|
Copyright 2005 Randy Charles Morin
Part of the KBCafe Blog Network.
|
After running Commission Junction for a week and a quarter of a million impression (mostly top of page banners). I have zero conversions, zero leads and have made $0. This is similar to other CPA experiences that I've attempted in the past. The ads were highly relevant; NBA playoff tickets on NBA blogs and simliar.
SponsoredReviews is another pay per post service. I signed up today. I added a few of my blogs, but they haven't been approved yet. I'll provide more feedback later.
I got a call from Chitika a couple weeks back asking to test their new premium ad units. They wanted me to replace my primary AdSense ad unit with their units. I decided a less ambitious test would be better and put it further down the right sidebar. I did so for the last 10 days. At first, I was confused because I was only getting a fraction of the ad impressions I thought I might. I asked them and they replied that this premium unit only appears for search referrers. That explained that, but that would mean very few ad impressions. It was paying about $0.09 CPC, which is well below the CPC of the AdSense ad unit it could replace. I'm giving up on their premium ad unit, but I'm gonna retest the eMiniMalls.
A few weeks ago, I was contacted by Voxant to display their ads. They have some very interestering ad units. They have a video unit that pays $3.5 CPM. I didn't like it, as it was distracting. Instead, I went with their text unit ($0.25-$1 CPM). The text units are very large, but they are paying reasonably well. In fact, I'm making more from Voxant than AdSense. The truth will be told when I actually get paid (PayPal) and if the earnings hold up. I've experienced good times with other advertisers other than AdSense (Amazon, FeedBurner and Chitika), but earnings eventually sunk.
Today, I created a Commission Junction account. I've heard both good and bad things, but I was never much into affiliate programs. I'll report back in the next few weeks with my successes and failures. I applied to four advertisers and one has already declined (MLB.com).
Thought I'd just drop a blog entry bomb on what I've been up to in my advertising.
First, I've decided to completely abandon the FeedBurner ad network. After making as much $410 for ads in my feeds, before the Google takeover, I've now made $3.31 in the first two-thirds of this current month. I thought that by now, FeedBurner should've been integrated into AdSense. I kinda wonder what's up for the future of FeedBurner. Is it gonna turn into one of those forgotten Google purchases?
I'm dropping BlogAds from all my blogs, except Talk-Sports. I rarely ever get any new ad submissions for my blogs that get as much as 2000 daily pageviews. You appear to need at least 5000 daily impressions before BlogAds advertisers will consider your blog.
Last, I'm testing Chitika and Voxant and will report further soon on both.
In the last month, I've written 800 words in 4 ReviewMe paid reviews and I made $60. I could write another 6 campaign reviews, as they allow 10 per month. Assuming I could get the same pay per review dollars, that's $150 per month or $1800 per year. Now consider that their are several pay per post services, sign-up for them all and you have an awesome part-time job. You could easily write 30 reviews per month and make $5400 or who knows. Some of the paid reviews I wrote paid me as much as $125. Now add some AdSense to your blog and who knows, you might actually be able to quite the 9 to 5. I think I'll spend some time checking out the other pay per post services to discover just how profitable paid blogging can be.
On the downside, a friend of mine with a very good blog, was rejected by ReviewMe. He was using a standard Wordpress template with great technical writing, so his blog looked like a splog created from those article buying services. I think it's really important to customize the look of your blog before you submit it, so that it doesn't look like just another splog.
The following is a paid review.
Frontier Labels, Inc. has a website for ordering Labels and Stickers. They have candel labels, coffee bag labels, vitamin bottle labels, wine labels, beer bottle labels, bumper stickers, tea tin labels, paint labels and much, much more. Check out their homepage for a sampling of what they can do. From quarter inch labels to full page labels and everything in between. It's very easy to order your own labels thru their website and you can get them shipped in 1 business day express shipping or 5 days regular shipping. They'll give you an instant quote online (excludes shipping) and you can even chat with one of their team members for instant online help. They use an HP Indigo press and AB Graphics converting machine. Because this is a digital process, their is no cost per color or plate charges or setup fees. They have volume pricing which apply equally to single and multiple item orders. They support both Google Checkout and PayPal, and once you've order your first time, you can reuse your account to make ordering even faster. Check out their portfolio of sample labels. Ten percent of company profits are donated to help make a difference in their community. What a great idea!
ReviewMe, the paid blogging service, allows you to do 10 campaigns per month. If you have a few blogs that cover most of the ReviewMe categories, then you can at least make an extra $100+ per month by writting 2000 words. That's $1200 annually. I suspect that adding other paid blogging services can mean a substantial little bonus. I haven't tried the other paid blogging services. I'm thinking about getting some blogs going for my wife, so she can make some extra coin as well. For that matter, I'm sure my niece (in college) would appreciate this as well.
ClixTrac is a free impression and click tracking service. I only know about it, because one of my advertisers uses it. Today, I noticed that their banners were timing out, which in turn caused my own website to load very slowly. I'm not too impressed. It's been several hours now and I've had to pull the advertising. Now, I'm gonna have to explain this to the client.
| Top Articles | |
|---|---|