Monetizing your blog
To monetize your blog, you first need to seriously evaluate whether you want to work at monetizing your blog. Also, you
have to make sure that making money from your blog directly is your
goal. It’s quite possible that your blogging goals may just to network,
write about something you’re interested in, or serve some business
purpose that isn’t direct income generation.
With that out of the way, let’s get started:
1. Contextual Advertising
Surprise, surprise. Advertising is easily the most popular blog
monetization tactic, mostly due to it being the easiest thing to
implement. Advertising comes in many forms, and contextual advertising
is the most popular due to Google Adsense and it’s general success with
blogs and niche sites.
I’m
going to assume everyone reading this is familiar with it, but I think
it should be mentioned that too many bloggers assume that Adsense is
the best solution for their blog. For some blogs and topics it works
great, for others, not very well at all.
My
advice is to not limit your blog to one ad network or just one form of
advertising. Other contextual options include the Yahoo Publisher
Network, Chitika, Clicksor, AdSonar, and others. It’s not easy to
manually test all these though if you’re shuffling ad tags around and
randomly allocating your impressions to them, using a ad network
management tool like RMX Direct can help you manage, evaluate, and
control your various ad networks.
2. Display Advertising
As I
mentioned above, contextual networks aren’t always the best solution
for blogs. In some cases there aren’t enough advertisers in niche
topics, and in others the users just isn’t likely to click. In this
case, you want to be working with ad networks that provide CPM display
advertising. This means you get paid something for every ad viewed,
opposed to only getting paid per click.
Just
like with contextual networks, it’s important to use multiple display
ad networks to get more variety from your ads, to not let anyone
network control your inventory, and to make sure you’re earning the
most amount of money possible.
3. Targeted Advertising
The
most desirable form of advertising is having companies that wish to pay
good rates to advertise on your blog directly whether it’s text or
image ads. Many bloggers feel that this is a pipe dream, but I speak
from experience from running a wakeboarding blog for many years that
you can make solid income from targeted advertising without having
insane amounts of traffic.
There are a number of key things you have to do though in order to get this type of advertising:
- Have a blog with leading content in your niche and a professional design
- Create
a “media kit†which is essentially a page on your blog that explains
that you take targeted advertising, what your rates are, demographics
of your users, your traffic levels, examples of the types of ads people
can run, testimonials from any companies that have
advertised with you, and a phone number and email address they can use to get more information.
- Have obvious “Advertise On This Blog†links in key places on your blog.
- Give
a company or two in your niche free or very low-cost advertising in
order to get the ball rolling. When advertisers see their competitors
or companies similar to them advertising, they get the idea that it’s
available. If all they ever see is Adsense ads, they might not realize
it’s an option.
- Be willing to be creative to help your advertisers achieve their goals, and lower your price to get the deals.
- Provide
statistics and results to your advertisers. Use an ad server like RMX
Direct, phpAdsNew, or something similar which has the ability to create
reports per advertiser.
Once
you’ve set your blog up properly, start approaching companies in your
niche who will want to reach your traffic. You don’t need to go after
the biggest companies, there are many small companies who are looking
to get better results from the web, and they might not evenknow about
your blog. You don’t need to be an ad sales professional, you just need
to present your case well on why they’re missing out if they don’t
advertise on your traffic. Make it easy on them to work with you, help
them create ads, help them determine what sizes to use, and work with
them to make sure they get the results they need. It seems like hard
work at first, but after you get a solid base of advertisers going,
it’s a great source of income and it starts to streamline.
4. Text Link Advertising
Another
somewhat unobtrusive form of advertising is using services like Text
Link Ads or Adbrite to sell text ads directly to companies. This is
pretty low effort and often doesn’t take up too much space on a site,
so it’s easy to implement and try out. It should be noted though
that you need significant traffic for it to be a big source of income.
5. Affiliate Links
One of
the older web monetization methods is still as good today as it’s
always been. If you’ve got a blog in a specific area, there’s a very
large chance that there are companies out there that sell products or
services your users are interested in. You can earn some nice income
recommending or linking to those products.
Amazon.com
is probably the most common affiliate merchant used by bloggers, but
I’d advise finding other unique merchants who may pay better and be
more specific to your topic. Amazon is always there as an option, but
you’re more likely to get more help from the merchant if you go with a
smaller company.
Another
nice thing about affiliate links is that they fit well with quality
content. Reviewing products and services for your users is valuable
content, and if you can make money off it as well it’s a great
combination. A word of warning though that you shouldn’t change
yourreviews or be biased due to the fact you can make money off a
referral.
While
traffic also helps for affiliate links, it can sometimes be an easier
way to generate income without high traffic levels like advertising
requires. As an example I did a review of a web analytics application a
couple of years ago, and this blog had very little traffic at that
point. I referred two sales through that review though that still earn
me $150 a month every month two years later.
6. Selling Your Content (Ebooks, Videos, DVDs)
If
you’ve got great content, another option is to package it and sell it.
There are numerous bloggers who have created ebooks and even real books
based on their blog content and made great income selling them. You can
also expand to info products like videos, DVDs, audio CDs, and printed
books on demand.
This
can take some significant work and it requires great content to
actually sell, but it can be a nice income stream that lasts a long
time.
7. Consulting
Depending on your topic and your level of expertise, you can
sell consulting services. If you’re a web analytics expert, you could
offer web analytics consulting services on your blog for an hourly fee.
This takes very little work to set-up beyond creating a page outlining
your services, getting a standard contract, and having a way to take
payments from companies. Again though, it just takes a little bit of
effort to let people know that consulting services are available.
8. Donations
Not
quite as common as it once was, it used to be fairly common for
bloggers to ask for donations on their blog through Paypal or some
other service. This only works if you have a dedicated userbase, and a
large enough number of users that their donations add up. I wouldn’t
recommend this if you’re also putting a lot of advertising and other
monetization methods on your blog. You’ll come off as a bit too greedy
in that case.
9. Selling Products
Besides
info products, you can sell real products like t-shirts, bumper
stickers, clothing, or whatever other kind of merchandise makes sense
for your topic. Companies like Goodstorm, CafePress, Lulu, and others
make it easy by creating the products based on your design and letting
you set up a shop. There is no risk to bloggers, which makes it a great
opportunity.
10. Selling Your Blog
Perhaps
the most extreme of the blog monetization methods, but it can be
lucrative! If you aren’t attached to your blog and are willing to part
with it, you can usually find a buyer for it. Your blog must be pretty
good, and have a level of traffic worth buying, and it really helps if
you already have some income streams going for it. Blogs usually sell
for 12-24 times monthly revenues, and there are numerous places you can
sell them like eBay and the Sitepoint Marketplace.
Conclusion
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Comments (1)
Gioi Tran8
Affiliate Marketing
Great content. Thanks.!