Forum Moderators: martinibuster
The trick will be to get the 100k uniques every month.
Yup. My city has the most university students per capita than any other city in the country, and I've got street team reps at all universities in the four provinces that make up my region. I'm hoping to reach 50,000 per month by the end of the year. Hope it's not a pipe dream!
True, but the advantage is that music is something that a large proportion of the population has some interest in. It's not like cooking for example, where a serious chunk of the population will prefer to go to the drive-through than read a recipe website. The point I am trying to make is that there are enough people out there to get the high numbers of visitors to make it worth it. I think the key is to find a niche within music (sounds like original poster is doing that). And try to give something more original than a continuous stream of CD reviews.
I'm about to brainstorm my next move on my own music website...
cheers, O.
what are some of the high ticket subjects?
you joined nearly two years ago and this is your first question? cool!
but the advantage is that music is something that a large proportion of the population has some interest in
but the disadvantage is, a topic that everybody is interested in is likely a topic that a lot of people have serious knowledge in, which means heavy competition. moreover, popular music is an example of a typical low skill hobby subject, which makes it hard to monetize.
there are enough people out there to get the high numbers of visitors to make it worth it
as you have to face a lot of competition in the music market, you'll naturally have difficulties in gaining a decent piece of the pie to feed you. add a low click price and worst-case audience (internet-savvy kiddies short of cash surfing for fun) to it, and there you go.
I think the key is to find a niche
niche market after all. the trick is to find one that you are dedicated to, that attracts enough paying visitors and advertisers and is underpopulated by knowledgeable publishers.