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Archive for May, 2007

The Lazy Git: Text Link Ads and AdSense

May 15th, 2007

This post is adapted from a message I sent out to my mailing list. Might as well share it with all my readers.

Not too long ago, one of you asked me if I had some more
information about text link ads. As it happens, I really didn't
have much to say at the time, but I can talk more intelligently
about it now. It's timely for me because I had an unsolicited
request to display a text ad on one of my sites last week. So here
are my thoughts about text link ads, how they relate to AdSense,
and whether or not it's something you should be doing.

What Are Text Link Ads?

Let's first make sure we're all on the same page. When I say “text
link ads”, I'm referring to text links that someone PAYS you to put
on your sites. In other words, advertisers go around looking for
sites in their niche and buy links on those sites in order to direct
traffic to their own sites and/or to raise the search engine
rankings of their sites. While there is a company called Text Link
Ads
out there, when I use the term “text link ads” I'm referring
to the generic concept of paid/sponsored links, not to the specific
company.

How Do Text Link Ads Work?

It's fairly simple. You and the advertiser (often mediated through
a third party like Text Link Ads) sign an advertising contract where
you agree to link to the advertiser's site for a fixed fee, usually
a monthly payment. The advertiser gets to choose the link and where
the link is placed, paying more for the top spots on well-trafficked
sites.

You can see how much sites are worth to advertisers using the
free Text Link Ads free calculator. Start by going to the Text Link Ads home page and select “Free Tools” from the “Make Money” tab. Click on the
“Text Link Ads Calculator” and you'll end up on a page that has
a simple form to fill out as well as something that looks very
much like an AdSense heat map. First fill out specifics about your
site on the left side. Then click the various areas of the heat
map on the right to see how much you could be making per month
by selling ad spots for text link ads.

For example, the TLA calculator tells me I could be making about
$70/month selling one ad spot on my AdSense blog. And I could make
more by selling more spots. Hmm.

So say I can get $100/month on average for selling links on a site.
If I had 5 sites like that, it would be $500/month in extra income
for very little work. Not a bad model.

Google Doesn't Like Text Ads

But there's a catch. The search engines, and Google in particular,
don't like paid links. Because it mucks up their algorithms. You
should read this post from Google guy Matt Cutts for some details.

Now, various people in the search marketing community think that
this is bull, that people have been selling links in one form or
another for a long time now and so what's all the fuss? They even
argue that Google does it themselves with AdWords, AdSense, etc.
(Mind you, their programs don't affect search engine rankings.)

I'm not going to get into the debate, mostly I just want to make
you aware of it.

Here's the problem, though. Much of a site's value to
advertisers is based on various third-party measures of how well
the site is trusted and how much traffic it gets. Google's PageRank
and the site's Alexa numbers are particularly important. So if
Google comes up with algorithm changes that force sites with paid
links to lose PageRank, and the value of those links is based (in
part) on PageRank values (all things being equal, advertisers will
pay more for links on a PR6 site vs. links on a PR5 site) then the
money you make from selling text links will decrease and maybe even
disappear. No, I can't predict the future, but it's something to
keep in mind.

The Lazy Git

After my interest in text link ads was piqued, I went looking for
some useful resources on the topic. The only one I've found so far
is an ebook called The Lazy Git Marketing Method (LGMM).

I had seen this promoted by other Internet marketers, but had not
bothered with it before because the sales page turned me off. When
I see pages with fancy sports cars and dollar bills flying around,
it just kind of says “scam” to me and off I got to other sites…

(A “lazy git”, by the way, is a British expression. A “git” is slang
for a stupid or unpleasant person. A “lazy git” is… well, you can
figure it out.)

What you don't see when you read the sales page for LGMM is any
mention of text link ads. That's what it's all about, though:
creating high-PageRank sites (PR4 or higher) and then monetizing
them via text link ads. It's pretty passive income once you've got
the sites set up.

Text Links Ads and AdSense

Of course, AdSense publishers know all about passive income. Once
you create a few AdSense sites, it's usually just a matter of
tweaking them once in a while (with new content, usually) and
basically letting Google do all the hard work for you. So displaying
text link ads on a site is really a close cousin to displaying
AdSense ads. It's almost a natural step for an AdSense publisher to
take.

Well, if it weren't for the search engines grumbling about paid
links. There is some risk to putting text link ads on a site that
is getting a lot of traffic from organic search queries. You might
want to think twice about doing that.

So I wouldn't go slapping text link ads on all your AdSense sites.
Try one or two sites, maybe. Or create some new sites specifically
for this experiment.

Back to the Lazy Git

If making money with text link ads interests you in a serious way,
then the Lazy Git Marketing Method is worth a look. It's not a big
ebook — it's very short, in fact — and it's not for short term
gains — the author tell you that up front. It will require
some work on your part to get the sites going and to get them
ranking well — kind of like AdSense. But that's what I like about
it, it's a complementary process to what you (as an AdSense
publisher) are already doing.

I actually learned something from this book. Not about text ads,
but about finding good domains, both new and expired, especially
about the tools you use to make that fairly easy. The parts of the
book about setting up sites and blogs is pretty basic and I don't
think you'll learn anything new there. Besides the domain stuff,
the most interesting parts of the book are the strategies you use
to get your sites to rank more highly and therefore make money from
selling links on them. Again, some duplication there with things
you already know, but there are some different twists.

Are Text Link Ads For You?

That's a good question. “Probably” is the answer if you're an
AdSense publisher. It's another income stream to consider for your
sites. I say go ahead and try it out with one site and see how well
it works for you. Again, it's a complementary strategy in many ways.
If you're more into affiliate marketing, though, then text link ads
probably aren't for you, not if you're looking to direct traffic
to vendor sites to make money as an affiliate — if you're not
putting AdSense ads on your affiliate sites, don't go putting text
link ads on those sites either.

Sponsored Link: The author of the famous Google Cash book has a free report available for download called Google Cash Strikes Back. He's trying to sell you on his system to automate the Google Cash method, but it's instructive in and of itself in showing you how much work is required to make money by promoting affiliate products with AdWords. AdSense is a lot easier in many ways, IMO.

Eric Giguere is the author of Uncommon AdSense and the award-nominated (that just means it lost!) blog Make Easy Money with Google and AdSense.

From Website to Blog (Part 3)

May 11th, 2007

Time to continue the series about transforming a website into a blog. In Part 1 we discussed the reasons for and against changing a website into a blog and in Part 2 we discussed the initial steps for moving from a site to a blog, which included backing up the existing site and preparing a sitemap. Now let's look at how we keep the old site alive while we dick around configure the new blog and what blogging platform we should be using for the blog.

Two Ways To Keep The Old Site Alive

By doing a backup of your site and creating a sitemap, you've ensured that you can quickly restore things if you royally screw things up. It may take you a while to get the new blog configured properly, though, so you want to keep the old site alive and around while that happens. There are two approaches I recommend.

Approach 1: The Temporary Site

This approach requires you to spend a bit of money, but it's the cleanest way. Acquire a second domain, host it somewhere, and put a duplicate of your original site on the new domain. Ideally you can do this just by copying up the files from your backup copy of the site. If you use relative references in your internal links — in other words, the links to the pages/images on your site don't include the domain name — then the site should just work. If you use absolute links, however, things may break on the new site once you take the content off the old site. And of course, the traffic's all going to the old site anyhow.

The way you fix both of these problems is by redirecting traffic from the old site to the new site. The easiest way to do this is with a .htaccess file on the old server:

RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule   ^/(.*)  http://newserver/$1  [R=302,L]

The key to this rule, though, is to use a 302 redirect instead of the usual 301 redirect. The “302″ code is the “moved temporarily” code, while “301″ is the “moved permanently” code. At some point we're going to want people to go back to the old site, so we make sure the redirections are temporary.

Approach 2: Co-existence

The other approach is to have the website and the blog coexist on the same server. This may be easier than you think. Remember last time how I mentioned that the files on the site probably end in “.html”, “.htm” or “.php” and that the equivalent blog pages wouldn't have those extensions? You will ultimately want to redirect the former to the latter, but only as a last step. In the meantime you can just let the old files site around and get accessed while you get the blog up and running around it.

The only trick with this is the home page, because normally the blog's going to take over the home page, and if people come to your home page they'll get into the blog and perhaps be all confused.

Rather than get all technical, I recommend a simple approach. Use WordPress 2.1's static home page feature and quickly whip up a very simple home page that consists of nothing but links to the non-blog parts of the site. I'll show you how to do that next time.

Which Blogging Software?

Well, you can guess by now. I recommend you use WordPress 2.1 as your blogging platform. You'll find the static home page feature and the various plugins and themes that are available to be invaluable in transforming your site into a blog.

But I'm out of time today, so we'll discuss the blog setup next time…

Sponsored Link: For a complete set of AdSense best practices, read Uncommon AdSense — for serious AdSense publishers only!

Eric Giguere is the author of Uncommon AdSense and the award-nominated (that just means it lost!) blog Make Easy Money with Google and AdSense.

Personal Notes

May 10th, 2007

Yes, it's been quiet here, but two things I want to point out:

  • My personal blog is finally up and running. Very bare bones at the moment, nothing too exciting yet.
  • AvantGo for BlackBerry, the project I've been working on for the past year, finally went out the door. Whew.

I'll be back tomorrow with some AdSense postings.

Sponsored Link: For a complete set of AdSense best practices, read Uncommon AdSense — for serious AdSense publishers only!

Eric Giguere is the author of Uncommon AdSense and the award-nominated (that just means it lost!) blog Make Easy Money with Google and AdSense.