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Creating a new website -- affiliate

requirements on creating a new good website and earn money while at it..

         

illumina foxz

7:57 am on Jun 6, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hello,
this is my first post ..
I've read a lot in this forum so I decided to register and ask a few questions here because it doesn't seem like other forums can help me out though.

I have been thinking of creating a good content website.. at least for my own leisure and earn money while at it.. I saw you people were having a really really huge website out there. I was just wondering, what do I need to get started? I should be going on the same track as many of you that are affiliates.

Do I need to learn PHP?.. Do I need Content management system?
Right now, I am able to do the designing part on my own and could create pages in html. The problem that I'm worried about is when the site gets large and it started to get hard to keep it in control.

About the idea.. I was thinking of doing on Computer stuffs... Originally I planned to do on a Various topics... but I find it difficult to just keep up all of them. So the solution was to just go for one category, at least for the time being.
Would that work? I mean for people to keep coming back onto my website..

About affiliate programs.. I think I should pick on Adsense later on when my site is established.. would that be a good choice? Maybe add in a few other things like pay per lead or sale..

To wrap up the things... I'm just worried about managing the content and stuff. Please help and give some insight and enlighten me as I'm quite new to this.

mack

7:38 pm on Jun 7, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Hi illumina foxz,
Welcome to WebmasterWorld.

Right now you are at the crucial time where you need to decide how to proceed. Should you use plain html pages or go with a CMS system.

As you mentioned writing a site in PHP may also be an solution.

If you go with a plain HTML static site the big problem arises when you want to make a layout change. With PHP you can usually overcome this to a large extent by using includes. You have a page header and a page footer that you "include" This will allow you to make pretty large layout changes without having to edit each page one at a time.

A CMS system takes it to the next level by allowing you to change pretty much every part of the desgn and layout. It also gives you a lot more control over the site and allows you to administer it from pretty much anywhere you have web access.

I think it all comes down to how large you want your site to be. If you're talking about 20-100 pages then a static site is an option so long as you plan it well from the start. Beyond that I would recommend looking into some form of CMS.

Mack.

joeyfranklin

7:30 pm on Jun 9, 2005 (gmt 0)



Hello. i am new to website design and was wondering what CMS means. i found a pretty simple website developing site named <Snipped> however, i can't change fonts, graphics, etc. the price was right but i might be willing to pay a little more if i can edit more. can yopu help

[edited by: mack at 8:01 pm (utc) on June 9, 2005]
[edit reason] No url's please ;-) [/edit]

grandpa

7:58 pm on Jun 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

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



Hi illumina foxz,

mack laid out some good basics. The site I manage was started as plain html. Then I came along and started learning php. Now the site is a big mix of both. From a management point of view it would all be nicer if I could manage each page from a CMS. But the site is not unmanagable as it is today.. just takes more time and due diligence. I guess I'm trying to say that you have enough knowledge to get started and you can grow into something else. One alternative would be to wait until you've mastered a cms system, or PHP, or whatever. But how long will you wait? And what if you discover something else down the road that you don't even know about today? Keep waiting? If I knew 18 months ago what I know today my site would be managed differently today. Maybe in another 18 months I can bring it all under a unified management system.

One thing is certain. You are right in considering how to manage your site as it grows. Add some basic templating skills to your toolbox to get started. An aside is that SE's like natural growth in a domain and what's more natural than applying new skills to new, and old pages?

Best of luck and let us know how it works out.

joeyfranklin - Welcome to WebmasterWorld
CMS = Content Management System.

<add>
I didn't address your affiliate questions.. for a pretty good reason. Maybe someone else remembers what it was like to be a new affiliate.
</add>

illumina foxz

12:50 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



thanks all..
with Dreamweaver Template, I could update those layouts and stuffs quite easily as well though. The only problem is, I might have to upload the whole thing again if I were to change certain things in the template.. such as texts.. or locaton of the images.
The problem is, wouldn't it be really too long to learn PHP and use CMS? Can I just go ahead and use CMS without learning PHP?

buckworks

1:10 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



It's possible to make a living with nothing but hand-built static HTML pages. So don't wait; write some good content, get your site online, and start promoting it. You can add software management tools as you grow and have some income to pay for them. It would be more work to convert to a CMS later than to set things up with it from scratch, but on the other hand there is much wisdom in doing things so that your expenses don't get ahead of your cash flow.

Suggestion: do enough research to decide the CMS tool you'd eventually like to use, and make sure you understand the directory structure it uses and the URLs it would generate. Set up your hand-built pages to use the same directory structure and naming conventions. Then your URLs could remain stable if you finally decide to start using a CMS.

illumina foxz

8:04 am on Jun 12, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



thanks a lot..

well... is there any suggestion for me to start off with affiliate programs as well?

illumina foxz

8:17 am on Jun 12, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



by the way...
any recommendation on certain CMS system?
free and paid ones...