Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Hollywood

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RIP George

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Monday, November 28, 2005

Buy and sell domain names

This is a great resource for buying and selling domain names: http://www.sedo.com


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>> There are only 10 kinds of people in the world - those that know binary and those that don't.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Domainers

I just read a great article on the Business 2.0 web site about people making money on domain name speculation.  In the past, this was mostly about buying a good domain name, and then reselling it.  These days, it's about finding names that people directly type into the browser URL bar.
 
I know - you're thinking "these days everybody uses google or yahoo to find web sites."  Not exactly true, it appears...  Although google and yahoo won't discuss it, apparently somewhere in the range of 10-15% of all internet search traffic comes from people that type exactly what they're looking for into the url bar of the browser.  Crazy!  So, if I was looking for information on Iraq, I would type in http://www.iraq.comIraq.com happens to be a very good example - because it's some domainer with links to things about Iraq!  Wonder how much money he's making... (according to the Overture inventory tool, the term "iraq" got 324,245 searches last month, which is a VERY big market)
 
The trick to this market is purely finding a good domain name, or landing a newly minted term, (like "avian bird flu") before anyone else.  Or, alternatively, snapping them up via automated programs as soon as someone that doesn't know what they're worth lets them expire...
 
Interesting stuff - domain names are the new real estate!  The article is worth the read, they're covering a few people that are making millions per year off of this income stream generation method.
 
TG

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>> There are only 10 kinds of people in the world - those that know binary and those that don't.

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Thursday, November 17, 2005

Legal Bloggers (Blawgers)

Last weekend I was in Chicago for the Lexthink Legal Blawgers convention.  It was a very interesting conference in a couple of different ways.
 
Firstly, it was 90% lawyers with blogs, so these were very smart people.  Secondly, for the most part they had no clue about how to make money with their blogs.  They do it for the passion of it.  They write about legal topics because that's where their interest lies.
 
Their biggest problem is that they avoid putting simple advertising like adsense on their blog because they don't want to be perceived as being associated with any of the advertisements that come up.  They also have some fears of fee splitting.  Everyone wants to be able to justify the time they're putting into their blog, but nobody wants to use the traditional methods of monetizing a site.
 
They have great content.  They have good pagerank.  They have zero dollars!  I tried in vain to suggest ways they can monetize their time investment, but I don't think I got through to very many of them.  It's not for a lack of intelligence, because these were very smart people, but rather a lack of Internet and SEO knowledge.
 
Here's the key.  Put up a separate site to make money on.  Whether it's an affiliate site, membership site, ebook, or retail site - doesn't matter, you just need to sell something.  Then, point keyword loaded links to it from your well trafficked, well respected blog.  Start another blog, and point links from that one as well...  publish a few articles, with links.  That's basically what SEO is all about these days anyway.
 
Then, you have the capability to make money with your integrity intact, without running ads, and without worrying about fee splitting.  Plus, you can rationalize all the time you put into your blog(s) as SEO for your $$ site.
 
Anyway - Chicago is great!  I walked around for a while downtown with my friend Candice and explored a beautiful city.  I'll definitely be back there again...
 
TG

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>> There are only 10 kinds of people in the world - those that know binary and those that don't.

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Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Getting content on your site

Content is king, they say. I'd pretty much have to agree - for several reasons. Search engines make content a valuable commodity. Textual content in particular is what I'm talking about. I don't think that search engines have figured out a good way to index the content in a video or picture very well yet.

If you're relying on natural rankings in the search engines to get your traffic, the more content you have on your web site, the more money you'll make. It's really that easy. There are plenty of other factors to worry about, the most important of which is linking, but content comes first in importance on any SEO's list.

This is great, but I'm busy putting up 50 other sites, and programming some cool technology and conducting A/B tests on PPC marketing, and attempting to get at least 5 hours of sleep per night. So when am I going to have time to write content? There are plenty of places to get content for your site, with a little bit of ingenuity.

Here are a few of the places I've gotten content from in the past. I can't offer guarantees about the quality of the content, or if the search engines like this content, but it's not breaking any copyright laws, and not pissing anybody off too much. I do not reccommend using this content on a valuable domain - you're risking dup content penalties.

My favorite place to get content is from the Newsgroups. You need to program an NNTP interface to pull data down from a news server, but search engines seem to love the real conversations taking place on the newsgroups. Several of my sites have over 250,000+ pages of content from the newsgroups. Google isn't liking it too much these days, but Yahoo is flooding me!

I've scraped data from firstgov.gov for content filler on many a page with too few quality words for a search term. Load a database with keywords related to the theme of your site and do a search on firstgov.gov for the exact keyword phrase in parens.

I've used the google API to put the top search terms for a keyword as content filler. I definitely do not reccommend this path anymore...

I've used RSS feeds.

I've scraped articles from article directories like the ones I blogged about yesterday.

I've experimented with keyword replacement on copyrighted articles by writing a script to replace adjectives and verbs with their synonyms. This didn't produce very readable copy, so I've scrapped the project for now.

I've coded forums, review sites, and "wiki" type sites where people surfing the site product more content. This is good stuff, if you can get the people on the site in the first place to produce it.


Here's the catch with all this content though (aside from the forum/review/wiki model). It's not unique content. It's duplicate content. When I get fancy, I'll pull snippets out of large pieces of text to make it a little more unique, and keyword dense, but I'm basically putting duplicate content on my sites. This is NOT a reccommended path for long term site quality. Eventually all the search engines will catch onto dup content and quit sending you traffic. But, if you can automate the task in many many categories/urls, there is money to be made... ...for now...

I'm always on the lookout for good places to pull quality, non-copyrighted content from...

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Monday, November 07, 2005

Cool site optimization tools and tips

This is a partial list of SEO tools used by myself, and some great SEO's that I know...  These are worth checking out if you're into SEO.  There are a couple of obvious ones, and a few you might not have heard of.
 


Google Sitemaps (let Big-G know what files are on your web site)

 

Microsoft's Search Engine and directory submission tool

 

Sweet Directory Manager Tool



Nice directory of SEO tools


 

Awesome backlink analyzer


 

Free/paid press releases


 
Article Submission

 
 
Couple of miscellaneous SEO pointers, as of 2005-11-07.  Gotta put the date, because these damn rules change all the time!
1. Put your keywords first in the title of your document.  Not at the end...
2. Always make a sitemap and submit it to G.  It's easy, it gives a green light for Google to put your pages in their directory.
3. Recipricol links are quickly becoming an outdated method of getting site popularity.  Instead of spending your time trying to get recipricol links, spend it submitting to directories, press releases, and article distribution - getting one way links with good link text.
4. Keep your link building campaigns going - don't do a big push and then forget about it.  G watches how fast links are generated to your site.  If they're generated too fast, G will assume that they're spammed out - unless they keep coming at a steady rate - then they'll assume that your site is bad-ass and everybody always wants to link to you.  And that's a good thing.

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 My Photo
Name: Travis Giggy
Location: Fort Collins, Colorado, US

I am passionate about business on the Internet. This blog is my personal archive of lessons learned while conducting business on the Internet.

I started programming web sites 11 years ago.

In 1997, I started my first Internet business, called Carryout.com. It was an online food ordering service that allowed you to order food from a local restaurant right to your door. At the time, that was pretty cool!

The fire was stoked, and I started learning as much as I could about Internet marketing and copywriting. I became an expert at measuring and testing.

I've been a success and a failure many times over.

Now, a decade later, I still learn every day what it takes to be successful in online business. This blog is how I record those lessons. Since I started this blog, I've learned the value of keeping a written record of my Internet business experiences. As long as I keep learning and growing, I'll keep writing about it.

I doubt I'll ever quit learning.