Forum Moderators: martinibuster
the last (and first) evergreen i was 10 pages, now i'm making one that has 50, and will see what happens.
on any topic you could write 100s of pages. even the nicheiest of them all can be drawn out. i'd like to get a sense of when adding more pages isnt cost effective anymore in terms of man hours.
Track your stats, build your Excell sheets, and watch your data. Eventually you'll get a feel for when it's time to move off a subject and on to a different one. (It's when your new pages no longer return fair earnings.)
There are many here who will disagree with this advice, but it works for me: day after day, month after month. Gets boring though!
The number of pages is not important, what's important is when a site can stand on its own. That could be from one page to over a 100 pages.
Exactly. One of our sites has only one page, and doesn't need any more. But, although the ads on that page have a fairly low CTR, they have high EPC. I suppose it's our "nichiest" site. [He he, like that word! ;) ]
Another site has well over 100 pages, is "evergreen content" and apart from occasionally adding relevant new pages, is left to get on with it. It has a much higher CTR, but also much lower EPC.
Pro rata, those two sites probably earn roughly the same over a month, so as you can see, it really doesn't matter how many pages you have, what matters is what's on the ones you do have :)
In otherwords, I build on each site continually, and eventually, they will all be fairly large sites. In the meantime, they might generate a buck or two.