I’m featured with an interview on Day 1 (here). See the rest of the first day’s sessions here.

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from ProBlogger Blog Tips

How to Run a Successful Competition on Your Blog

Blog-CompetitionYesterday I shared some of the costs and beefits of running a competition on your blog. I ended that post by asking:

“So how does one run a competition on their blog that brings more benefits than it costs?”

In this post I want to walk you through everything I know (and I mean everything) about running a successful competition on your blog - from setting objectives, finding prizes, running the competition and more.

Get Your Objectives Right

If there’s one tip that you need to take away from this post it is to get the objectives of your competition right before you even begin to design it.

What do you want to get out of your competition?

The answer to this question will shape everything from the prizes you offer, to the rules of the competition, to the length of the competition.

Speaking generally, there are two types of focusses that you might want to have:

  1. Internal Focus - this is where you focus upon the readers you already have and include rewarding loyal readers, increasing pages viewed per visit, drawing RSS readers into the blog, increasing reader participation etc
  2. External Focus - this is where you focus upon readers who you don’t already have - ie drawing new readers into your blog, increasing the amount of links pointing at your blog from other sites, building your RSS subscriber numbers etc

While it is possible to have a competition that achieves objectives in both of these areas - I find that the most successful blog competitions have a primary focus of one or the other. The main reason for this is that a competition that wants to draw new readers into a blog will need to be promoted in a different sort of way to a competition focussed upon regular readers.

For example - if your primary objective is to find new readers - you won’t want to run a competition like I currently did over the weekend that asked people to leave a comment to enter. This type of competition is squarely aimed at rewarding regular readers and increasing their participation on the blog. A competition to draw new readers into a blog would need to have more of an external focus and possibly would involve readers doing something more ‘viral’ in nature to help me promote it.

One last note on objectives - I think it’s worth mentioning that competitions with external objectives tend to be both harder work and more risky. They require more planning and ground work as you need to force yourself off your blog into new audiences. The risk is that if you’re unsuccessful at drawing people in you could either leave yourself with unhappy sponsors (they are looking for exposure) or leave yourself holding the bill for a prize.

Prizes

There are many ways you can go with prizes (more than I can handle in this post alone) but let me throw a few tips at you:

Sponsor vs Self Funded - there are pros and cons of both having a sponsor supply your prize/s or doing it yourself. This will partly depend upon your budget and your blog’s profile. In the early days of my blogs I generally will fund my own prizes (smaller ones to start with) but work my way up to going with sponsors. If you choose to fund the prize yourself, be realistic about what the competition will bring you. One thing to consider is starting with a small prize and then adding another if the competition really takes off. Changing the rules by increasing the prize is not going to phase anyone who enters - but downgrading the prize from a big one to a small one won’t do anything to help your credibility.

Finding Sponsors - I’ve used two methods to find sponsors - both have worked out for me. Firstly I tend to announce that I’m looking for sponsors on my blog a week before I run the competition. Even on a smaller to medium sized blog this can draw out some good opportunities - you might be surprized who is reading your blog. The other method is to directly approach sponsors with a request for a prize. I’m always surprized how effective this is - particuarly with sponsors who have products relevant to your blog’s topic. If your blog is smaller you need to lower your expectations a little in terms of what sponsors might offer - but that’s ok - you can always grow your relationship with sponsors over time.

Get Expectations Right with Sponsors - it is extremely important when negotiating with sponsors to get their expectations of the competition aligned with yours. This can alieviate a lot of headaches for you in the long run. Some of the things you might want to outlign indlude:

  • the prize - get a good description and the value in writing
  • deliverability - are they covering costs of delivering prizes , will they ship internationally, how will this be handled?
  • benefits to them - what will they get in return. How many posts will they be mentioned in, how many links will this entail, how many readers will see these posts (your normal readership as a minimum).
  • active promotion - will you be endorsing them or just linking to them? What do they want you to say about them (ie get them to give you a short description of their company or a product that they want to promote).

Getting these expectations right is crucial. Never lie to a sponsor or promise what you can’t deliver.

Relevant Prizes - it’s always hard to tell which prize will be most appealing to your readership until you actually put one up - but in general I find that prizes that have some relevancy to your blog’s topic will do well. While I’ve given away some pretty irrelevant prizes on my blogs - the more closely you can match them to the reason your readers come to read your blog the more on topic you can keep your prize (this helps combat reader disillusionment).

Valuable Prizes - this probably goes without saying - but the more valuable your prizes are in the eyes of your readers the higher buyin rate you’ll get. Of course ‘value’ is something that will vary from reader to reader and is not just about monetary value (although this doesn’t hurt). I’ve found that sometimes it’s the simple prizes that get the most excitement from readers - a well chosen book for example can really get a good response. A perfect example of this is the prize I offered last weekend - a 2gb flash drive. That prize is fairly simple and something that many could go out and buy relatively cheaply - yet it drew over 200 entries in two days!

The Wow Factor - if you’re objective is external in focus (ie to build new readers) then a big and impressive prize is one way to go. For example my recent birthday competition which was a $54,000 giveaway got quite a bit of attention on other blogs and was reasonably successful at drawing in new readers. Of course going this big was risky and a lot of work - like I say, a simple giveaway can go a long way too, but is more effective for competitions with internal focus.

DIY Prizes - if you’re just starting out and don’t have any luck with getting donated prizes from sponsors you’ll need to provide your own. This can be daunting if you don’t have a large budget - but it need not. There are numerous options that you might want to consider including:

  • a cheap but highly relevant prize - as mentioned above a prize that is highly relevant to your audience can have as much impact as one that is irrelevant but expensive. Pick a new book from Amazon on a topic similar to your blogs and you’ll find that it can do quite well (bonus tip: link to it with an affiliate link and you might make a few dollars to cover the cost of the prize in commissions).
  • a service - what can you DO for people that they’d find valuable. Do you have expertise that you could offer as a prize (free consulting), do you have a resource that you’ve made that you could give away, do you have a site that you could give some free promotion on…. think outside the box a little into what you could offer a lucky reader.
  • a ‘re-gift’ - this is what I did over the weekend. The prize I gave away was given to me as a gift by AdSense late last year - but I had no real use for it - so I ‘re-gifted it’. I’ve started keeping these types of gifts in a ‘prize cupboard’ here in my office. It includes books that I’m sent to review, gifts from vendors and even a few freebies that I picked up at trade shows.

The Competition

The actual competition that you run on your blog can vary quite a bit and will largely depend upon the objectives that you’ve chosen for it.

I’ve seen (and run) a variety of competitions over the years. Here’s some of them:

  • Comment Competitions - where readers enter the competition by leaving a comment. These might be any comment that they like or could have requirements (ie our consulting workshops offer a prize for the most helpful comment).
  • Subscriber Competitions - where you offer a prize or incentive to those signing up either for an RSS feed and/or newsletter.
  • Membership Competitions - similar to subscriber competitions - but prizes are offered to those who sign up for a forum or other membership area
  • Link Competitions - where you offer a prize to someone who links to you. It’s worth noting that these are risky competitions as Google has penalized some who have run them.
  • Writing Competitions - offering a prize to bloggers who write on a certain topic (for example I’ve run a variety of Group Writing Projects like my Top 5 and How to projects). These can be good for externally focussed competitions as they can have a viral element to them.
  • Treasure Hunts - where you hide clues and treasures in your archives and readers have to find them to win a prize (good for increasing page views).
  • Guess the…. Competitions - where readers need to take a guess at something (for example - I ran a ‘guess the key words that people searched for most in Google to arrive at my blog’ competition).

I’m sure you’ve seen other types of blog competitions being run - feel free to add to the list in comments.

Keep entry rules simple - what ever type of competition you choose to run, attempt to keep the rules as simple as possible. I’ve seen people run competitions where people have to jump through so many hoops to enter that the competition flopped whereas simple competitions (ie asking people to leave a comment) can generate massive responses.

Find ways to add value to your blog - good blog competitions not only give your readers something - but they add some sort of value to your blog in other ways. For example, when the community consulting workshops that we’ve been running here at ProBlogger offer the chance to win an iPod to readers that add helpful comments to the consulting posts. The quality of comments that have been written are significant and add a lot of value to this blog.

Don’t Change the Rules - I have seen a number of bloggers hurt their reputations by changing the rules of a competition mid-stream. While I understand the reasons behind it (for example if there are not as many entries as expected) those who have entered the competition with one set of rules can become disillusioned if you then change things. The only time you might want to consider changing the rules is if the competition has more success than you’d expected and you want to increase the number or value of prizes.

Choose a period for the competition carefully - the length that your competition runs is important. If you go for a long competition (a month) you increase the chances of participation - but also could frustrate readers who get sick of you posting about it. Choose a competition that is too short (or at the wrong time of the week) and you’ll have readers who miss it completely. There is no single ideal length for a competition - but you should consider the implications of your choices. One hint I’d give is to map out how the competition will run in advance. When will you make posts about it (ie when will you launch it, how many posts will you make during the competition, when will you close it off, when will you draw prizes, when will you announce winners). Mapping it out in this way helps you to see how many posts you’ll make which can help you see how much the competition will dominate your blog during it’s duration.

Lighten Your Load over the Duration of the Competition - depending upon your blog’s size and the requirements that you have for people to participate - you’ll need to find more time during a competition to administer it. I generally either choose periods that I have less on or lighten my load on a week that I have a competition running. Freeing up this time can help a lot.

Keep Normal Posts Flowing - it is really important that during a competition you continue to post ‘normal’ content on your blog. Regular readers will enjoy the competition - but not if it’s at the expense of what they’ve subscribed for, your best content. I attempt to keep my normal posting frequency up during a competition (the competition posts are not included in this) and will often write some of these posts in advance to ensure that I have quality content over that period.

Promoting Your Competition - if your competition is all about your regular readers then you probably don’t need to do much more than post about it to get people participating. However, if your competition has more external objectives then it’s important that you think about how you’ll promote it.

New readers will not hear about your competition if all you do is post about it on your blog. A few suggestions on promoting your competitions:

Take if Off Your Blog - include something in the ‘rules’ of the competition where those who participate need to do something off your blog (and on their own) to enter. A good example of this is a ‘Group Writing Project‘ type post where they write their entry on their own blog. Be a bit careful on these though that you don’t force people to link to you as part of their entry as you can get in trouble with Google. I find that a large % of people naturally link up in these. The benefit of this is that your competition suddenly is being exposed to not only your blog’s readers but the readers of readers. This of course works best when you have a blog which is read by other bloggers (not for everyone).

Big Prizes - I’ve already mentioned the power of ‘wow prizes’. Impressive prizes can really draw people in - although with more and more blog competitions happening I suspect people are becoming a little immuned to this. However a unique prize that is worth talking about in and of itself could also be another way to go.

Promote to Other Blogs - promote your competition to other blogs in your niche. Email other bloggers that you have relationships with to let them know what you’re doing. Also - if there’s some way of involving the other blog/blogger you can increase your chances of them linking (for example - ask them to be a judge and promote their participation).

Do Something Out of the Blue That Will Make People Talk - how about running a competition that is out of the blue and that will make people talk. The problem that I see with some competitions that bloggers hold is that they’re exactly the same as what every other blogger does. While this will be ok for blogs with an internal focus, if you want to draw new readers you’ll probably have more success with a competition that is new and fresh.

Two Last Words of Advice about Blog Competitions

What I’ve written above some of what I’ve learned from running competitions on my blogs over the last few years. I would encourage you to add your own tips below as I’m only one guy sharing from my own experience - together we know a lot more.

I will finish with two points which I’ve touched upon above numerous times:

Keep it Simple - a competition can fun into trouble on numerous fronts the more complicated you make it. Every extra requirement that you make on those entering decreases the likely participation rate, every extra post you do it on it will frustrate an element of your readers and every extra hour you spend moderating and administering it will take you away from the core business of your blog (producing content and building community).

Let Your Competitions Evolve - view each competition on your blog as a learning experience. Each time you run a competition you’ll learn a little more about what works and what doesn’t work. Let these lessons shape your future competitions. Also let your prizes and participation rate build naturally. It’s OK to run a competition with a $30 prize and 30 participants the first time around. What you learn from this will hopefully enable you to run one with a $50 prize and 60 participants the next. Let things progress one step at a time.

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from ProBlogger Blog Tips

Welcome to Readers of the Wall Street Journal

Mainwsjlogowhite
Welcome to readers of Wall Street Journal who may have found themselves here after today’s article in there.

If this is your first time to ProBlogger.net then let me give you a quick tour of my online home.

Firstly, my name’s Darren Rowse and as the article in the WSJ suggests - I’m a full time blogger. I blog both here at ProBlogger but also at Digital Photography School. I’m also a cofounder of b5media a blog network with close to 300 blogs.

ProBlogger is a blog that is devoted to helping bloggers improve their blogging and explore ways to earn an income at the same time by writing about topics that they love.

More and more bloggers are now making at least a part time income blogging - with some even having gone ‘Pro’ with full time incomes using a variety of income streams.

I write more about the reasons for this blog and my experience as a blogger in my About Page. You might also like to see some of the ways that I make money from my blogs for an introduction into how bloggers make money blogging.

If you’re new to blogging you might find this ‘what is a blog?‘ article and my series on Blogging for Beginners helpful.

If you like what you read here you can follow my future entries (I write several times per day most days) in two ways - either using our RSS News feed or you can get daily updates by adding your email address to the field at the top of my sidebar.

Thanks for stopping by - I hope you enjoy your stay at ProBlogger. If you do have any questions feel free to drop me a note in a comment below or via my contact form.

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from ProBlogger Blog Tips

Elite Retreat San Francisco

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The Elite Retreat is back and it’s better than ever. Join Jeremy Schoemaker , Aaron Wall, Neil Patel, Andy Liu and Brian Clark for two days of intense training that will take your Internet business to the next level. In addition, there will be a special keynote by Guy Kawasaki.

This is not your average get rich quick seminar. There are only 35 spots available and even if you have the $4,950 entry fee, it doesn’t mean you can attend. Attendees will be chosen by an application process. The purpose of this event is to take your business to another level. Elite Retreat wants you to bring your business plan or current site objectives with you so they can help you optimize your business structure.

Since the Elite Retreat website went up live, seven people have signed up. Six of them have attended a past Elite Retreat. The fact that they would spend the money and go again shows what kind of value Shoemoney and his team is delivering.

Should You Attend Elite Retreat?

At $4,950, Elite Retreat is not for everyone. Ideally, you should already have an internet business set up and making money. Elite Retreat will give you the tools, advice and one-on-one time to take that business from good to great.

Shoemoney is so sure that Elite Retreat can help your business that he offers a better than 100% money back guarantee. If you’re not satisfied with the Elite Retreat for any reason after the first day, not only will Shoe give you a full refund, he’ll even refund your plane ticket cost to get to the retreat! Now, that’s standing behind your product.

The 2008 Elite Retreat will be held April 3 - 4 at the Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from John Chow dot Com

Google Goes Cheap with AdSense Affiliate Program

I just got an email from Google concerning changes to their AdSense affiliate program. The program pays you to refer other publishers to Google AdSense. The current pay structure is:

  • $5 when the referred publisher makes $5
  • $250 when the referred publishers make $100
  • $2,000 bonus for referring 25 publishers earning $100 or more in any 180 day period

Google is doing away with the above setup and will be paying just $100 when a referred publisher brings in $100.

We are writing to share some important information with you about referrals to the AdSense product. As part of ongoing efforts to optimize revenue opportunities for our publishers, we are constantly experimenting with new revenue-enhancing features as well as tweaking those products already available to our publishers.

In this spirit, we will be making some significant changes to referrals for the AdSense program in the coming weeks.

As some of you may remember, in February 2007, as an experiment, we raised the bounty paid (from $100 to $250) when a publisher you refer brings in $100. We have decided to conclude this experiment and return to the original paid bounty amount of $100. In addition, we will no longer be offering the $5 bounty for the first $5 that a referred publisher brings in or the $2,000 bonus for referring 25 publishers earning $100 or more in any 180 day period. $100 will be the only bounty paid for referrals to the AdSense program.

If you’re currently displaying referral units on your site directing users to sign up for AdSense, read on below for details about what to expect in the coming weeks.

In early January, your AdSense account will be updated to only note the $100 payment for referring users to AdSense. You will continue to be paid under the current bounty structure ($5, $250, $2,000) until late January, after which you will receive $100 once a referred publisher brings in $100 within 180 days.

Thank you for referring users to AdSense in the past. We apologize for any inconvenience this news may cause.

I never made much with the Google AdSense affiliate program. I expect to make even less now. If anyone signed up to the AdSense program through me, please try to make your $100 before this month is up. :neutral:

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Originally Syndicated via RSS from John Chow dot Com

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