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How would you best evaluate different categories for AdSense profit potential?

         

McVicker

1:02 am on Nov 13, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'm a professional writer. Over the past decade I've written about 800 magazine articles on dozens of topics. With print publishing, the article appears, you get paid, and then - if you want to keep eating - you have to soon start working on the next job. It's always a hassle to find new jobs, and magazine writers don't get paid much anyway. The thing I like about AdSense is that each article can continue earning money indefinately. I'll own all of my own work, and eventually I won't have to worry about finding new jobs all the time.

Anyway, here is my question: If you were starting up a for-profit website from scratch, and if you have the ability to write about nearly any subject, what category would be the most profitable? Cancer? NASCAR? Brittney Spears?

How would you best evaluate different categories for profit potential?

farmboy

3:17 am on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



But if you were doing it all over again, and if you had experience in, say, 10 categories rather than 2, how would you choose which one of the 10 to write about? (assuming that profit was a prime factor)

I'd write about all 10 for diversification purposes.

farmboy

farmboy

3:30 am on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



If I'm going to launch a for-profit website (based on AdSense) I want to target a niche that has a decent chance of succeeding.

For what it's worth, I wouldn't do that. I would launch a for-profit website based on affiliate programs, my own fee-based content, AdSense ads and whatever other means of monetizing my site are available.

Building a site for AdSense is putting all your eggs in one basket.

No, check that. Google has problems brewing. Building a site for AdSense is putting all your eggs in one basket and the bottom of the basket may not be structurally sound.

And if you're planning to rely on search engines to send potential ad clickers to your AdSense based site, check it again. It's like putting all your eggs in one basket, the bottom of the basket may be be structurally sound and the basket handle may unravel at any time.

Now the next obvious question is how do you evaluate the best topic for a site with multiple means of monetizing the site? The answer may not be what you're seeking, but it takes me back to starting with what I know best. Why? Because it's easier and more enjoyable and I can get the content published fast.

Later, for diversification purposes, I move on to those topics I have to research and work harder to master.

farmboy

ogletree

4:55 am on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I wrote [webmasterworld.com] about this a while back. If you just write a bunch of articles you may never rank very well. You need to make an online magazine that people will want to use and articles to link to. As soon as you rank well a zillion people will copy all your content and put their adsense on it and maybe even get you filtered out. This is a rough dog eat dog world. Read the forums to lean the basics and network with other SEO's and find out what is not mentioned on the forums. Learn the trade.

McVicker

5:26 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Someone said, "Just write about a bunch of things and see what sticks."

I'm sorry, but that's not an efficient way of going about things. It takes me several days to write a decent print article. It takes several months (if not years) to build a decent theme-based website. I don't think there are any shortcuts to producting good quality content and a solid site.

Using the "see what sticks" approach to vet out, say, a half-dozen themes could take the better part of a decade. Surely there are better ways to evaluate various niches for their profit potential.

McVicker

5:34 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



If I'm not mistaken, to use the preview tool you need to put together a page of content first (and then use the preview tool to evaluate it). Is this correct?

As a quicker alternative to that, I've been doing a regular google search for a given keyword phrase and then clicking on the "More Sponsored Links" button on the bottom right side of the screen. This leads to a listing of competing advertisers. You can easily count them up to see how many companies are competing for AdWord positions for that keyword. Is this an accurate way to determine a keyword's profit potential? Why or why not?

Jane_Doe

5:46 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Someone said, "Just write about a bunch of things and see what sticks."

I'm sorry, but that's not an efficient way of going about things.

People have given you lot of free advice in this thread, people who are living the life you seem to aspire to, and you have rejected ot criticized much of it.

If what you thought was all completely correct, you would be answering questions in this thread instead of asking them.

janethuggard

8:46 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"Seems to I that those who want "spoon feeding" about what to write about should try to be less abrasive in their posting .."

Well said.

McVicker

10:14 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Good research takes time, and it doesn't matter what you're writing for. It also takes time to develop illustrations, charts, and other graphical material.

By the way, I HAVE written a few dozen articles for web publication, and they might have taken even a little extra time because I wanted to do solid keyword research and work the best keyword phrases into the articles. You never have to do that with print articles.

But you might be right to assume that web users don't want solid, well-researched content written by professional journalists. Maybe I DO need to up my game and learn how to spit out stuff more quickly.

And thank you for pointing out how web articles don't need to be perfect right out of the blocks. The ability to make adjustments at any time appears to be a real advantage over print publishing.

Sweet Cognac

11:12 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I just might be the one with nothing to contribute to this thread. :)

I would say a couple of years ago, what you are asking would have been easier to answer. We have 10 sites all just about things and hobbies we have done in our life and they were all doing well in Adsense. Now with smartpricing, only one is doing well. Which one? The review site.

I think nowadays if you have a review site, especially product reviews, you will do well. Pretty much everything else is being smartpriced.

So your articles should be reviews of something. That way after your visitor reads the review they will click to go buy the product. Tah dah - it converts and you don't get smartpriced.

Which product should you start with? Go to Google News and search for New Product for Christmas.

sailorjwd

11:14 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I'm packing today and taking 'what stuck' out of the bank and spending the winter in Key West.

MrV. You remind me of the brokerage commercial where the guy won't say 'I do'... mulling over the cost/benefit too much.

I think you may do well doing business on the Internet... no people to abraid.

McVicker

11:26 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi Sweet Cognac!
Love that "Tah dah..." sound effect!

Yes, your advice sounds right on target. I think it makes sense to focus on a niche that has products to sell. And yes, anyone reading a review article is already primed to click on an ad.

Do you think the price of the product being reviewed matters? For example, BMWs cost $50,000. But a book only costs $19.95. Is this a significant factor when comparing various niches for their profit potential?

Sweet Cognac

11:41 pm on Nov 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Sure it matters. The best product would be something that costs between 100 and 200 dollars. Anything more than that they get queasy when they have to use a credit card. Anything less than that is not worth the hassle. - unless it's a new product that EVERYONE wants! Like the popular iPods!

To me the perfect niche at this time of year would be a product a teenager just HAS TO HAVE! Do you know how hard it is to find presents for teenagers?

Have a great time Sailor!

farmboy

12:23 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



But you might be right to assume that web users don't want solid, well-researched content written by professional journalists. Maybe I DO need to up my game and learn how to spit out stuff more quickly.

Don't be too quick to abandon your research and careful writing.

A lot of hastily produced 200-300 word articles are appearing on the net. But that's not because web users don't want solid, well-researched content. It's because search engines do a lousy job of differentiating between your well-researched & written article and my lousy article as long as we include the same keyword phrases. Thus the search engines are easily manipulated.

But people are likely to recommend your article to others, voluntarily link to it, etc. than to my lousy article.

farmboy

ann

3:44 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Now, Now, OptiRex,

Don't frighten the children.:)

Sweet Cognac

4:41 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Actually I enjoyed living in the "real, non-American world," but my Visa kept expiring, and they sent me back every time.

farmboy

4:55 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



If I'm not mistaken, to use the preview tool you need to put together a page of content first (and then use the preview tool to evaluate it). Is this correct?

You can find an existing page with similar content and use the preview tool on that page.

farmboy

Marcia

5:11 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



But you might be right to assume that web users don't want solid, well-researched content written by professional journalists.

You are 100% right_on accurate! Your qualifications don't mean squat to anybody - unless you already have a famous name on the web to begin with, on a topic that's of high interest already that you are personally noted for. No matter how "professional" you are, it means absolutely nothing to searchers who are looking for products and/or information to fill their needs. And they want it fast and easy to read.

Maybe I DO need to up my game and learn how to spit out stuff more quickly.

Exactly, yes you do. You need to research and read up on writing for the web, which is entirely different from writing for print. People don't read the same way on web pages, and the layout and construction of articles and such is entirely different.

McVicker

5:15 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Is the number of companies competing for ad placement a significant factor? It appears to be a variable that is easy to measure.

Take the following case study from earlier today:

Keyword phrase / # companies placing ads:
"water gardens" / 840 companies
"refrigerators / 280 companies
"bamboo" / 120 companies
"cancer" / 70 companies
NASCAR / 20 companies

1) Does this imply that "water gardens" might be a more profitable niche than "cancer research?"

2) According to WordTracker, "NASCAR" gets about 15,000 search queries each day. With that kind of traffic, why would there only be 20 companies trying to place ads?

What do you think? (not about these categories, but about the method)

ronburk

5:28 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



why not target the niche that has the BEST chance of succeeding?

Might as well ask: why don't they drill holes where the oil is, instead of all those holes that don't produce much oil?

Using the "see what sticks" approach to vet out, say, a half-dozen themes could take the better part of a decade.

Only because you're thinking like a magazine writer. For example, you didn't ask how to go about building the content because you think you already know... but you probably don't. If you try to build it like a magazine, it probably doesn't matter much what category you pick -- the odds of success will be low.

I infer from your postings that you have too simplistic a model of how this all works. That leads you to think you can analyze what it is you need to build, and then just embark on it with high confidence of having picked the right direction. Sorry, it's more complicated than that. Here's some complications:

  • Determine Good-Paying Keywords Sure, use the Overture bid tool and an AdWords account to get a "feel" of where the money is. But if you think that's going to give you an actual accurate measurement of what you will earn, well then good luck. AdSense is only going to continue to get more variable in how it pays different websites for the exact same ad. Will you be on the winning end of Smart Pricing or the losing end, or somewhere in between?
  • Determine Good-Traffic Keywords
    Hey, look at those cool tools that tell you how many searches each keyword gets per day. Too bad they're really crappy for predicting how much traffic you're going to get for those keywords.
  • Make Great-Quality Content
    Welcome to some real culture shock here. People don't take web articles to the can and sit down to read them for 15 minutes. People scan very fast and skip here and there to get just what they need. So, go ahead and make that lovely 8-page article with professional illustrations and hours of editing. And then watch the lion's share of the traffic go to pages 2 and 7, where Google searchers land, extract the 2 paragraphs of info they wanted, and then leave.
  • Carefully Plan and then Execute
    Yup, that's a real good idea for a magazine, 'cause you gotta sell ads, and advertisers want to know what the magazine is about and so do readers, and you can't change the magazine direction later except with great pain and guaranteed alienation of some percentage of advertisers and readers (having edited a magazine as it went through 2 name changes, I should know). But now welcome to the web. Advertisers come and go in a matter of minutes. Virtually nobody "subscribes" to stuff on the web. And after you pick your profitable topic area, you really don't have a clue what topics are going to give you the best ROI until you get enough content up for your weblogs to start giving you intelligence on what web visitors are actually doing.

OK, so back to answering your question (and maybe one or two you didn't ask but should have).

First, use the Overture bid tool and an AdWords account to fish around for areas with relatively decent money and traffic. You also want to look for "volume under the curve". That is, besides the obvious, high-paying keywords, you want to be able to sit down and come up pretty quickly with at least 50 additional related search terms that are getting at least "some" traffic. Conceptually related keywords count too (e.g., if the "money" keyword is "bicycle tours", then "dehydration" can go on the list despite its indirect association). You'll need that list to get you started on "drilling holes". Sounds wasteful, but pick more than one topic area. I wouldn't start with less than 3.

Second, reserve domain names for all three topics, as well as a fourth domain name that is relatively generic (e.g., "my-thoughts-on-stuff dot com").

Third, begin to put content up on your 3 topics but only on your generic domain. Ignore your magazine instincts and write things that have value, but are highly specific and very focussed (e.g., "how to set the master/slave jumper on an IDE Klemdiddle scanner" -- yup, I'm talking really focussed). You aren't in a position to go after high-traffic, single-keyword search terms. Go after 3- and 4-word search terms, or even, entire question searches such as "How to set the Jumper on an IDE Klemdiddle".

This stage 3 is where you are drilling test holes. You want to be able to drill them damn fast because this is where you're going to get real data on the traffic possibilities and real data on the AdSense payout possibilities and real data on click-through rates and real data on your ability to rank well in the SERPs.

Fourth, there will almost certainly be a clear winner amongst your 3 candidates. That's going to be your first real bet on a topic area. Redirect the articles from that topic on your generic domain to appropriate URLs on the domain devoted to that topic. Start building it out.

As you build content, you want to create 2 distinctly different kinds of content (I'm keeping it simple here). One kind is the lovely, detailed, precisely researched article you previously imagined spending all your time on. The other is the same short and sweet 5-paragraph things you built on your generic site.

The short-and-sweet pages are new test holes you are drilling for oil; they are targetted for quite specific keywords. You are now in the business of going after the "long tail" of the enormous keyword space that your chosen topic area comprises. You cannot afford to invest days in a lengthy article that is not going to pay off.

Think of these little test holes as sensors that you are installing in the Internet to bring you valuable intelligence. Even the test holes that bring you absolutely no traffic have value -- you may find that they sit there for months silent, and then suddenly some new development in the world (a news item, a mention in a book, whatever) will make traffic start appearing and making your sensor ring (that ringing noise is you studying your log stats every day to see what search terms traffic arrived via). When that happens, now you know it's worth your time to build more elaborate content focussed on that keyword.

Your elaborate articles should be the minority of your time, initially (because you just won't be smart enough to know what to write about until you start getting some weblog data). You can think of these larger articles as serving two purposes. First, they are the result of your building out an area that a "test hole" indicates is profitable. Second, they are part of your effort to gain "authority" for your chosen topic area. Here's where your magazine article instincts are right-on, since good, well-researched articles make people more likely to link to you.

That's still pretty highly simplified (no mention of link-building, or maximizing AdSense income, or leveraging intelligence on your advertisers, or SEOing, or the thousand ways to mine your weblogs for intelligence, or...).

Good luck!

McVicker

5:49 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi ronburk,
Thank you very much for taking the time to write such a detailed, comprehensive strategy.

A couple of followup questions:
1) Which provides more accurate data, Overture's bid tool or an AdWords campaign?
2) How do you figure out what search terms the traffic came in on? Is that a tool that we should expect from a decent hosting service? Right now I know where the traffic is coming from, but I don't know what search queries were used.
3) You said the short sites were test holes and that one of them would eventually hit paydirt. Are you talking about traffic or are you already talking about ad income?

Ronbuck, Thanks for the time you put into your post. I don't expect you to waste any more of your time, but maybe someone else can answer those followup questions.
- McVicker

danny

6:20 am on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



How do you figure out what search terms the traffic came in on?

Any decent log analysis tool will give you this information, broken down by search engine and search terms. Log analysis is vital!

laertes

5:33 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I also appreciate ronburk's post and hereby nominate it Adsense Forum Post of the Week. Bookmarked.

Thanks

oddsod

7:18 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Great post, ronburk!

McVicker, Overture's bid tool and Adwords are very rough indicators. I wouldn't start using any one with a preconceived notion of how accurate it is or isn't. Wordtracker gives you a little more info on Overture's data but you really need to play around with it to get a feel for recognising what's reliable and what's not. For example: I did a search on "saving" and among the results was a "saving for college 529 Oregon" which is searched 2270 times a month (73 times a day) apparently. That looks whacky. Particularly when you notice that none of the other states figure in any of the searches. I suspect that one person searched once in the last 30 days and an extrapolation was made of how often it appears per month.

For figuring search terms I would use a good stats package. It's often stated that there's gold in dem logs. It's worth spending some time and money monitoring and studying your server stats.

ronburk

7:40 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Which provides more accurate data, Overture's bid tool or an AdWords campaign?

Stop thinking accurate. Instead, think "relative to other topics". If both sources agree that more money is being paid out to clicks on "red widget" than on "blue widget", then that relation is likely to hold on your own AdSense income.

Also, you don't have to run an actual AdWords campaign. You can just use the AdWords account to see what Google is claiming you would have to bid in order to put your ad on top. Again, if you try to use these actual numbers to predict your AdSense income, you will be disappointed. Use them to compare the relative value of two different terms.

How do you figure out what search terms the traffic came in on? Is that a tool that we should expect from a decent hosting service? Right now I know where the traffic is coming from, but I don't know what search queries were used.

Yes, that would sort of be a minimal feature of decent weblog analysis software. When people click on a Google search result, the search term is encoded into the "Referer" field of the resulting HTTP GET, and will (if their browser is not set to block the transmission of such info) show up in your search logs. Any decent weblog analyzer should be able to provide that info to you in human-readable form.

And this indirectly hits upon another complication of the business you're thinking of embarking on. You need some expertise in things like weblog analysis. You can either pay for someone else's expertise or gain that expertise yourself (entirely doable -- it's more tedious than truly complex). Either way, though, the cost of that expertise eats into your revenues (directly or indirectly). You really need to understand the basics of web logs when you're drilling for oil. Otherwise (for example), one anonymous spider can make you think things that aren't true about your traffic. The initial traffic will be small, anyway, so it's not a bad idea to be eyeballing the raw log data to confirm anything the fancy weblog analysis package is claiming to you. More pitfalls here...

You said the short sites were test holes and that one of them would eventually hit paydirt. Are you talking about traffic or are you already talking about ad income?

Example: I poke around Overture and AdWords and WordTracker (and study prospective competitors to see how many different advertisers they are getting) and I discover that a particular kind of cancer looks like a good bet. The problem is, can you make that bet pay off in 1 year, or will it require 10 years, or will it maybe never pay off?

View the act of making short pages on a generic site as market research. Again, I encourage you to give up the idea that you're going to get accurate predictions and instead look for relative predictions. If you "test" three different topics, you will at least get a good clue of how easy they will be to profit from relative to each other. Will the winner be "paydirt"? I don't know, but it's a good bet it will do better than the other two.

Things I'm looking for when I drill test holes:

  • Traffic. It won't be much, but again, you're looking for relative measures. You'll probably want to get at least 20 short pages up per topic before you can hope to get a feel for relative differences in traffic.
  • Traffic spread. Did Topic #1 score the most traffic but only because it scored real big on a single keyword? That's not a good feature for your business plan -- it puts you one small Google algorithm change away from losing most of your traffic. What you really hope to see is this: "every time I think of a new related search term to target in my topic area, it seems like I always get a small but regular stream of visitors for that term."
  • Google Love For many, if not most topics, Google owns the lion's share of the traffic, and you have to look at where you're ranking with Google at the same time you examine the traffic. Did you pop right up onto page 1 for the term "custom paint for widgets"? Great, then keep an eye on that to see if you stay on page 1 or if it rapidly decays. Did you get a measely 2 hits per day for "widget inheritance tax"? Well, if that 2 hits per day is coming from a page 3 SERP, then that's actually good news. That means that a) you're within shooting distance of page 1 and b) people are regularly not finding what they want on the SERPs above you, so they may represent motivated (better converting, higher EPC) visitors. Can't put that all into a formula for you, but if I compare the data on one topic area to another, I can sure get an opinion about which one is looking more encouraging.
  • search term extendibility. After you write 20 pages, does it look like there's a real limit on how many search terms you'll be able to target, or does the keyword space look huge? It can be hard to get a real handle on this until you actually start writing something. Also, some topics are just inherently extendible. For example, if you're targeting GM cars, you know that every damn year there's going to be brand new models to target, which means you're never going to run out of new targets. Do you feel confident you're going to be able to make that "long tail" that brings in AdSense income forever like the nickel slots do for casinos? Besides working on more in-depth articles, you really, really want to be able to crank out at least one new small page per day. Doing 20 short pages on a topic should help you get an idea about how easy or hard that's going to be to keep up.
  • AdSense data Once your "generic" site looks even halfway decent and has, say, 40 pages, I would certainly plug in the AdSense code and start getting data. Again, it won't be absolutely predictive data, but it should be useful relative data. You'll quickly get a feel for how loosely correlated the Overture claims for click price are compared to what you can actually make. Click-through rates can vary greatly with on-page factors that have nothing to do with your content. Better focus: are you seeing ads from decent companies who appear to have money and a future? Compare to the advertisers you see for the same terms via the Overture bid tool, or by searching for the term on Google. If all the biggies appear to be advertising only on Google search and not on AdSense, that's not good news. Also, it's a good time to get acquainted with techniques for convincing AdSense that the real topic of a page is what you think it is.
  • web log data Even with just 20 pages, you should start to see some queries that you didn't expect, queries that give you ideas for new targets that you couldn't think of yourself. If not, then I would worry that either my 20 test pages were too narrowly focused, or else (worse), there just isn't much broad searching going on in this topic.
  • competitive analysis How's the competition looking? No competition is great, but unlikely (worry that there really is no money there if you can't find even one obviously made-for-AdSense site out there). If most of the competition is producing crap content, as little as possible, as little quality as possible, then that's not bad news -- assuming you're in it for the long haul. What you don't want to see is the same set of competitors dominating the top 10 Google results for every search term you examine. That's a clue they may know what they're doing and they have a good head start on you. Head starts didn't used to matter so much, but now that Google factors in page age, head starts can mean a lot.

Finally, I'll reiterate that I would make a little generic website that you can just throw stuff on (anything!) to test. And I would not make it beautiful. If you've really decided to be in this for the money, then you need to gain an appreciation for the fact that sometimes the most profit is in pretty low-quality content. You also need a visceral grasp of the fact that single small pages in isolation can get traffic and make money; people searching the web have different goals than people subscribing to a magazine. That crap site can redirect any pages that turn out to be good for the direction you ultimately choose to pursue, and it won't reflect poorly on the branding of your "good" site, since it won't have any particularly obvious connection.

This is really a pretty different business than the magazine biz. You might be happier if you assume you're going to take one run at it just to learn the ropes so you can take another run at it and do well. Of course, you also might get lucky right out of the gate with your first try.

osewa77

7:53 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Simple answer: Search google for keywords that are related to the niche you want to evaluate. If you see a lot of ads, then it's potentially profitable niche.

Next, go to the Overture Bid Tool and search for the number of times those same keywords are used per month, and compare this with the number of high quality results on the Google SERPS. This should tell you how easy it will be to acquire traffic.

TampaLou

8:00 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Here is the question again: What is a solid way to evaluate different categories for profit potential?

The difficulty with that question is that it is a complicated one. The relative strength of a category rests in a number of forms: how knowledgable you are about it, how much advertising money there is out there for it, how much demand there is out there for those services (which could impact smart pricing), and the inherent difficulties of comparing and contrasting those sometimes intangable elements within different categories.

The reason you hear many people say to "write about that which you are passionate about" is two-fold (if not more.)

First, you're more likely to have motivation to hang in there long-term with something that you're passionate about versus something you're not. With a site I launched this year, the income went from X in June (one month in) to 5X here in November. Had I been impatient, or lacked passion for it, it's entirely possible that I might have given up on it. But now it is the one and ONLY site on that particular niche on the internet. When I declined to put a link to one site about three months ago, citing that I felt it didn't fit the criteria of what the site was about (it's a genre of the radio industry), that person bought ad space on AdSense to get his site linked from my page. Those types of intangables are going to be next to impossible to determine going into a situation.

Second, you're likely to be knowledgable about something which you're passionate about. That, in turn, will help you to write more accurate, intelligent articles about the given topic.

If it takes you several days to write a single article, you might want to rethink your business plan. Are there shorter articles that you could write in the interim to give people a reason to make visiting your site on a daily basis worthwhile? You don't have to give up on the long articles necessarily, but short, frequent updates can give your site constant freshness and reason for people who have a passion or an interest in that topic to continue to visit.

Moreover, content is king, and while quality is important, quantity certainly plays an important role as well. Many people will discover your site for the first time by way of a web search (be it Google or Yahoo! or MSN or wherever), and the more articles you have, the better your shot at hitting the right combination to draw the reader into your realm. From there, if you have a large quantity of material (particularly if it's well indexed and easy to find) they may be inclined to look around a bit, and thus expose themselves to further advertisements -- ads that they might in turn choose to click.

McVicker

10:07 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks ronburk, osewa77, and Tampa Lou. This thread is starting to paint a more solid picture in my mind.

Ronburk: you mentioned purchasing three solid domain names and a generic one to test ideas on. Why purchase the solid domain names at this point? Why not do the testing first, before grabbing those domain names? As you say, the testing might lead things in an unanticipated direction.

Ronburk: I've got three websites up right now and none of them offer the kind of statistical tool that can tell you what search term broght the traffic in the door. They tell me where the traffic came from (Google, ect.) but not what search term was used. Should I be changing hosting companies, or do I need to take those weblogs outside and run them through a third party service?

Osewa77: Thanks. I like your idea about checking how many companies are running ads for a given keyword phrase. That's something that can be easily measured and compared. Now, how important do you think that data is? For a solid keyword/niche, how many companies would indicate solid potential? 10? 100? 1000? What do you think?

McVicker

10:16 pm on Nov 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Tampa Lou,
Thanks for your comments about writing shorter articles. Most magazines that I write for still want fairly long articles, but the magazine that I publish myself has a 1,500 word limit on article length. As a result, we often have to split longer articles into 2 or 3 smaller stand-alone articles that run in separate issues. It's easy to do, and most of the readers seem to appreciate it. Even in the print magazine business, the days of those marathon 28-page National Geographic articles are coming to a close.

icedowl

12:18 am on Nov 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



McVicker, you might do a search for AWStats. They have an online demo that shows the type of stats that they report. They might be enough for your needs.

GalaxyBay

1:10 am on Nov 16, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



AWstats is something that usually comes standard with most webhosting packages. You would find this tool in most Cpanel Unix Hosting packages. Along with Webalizer.
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Analog
Analog produces a simple summary of all the people who have visited your site. It is fast and provides great lightweight statistics.


Awstats
Awstats produces very pretty stats.


Webalizer
Webalizer is a more complex stats program that produces a nice variety of charts and graphs about who has visited your site. This is probably the most popular stats engine available today.

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