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Why bother saying anything

Posted on April 13, 2008 by Steven Hodson
22 comments

You know I was finally going to jump in on the very interesting discussion that has been going on this weekend about Shyftr and their taking of blog posts via the RSS feed; or however they do it, and locking it behind their walls so that they could build a community of comments around something that didn’t originate on their site or from their minds.

I was going to talk about the finer points that both Tony Hung and Mark Evans brought to the table about how they didn’t think what was being done was so cool; or how Mathew Ingram thinks it is crossing a line. I was even going to debate the finer points of Frederic’s statement of letting them steal his content or even discuss Louis‘ points about how it’s fine for someone to take his content; with attribution of course, and build a business out of it.

I would have willingly discussed the fact that there is a big huge difference between what FriendFeed and even Techmeme is doing in contrast to what Shyftr is doing. It would have been interesting to raise the point that even though FriendFeed posts only the headline portion of any blog post thereby still letting the originating author retain control. It would have been equally interesting to point out that even though FriendFeed can post any comments made on your post people can still click back to the original to comment.

Additionally it would have been interesting to raise the point that Disqus is working hard to make it a two street so that comments made on FriendFeed would come back to the blog. It would have been interesting to talk about companies that seem to care about the author having some say – some control over their content even though Robert Scoble suggests that the content creators should give up on the idea of it ever being their content anymore.

But really what is the point of saying anything when all you are going to be told is that you’ll never amount to anything

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Categories: Technology | Tags: appreciation, blogs, discussion, opinion

there are times

Posted on April 12, 2008 by Steven Hodson
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there are times when I almost feel like pulling a MacLeod and deleting it all – why bother any more?

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Categories: Odds & Ends

From the Pipeline – 4.12.08

Posted on April 12, 2008 by Steven Hodson
2 comments

My will to stay out of this weekend’s bitchmeme is slowly ebbing away as I see more and more being written that is just making me down right cranky. In the meantime here’s a few things that caught my eye in today’s FriendFeed pipeline.

Era of blogger’s control is over :: Robert Scoble – as far as Robert is concerned the time where a blogger has any control over their content and what is done with it or discussions around it is long gone.

7 Interesting and Useful Things to do with your USB Pen Drive :: Killer Tech Tips – just trying to do my part on passing along helpful tips

Sorry, I’m Not Buying This New Touchy-Feely Approach To The Music Tax :: TechCrunch – apparently Michael thinks that Ethan Kaplan’s post today is nothing more than trying to get all touchy-feely about having a music tax

IBM creates super-fast memory :: CrunchGear – a post about a new type of digital storage from IBM being referred to a ‘Racetrack’ memory

If Robert Scoble Is Right, Then Web 2.0 Is Dead :: profy – apparently Cyndy isn’t to hot over the idea that Robert Scoble thinks blogger control of their content is a dead issue

Are Pageviews Still Relevant for Bloggers? :: Mark Evans – just had to get one post from this weekend’s bitchmeme in and this one from Mark looks at the issue from a slightly different perspective.

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Categories: Odds & Ends | Tags: IBM, memory, pageviews, Profy, Robert Scoble, TechCrunch, USB Pen drive

Advertising for bloggers has to change

Posted on April 12, 2008 by Steven Hodson
32 comments

The blogging Ad Game Disclaimer: I doubt very much that this post will be of any interest to those bloggers out there who blog for the self-professed joy of blogging itself, or to any blogger who feels that advertising has no place on blogs, or to bloggers who think it’s okay for their content to be used elsewhere without askance. If this is the case then you might want to hit the old ‘J’ key and carry on with some other post.

When blogging first started out it was in most cases just a personal experience of posting one’s thoughts about any number of subjects. Then some bloggers realized that by adding advertising to a section of their blogs they could cover the cost of maintaining the blog and make a few extra bucks in the process. Typically this form of advertising was Google AdSense because at that time it was pretty well the only option open to the great unwashed masses.

Then some very bright people released that blogs if properly marketed could be real money makers – especially if you grouped a bunch of them under the same company masthead but covering slightly different subjects. Thus were born the blogging networks and for them the advertising game changed because they were no longer reliant on Google to feed their growing bank accounts. In these cases ad networks came looking for them and deals were struck making everyone but the average blogger able to sit back and count the bucks that were rolling in on the back of ever increasing page views.

As the financial profits grew top heavy the average blogger Ad networks for the big boyswho wanted to make themselves a living at something they really liked doing found that they were left with Google AdSense as the only reliable source of income. Sure there where other ad networks or affiliate type schemes that came along; and while some smacked more of electronic pyramid schemes others depended on where one’s person ethics stood. The only other real choice that bloggers had was to try and walk the advertising minefield by themselves which meant they had to understand a whole bunch of esoteric terms like page views, PPC, PPA, impressions and eCPM.

In the end Google AdSense has become the mainstay of probably 90% of the average blogs that have advertising and Google has made it more than plain that you play by their rules or you just don’t play at all. This was all fine and even though Google controlled the dominant portion of the blog advertising space we toed the line and collected our pittance  each month as long as we met the AdSense requirements.

This of course has nothing to do with those blogs whose whole purpose was to make money via AdSense by telling the gullible masses on how to make small fortunes online using the Google monster. No .. this is all about those bloggers who play by the rules but who have to put up with the AdSense splogs that lived on Google sponsored free blog networks. This is about the bloggers who just want to earn a living in a blogosphere that has become  increasingly difficult to earn a living because if you are not a part of the top tier you are just fodder for other’s to make money from.

At first is wasn’t so bad as people had to come to your blog in order to read about your opinions on things that they equally cared about; but in the process you were making a few bucks because those Google Ads were being seen. Then along came RSS feeds which made it easier for your readers to get that content without having to actually go to your blog and at  the time much was said about the loss of income because those ads were no longer being seen. Some folks fought back by only publishing partial feeds of each posts so that if you want the whole story you had to go to the particular blog at which point the ads were served and you made your pennies for the day.

But people; and a lot of blog owners disagreed with the whole idea of partial feeds and were willing to forego the ad dollars so that their readers would keep coming back. Then this ad Whose work is it anyway?dollar loss was slightly evened out when it became possible for ads to be added to the RSS feeds. This balanced things out for awhile but then along came things like social networks and all types of feed aggregators that once again took the blogger’s content and put it into other peoples hands – so once more our potential for making a living at doing what we loved best was being impacted by forces which we couldn’t control. Then on top of this there was a general attitude developing that so what if your income was being impacted. The fact that you wanted to make a few dollars from your writing wasn’t as important as other people being able to do what they want with your hard work.

While this part is equally important it is a subject for a later post as what I want to talk more about at this point is how those career bloggers who want to have productive advertising on their blogs can best achieve this without having to sell their soul or ethics in order to do so.

Recently I had an interesting email discussion with a Googler involved with AdSense which happened because she believed that I would give my honest appraisal of AdSense and how it works for small time bloggers such as myself. As she noted in her email ….“you as a blogger have no control over the quality of advertisers and many times the relevance is a joke.” She finished of the email with what I consider to be one of the most telling of Google’s attitude towards non top tier bloggers … “Internally, people (I’ve talked to) aren’t seeing blogs as ‘social media’”

A lot of folks would say that why bother with AdSense then just use any of the other ad networks that are out there. Well the fact of the matter is that it doesn’t matter which ad network you join and spend hours managing they are all based on page views in one manner or another. They all require that people come to your site and either view the ad, click on the ad or perform some action after clicking on the ad.

It is getting the eyes to your blog that is the all important key regardless of the network which is why we have such a proliferation of me-too type blogs that just rehash the news from the top tier boys along with properly placed links to hopefully get readers of the main blogs decide to check out what other people are saying – which in the majority of cases is Easy oney polluting the blogospherenothing more than a quote with maybe a snippet of text – yet surrounded by AdSense ads.

As irritating as this might be chances are these types of blogs are making a better living than those blogs that don’t act as bottom feeders of the top tier leftovers. For blogs that try hard to be original thought providers and bring something of value to the table they find themselves increasingly difficult to make a living because they don’t play the link bait game that would otherwise bring the much needed traffic to their blogs.

It goes without saying that the majority of hard working career bloggers need a better way to be able to monetize their efforts but the fact is that no-one out there in the advertising world considers low page view bloggers who continually bring new thoughts and ideas to the blogosphere to be worth the effort. There is too much money to be made from the top tier blogs and the splogs that pollute the blogosphere.

While there are no sure fired answers for the fact that it takes page views in order to make any money for your efforts and validate your choice in a career there are some alternatives that I have found that do in fact try to provide some tools to level the field if only slightly. Primarily among them is a new service that is still in beta called the Rubicon Project which I would equate as being an ad broker who uses the collective power of all the blogs under its roof in order to get better deals from the 64 different ad networks it does business with.

Rubicon Project might not be a complete solution but I know myself that since being lucky enough to get in on the beta I have seen better results from the ads that they serve up on the site. I will be doing a more in depth look at them at a later point.

Along with Rubicon there is also another network called Project Wonderful and they work on an entirely different methodology of serving ads up on your site and while their way of serving up ads will not make you extremely wealthy they do give you the power over what is displayed and how much you think that particular ad spot is worth. It is from this point that advertisers that are a part of the Project Wonderful network start bidding for those available spots.

But really these are just variations on the typical ad network philosophy that you need the eyeballs in continually growing numbers in order to make any decent money. While ad networks rely on the page view count in order to decide whether they want to do business with you there is never any value placed on the fact that you might only have a 1,000 visitors that come by everyday to read what you are writing. Just as they won’t taking into account that you have a few thousand RSS readers who faithfully pull your feed everyday to read what you write.

Unfortunately until advertisers realize that there is potentially more value for their dollars if spread across the broader spectrum of B-List size blogs we will fine ourselves forever locked between the shysters and a Google AdSense program that doesn’t even see us as anything to be interested in because “we aren’t a social media”.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: AdSense, advertising, blogging, Google, Project Wonderful, Rubicon Project
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