Leaving The Day Job

Leaving the day job through the wonders of affiliate marketing

Archive for the ‘general’ Category

Sometimes I can be really dense

Friday, March 28th, 2008

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I’ve slowly been building up my discount code site at Easy Discount Codes over the past couple of weeks. I’m using Wordpress so I can hit the ground running without having to do any up front development work and I’m hoping to get purely SEO organic traffic to keep the profit margin up.

I’ve used the Wordpress category pages to display SEO optimised copy for each merchant and then list their offers below. I’ve tweaked around with the templates so that it doesn’t show the post text on the category page so that I’ll avoid the duplicate content problem.

Several weeks have passed by and my individual posts are getting indexed but not the category pages. I’ve been scratching my head over it, wondering why Google is being so damn slow at indexing the whole site.

And then today I had a close look at the HTML of the category pages and it hit me like a wet kipper about the face : I’ve got a meta noindex on the page. I’m actively telling Google I don’t want that page indexed. Grrrr! What a pillock I can be!

One quick untick operation in the All-In-One-SEO plugin and the metas gone. One little tick and it’s lead to me wasting about three weeks waiting for my site to be indexed. Moral of the story: check and double check what you’re doing. And try not to be as thick as me.

TV viewers surf and shop

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

An interesting article at Techcrunch UK highlights that 70 percent of UK web users surf at the same time as watching TV. Nice to know it’s not just me. Quite often I’m doing something unrelated to the TV programme but I also tend to look up actors’ biographies or go off at a tangent and research something that was referred to in the programme.

The bit of the Techcrunch article which caught my eye though was this bit : “…adults who surf the web for content related to what they’re watching on TV are at the same time searching for products which appeared in the show….”. This is ideal territory for the affiliate who’s quick off the mark with their PPC campaigns.

For example, I remember watching the first series of Torchwood and thinking, “what’s that bluetooth earpiece Jack’s wearing?”. Doubtless other people thought the same and if you’d been quick enough you could have found the right headset, grabbed an affiliate link and set up a PPC campaign before the end credits had rolled.

Or if you’re a fan of cookery or home improvement shows you could be advertising the products used and save people searching around for them. Most people don’t know how to use Google properly to do their own research  so they’ll likely search for something like “Property Ladder dado rail”. If you’ve done the research for them you can take them straight to the product they’ve been looking at on the TV a few minutes earlier.

With some popular shows appearing on BBC3 a few days before they run on the more mainstream BBC1  you can get a headstart on those PPC campaigns before the great unwashed masses see the programme.

Can you be an affiliate and be pro-privacy?

Monday, March 17th, 2008

As a geek and a paid up member of Liberty I take a close interest in internet privacy and it’s been all over the news for the past week or so. There has been a huge outcry and backlash against Phorm who have signed deals with major ISPs to track their users’ browsing habits and serve them targeted ads.

You can see to the right of this article that I’m linking to one of the anti-Phorm campaign sites. But as an affiliate my income depends on being able to track users as they move from my site to the merchants and retaining that tracking for perhaps 30 or more days. How can I be pro-privacy, anti-Phorm and an affiliate all at the same time?

Trading potatoes and sheep

Our economic system is built upon the notion of trading. Way back in history we would eat only what we foraged or hunted. Later we came up with agriculture and grew our own food. Then some bright spark came up with trading. I grow potatoes, you rear sheep. I exchange something I have for something you have. We agree on a price which is acceptable to both of us and a trade is made.

Google provides free web search but they still need to pay their staff. What am I prepared to trade in order to get access to that site? My attention, my time and my interests have a value. An advertiser will pay for targeted access to my attention for the time that I’m using Google. That’s the trade that we make in order for me to get access to free search, email and so forth.

Similarly, a supermarket shopper can sign up for a reward card to collect points and get discounts. This involves handing over some personal details about your shopping habits in return for those discounts. Personally, I don’t have rewards cards but a lot of people do. To them, that personal information is worth the value of the discounts they’ll get. To me, my privacy is more valuable and I’m not going to make that trade. That’s the choice we make.

Trust

Phorm want your personal browsing history to sell to advertisers as a profile. Your browsing history has a value to them. Would you let them have it? Maybe if you trusted them and got something good in return you would. But Phorm have a history of distributing spyware and the ISPs have been less than transparent about how the system will work. Can you trust them with your info? You might trust a supermarket chain with details of your shopping but would you trust them if they started telling your doctor how often you bought booze or your wife when you bought condoms?

There are a lot of reasons to be suspicious of Phorm and frankly they’re offering me nothing in return, certainly nothing to the value I place on the private data they want from me.

Afilliates

And what about affiliates? Yes, we make use of tracking cookies to enable our business and, no, a lot of the time our visitors aren’t aware that this is happening. The difference is how we use tracking cookies. We are not building a browsing history. We aren’t identifying a single user visiting multiple sites. We don’t set cookies that last for years. We’re just using them to track the success of our referrals and to claim the reward we are due for introducing the customer and the merchant. I’m happy that the use of cookies in affiliate marketing is above board. A website visitor can always set their browser to reject third party cookies or clear out their cookies at the end of a session if it suits them.

Profiling based on browsing history is a lucrative business but it’s also very difficult to do it correctly on an anonymous basis. When AOL released anonymized search history for their users back in 2006 it very quickly became apparent that individuals could be identified from the history of terms they searched for. We don’t know that we can trust Phorm with that data, we derive no benefit from them having it and we should err on the side of caution and resist this invasion of our privacy.

Sunday Evening Catch Up

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Things I’ve done this weekend:

  • Upgraded my PC. Mostly I prefer working on my MacBook laptop but there are some things that are better done on a desktop Windows machine and mine was suffering under the strain. I’ve replaced the motherboard, CPU and memory to bring it into the 21st century and all for £120. It’s amazing how cheap and powerful PCs have become recently. Just need a new hard drive now to make the most of it. It’s getting towards the end of the tax year and so it makes sense to get these IT purchases in now to reduce my tax liability. Mental note to self: look up how to account for computer purchases on tax return - something to do with spreading it over several few years.
  • Did some articles for my vibration platform site. It’s chugging along OK but only making a few quid a day off AdSense. I’m hoping the organic SEO visitors will start to increase as I write more content. Should look for link exchange partners too. Feel free to shout up if you have a relevant site.
  • Worked on my discount code site. This is still in the early stages and will warrant a full post or two later. It’s Wordpress based but I’ve been getting my hands dirty doing some custom PHP and Javascript for some of the more idiosyncratic touches. It’s been a while since I did either PHP or Javascript and it shows. Pleased with how things are coming along though.
  • Knocked together a quick and dirty Amazon Astore and an Adwords campaign to support it. Not convinced that this is going to get the ROI necessary to make it worth while but should find out over the next couple of days. It’s time sensitive so might post more later in the week.
  • Went out for a few beers on Friday night with a good friend. It’s not all work, work, work; as they used to say in some stupid TV ad. It’s important to keep perspective when you’re trying to do fulltime and self-employed work.  Having an evening out did me the world of good. It’s been a while since I actually stepped away from the computer for an entire evening.

Seven days later

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

A week ago I wrote my blog posting (Not) Leaving The Day Job. It obviously struck a chord with a lot of people, I received some encouraging comments here on the site and the post was one of the highest rated on Affiliates4U for most of the last week. Here’s the update on what’s been happening since.

I mentioned last week that my strategy now is to concentrate on content. I wanted to write one posting a day on at least one site. I’ve sort of kept to that. I’m slowly soft-launching what I would call my first proper site : Vibration Platform and have been adding a few articles during the course of the week. The site is starting to pick up a little organic search traffic and I’ve been supplementing it over the past day or two with some PPC. At the moment I’m spending a few pence a day on PPC and making a quid or two a day on AdSense. Nothing sensational but once I build up enough content I can start looking at some link building. I’m aiming for it mainly to run on organic SEO traffic.

Discounting

I’ve also started setting up a discount codes site. This is a bit of bandwagon-jumping that I’ve been umming and ahhing over for a while. In the day job as a merchant’s employee I doubt the value of 99% of the voucher sites out there. The good ones attract new customers and incentivise them but for the most part they’re just brand name squatting and often dropping cookies in exchange for non-existent discount codes. But I’ve finally decided that if you can’t beat them, join them. If other people get away with it, why should I sit back and miss out?

This is going to be another Wordpress-driven site. I’m getting pretty hot at setting them up now and familiarity with the platform builds confidence in making the most of it. Wordpress really is surprisingly powerful if you understand it and spend a bit of time thinking things through before you start.

I’m hesitating at the moment over whether I should go down the “click here to reveal the discount code” route. For those not in the know, the idea is that you tell people you have a discount code for a particular merchant but require them to click a link to reveal that code. At the same time as revealing the code you open the merchant site in a new window and therefore drop your affiliate cookie. Some less honest voucher sites will make you go through this process just to tell you there is no offer. They still get the commission though because of the cookie drop. Other affiliates just post the code right there on the page assuming that enough people will follow their affiliate link to the merchant to outweigh the number who were already on the merchant site and just looking for a discount code.

I’m inclined towards the”click for code” approach as part of my “why shouldn’t I when other people get awat with it?” strategy. I’m not going to cheat people by claiming to have codes when I don’t, I’m not going to nick other affiliates’ codes and I’m going to display expiry dates where appropriate. Is it so much to ask that I get the reward for supplying useful discounts to the customer? Still not 100% sure on this one. Flame me in the comments if you have a strong opinion one way or the other.

Tweaking

This week, I’ve also been wrestling with some performance problems on my server. I have a Linux VPS which is fantastic as I get all the tweaking fun of a real server but at a lower cost. The problem is that I get a lot less RAM than I would on a real server and my Apache server seems to delight in eating it all up and then demanding hard drive swap space for dessert. Have you ever tried to understand the Apache config files? I have and I don’t recommend it to the faint of heart. I’ve got more parameters in there than I care to care about and I suspect my tweaking may yet prove fatal. If this blog goes offline, you’ll know why.

A-Peeling 

Over at my long-standing (and much neglected) site Friday Emails, I’ve been toying with the peel-away ads that I saw mentioned on Ray’s blog. This is a site I’ve been running for about three years now and easily predates my attempts at serious affiliate marketing. I’ve never successfully monetised it other than with a bit of AdSense income. I’ve got a Yahoo dating ad as the peel-away at the moment but that’s just temporary. Need something suitably international though as more than two-thirds of the traffic is non-UK.

Friday Emails used to be regularly updated and I had a regular weekly mailing to over 3000 subscribers but it only ever managed to break even and some time last year I lost interest in updating it. It’s on my todo list for some time way off in the future.

Reading

Finally, I’ve bought a book. A proper paper one with pages and a cover. It’s called Getting Things Done by David Allen. Subtitled “How to achieve stress-free productivity”, it’s apparently a big favourite amongst us geek types because of the focus on systems, classifications and methods. What I’ve read so far seems great. Needless to say that, as far as reading it goes, I’m not getting things done. Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose…

(Not) Leaving The Day Job

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

It was June of last year when I set up this blog and, at the time, “Leaving The Day Job” seemed like an achievable goal. I was hoping that by the end of the year I’d be free from the 9 to 5 yoke.

Yet here I am, eight months later, still working in the same day job with no sign of ever making it into even part-time self-employment let alone taking the plunge full-time.

So what went wrong?

Well, it turns out to be harder than I might have imagined to make money online. I had a bit of luck initially and made about 50% of my monthly salary in my first month as an affiliate. And I thought that was it. I thought I was a genius. Of course, it turned out that what I was doing (advertising gambling on Google) was a bit naughty and the big G caught up with me and cut off that lucrative revenue stream.

After that I tried numerous other ideas but they all had one thing in common. I wasn’t doing anything original. The usual suspects: dry, me-too, feed-driven sites; Adwords landing pages; gambling; insurance; mobile phones. And I wasn’t doing any of them particularly well.

Most of the time I was recycling retailers’ copy from their product feeds or when I did write my own copy I did it with little to no regard for SEO or indeed coherency to the reader. I wasn’t writing salesy copy, I wasn’t pre-selling the product, I wasn’t adding any value.

Of course, I didn’t know I was doing anything wrong. It just seemed too hard. I knew I was getting it wrong but nothing I tried seemed to work. Despondency kicked in.

I don’t take well to failure. I don’t like not being able to do something. If I can’t do something right first time I tend to give up and sulk. Needless to say this isn’t a very helpful attitude when you’re trying to be self-employed. There’s no one there to tell you to get on with it. If you give up, the whole enterprise falls.

Meanwhile, at the day job, things weren’t going well. The company’s doing poorly but not so poorly that there’s any immediate threat of redundancy. So I’m feeling dragged down but without the fear of unemployment that might give me a kick up the arse to get on with my own thing.

Christmas came and I had some success with Facebook Ads, doing direct to merchant for one particular merchant. I closed out December with a profit of several hundred pounds. Better than nothing but nowhere near as good as I had hoped.

January was cold and barren. Motivation at an all time low. This is the point at which I could have given up.

Then something happened. Spring sprung. The world started to wake up a little. The mornings and the evenings were a little lighter every day. I started to see where I was going wrong. I had been looking for the quick win. Looking for a get rich quick scheme then running off after another idea when the first one didn’t start to deliver in time. I realised no one else was going to do this for me. Friends were starting to say that they didn’t think I had it in me to succeed in this business. That did it. If there’s one thing I hate more than failure it’s people telling me I can’t do something.

So I have renewed enthusiasm and a new strategy. It’s all about the content. My goal is at least one new posting on one (preferably more) of my sites every day. Every day do one thing that will add value to one of my sites.I’ve got a new site which is soft-launching at the moment. I’ll blog about it in a few days when things should hopefully have started rolling a bit more.

I think the theme of this blog will be shifting a bit as well. I’ve got away from telling the story of my efforts to leave the day job and been blogging more general affiliate stuff recently. I’m intending to go back to my roots and talk more about the ups and downs of getting started. Expect more coverage of motivation, organisation and fitting self employed work in around fulltime employment and the demands of friends, family and household chores.

Subscribe to the RSS feed to follow the soap opera.

Can Yahoo, OpenID build your community site?

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

Yahoo today announced that they will be supporting the OpenID authentication protocol. This could be really big news to anyone trying to build a community based site such as a forum as users can jump straight in and get involved much more easily.

I’ll explain that logic in a minute but first : what the heck is OpenID anyway? OpenID is a open, decentralised authentication system. What that means is that you get a username and password from one website and you can use it to log in to any other website which supports OpenID. Think of it as being like Microsoft Passport was supposed to be a few years back only open, free and adopted by many more websites.

Users can choose which ID provider they want to use. When they want to log in to an OpenID-supporting website they simple provide their username (which often looks like a web addresss eg fred.myopenid.com) and the website redirects them to their ID provider to log in. The ID provider then passes back a message to the website telling them whether or not the log in was successful.

OpenID has been around for a while and it’s not really taken off outside the geek community because it’s all been a bit complicated for the average user. Why create yet another login for something you don’t really understand anyway?

What Yahoo have announced is that they will become an OpenID provider meaning that users will be able to log in to an OpenID-supporting website using their Yahoo user name and password. This more than trebles the number of OpenID accounts to about 370 million.

So back to my original point: how this can help your community website. People are swamped by user names and passwords. Getting them to create a login for your site to add to the hundreds they already have is a barrier to them using your site. Instead they’ll see a button labelled ‘Sign in with your Yahoo! ID’ and be taken straight to a familiar Yahoo login page before being bounced back to your site.

By allowing them to use their existing Yahoo credentials on your site you’re making it easier and quicker for them join your forums, comment on your blog or upload their user-generated content to your site. No form filling, no validating their email address and no illegible captchas to decipher. They’ll have a smoother path into your site and as a consequence be more likely to contribute.

There are more details at the OpenID website

Max-ing your affiliate earnings

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

How did I react when I saw Max the student affiliate’s earnings online? I raced into the kitchen to drink some milk just so I could race back to the PC and spurt it out my nose all over the keyboard. Here’s this 18 year old kid pulling in more off one affiliate network than I’m making at nearly twice his age in a fulltime job! (yes, I know it’s only turnover not profit before anyone says)

After I’d calmed down a bit, wiped up the spilt milk and reassured the neighbours that my loud exclamations were nothing to worry about, I read the rest of his posting. Essentially he’s asking why we’re not more open about our affiliate earnings and he signs off by asking other affiliate bloggers for our reasons for either posting or not posting our earnings. That did get me thinking. My immediate reaction is to get defensive and say that I don’t want to show people my earnings and why the hell should I? But the honest answer is that I don’t want people to find my affiliate packet a little limp and inadequate.

I’ve been working seriously on my affiliate business for about six months now on an evenings and weekends basis. I’m not somebody who has an awful lot of patience and the fact that my affiliate earnings are bumping along with no obvious sign of improving is leading me into the “could give it all up now” mindset. I’ve heard many a successful affiliate describe this point in the development of their business.

And this is where the wonder of blogging and community comes into play. Reading about other affiliates’ successes and how they got where they are now keeps me going in these gloomy times. I’m sure Max and Keiron and Shoemoney all took time to learn their craft and build up their business. They didn’t just start one morning then head down the bank that afternoon to collect the wheelbarrow load of cash they’d made. So Max, thanks for posting what you did. I’m not sure I’ll want to do the same when I’m in your position but if I do ever reach that position it’ll be thanks to people like you keeping me inspired.

A day in the life of a fulltime affiliate

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Well, it’s going to be a long time until I can go fulltime as an affiliate but I took the day off from my “proper” job today to try to get a good chunk of affiliate work done. I started out the way I always imagined working from home would be like by sleeping through the alarm and getting up an hour and a half later than intended.

I moved on to reviewing stats, reading blogs and answering emails over a cup of freshly brewed coffee then settled down to have a long, bitter and swearword-infested fight with PHP and XML. I was trying to convert the XML from Amazon’s web service into a nice CSV file to use with Affilistore. I quickly learned that Amazon provide you with easily enough XML rope to hang yourself with. There’s far more data in their feed than I could ever need and so I spent ages trying just to figure out which bits of it were which. Then my rustiness with PHP paid me a visit and I spent a similar number of ages referring to the manual trying to work out how to manipulate said XML.

In the end I got something not entirely dissimilar to what I was trying to create but was not at all pleased that I’d wasted half the day trying to get it. It’s my intention to create a more general Amazon to CSV tool to put on this website but it’ll have to go sit on the backburner where so many of my other bright ideas are waiting. As much as I love Linux my years spent coding .NET at the day job mean development would be a heck of a lot quicker if I just bit the bullet and switched to hosting my sites on Windows.

By this point it was lunchtime already. In the day job, lunch usually marks the point at which my productivity takes a serious downturn but working at home I’ve actually got more done in the afternoon than the morning. This is a good sign as it kind of suggests that working for myself suits me.

I’ve discovered that one of my old, neglected sites is still seeing a fair bit of traffic and that most of it comes from the US. So I’ve installed openAds to rotate the banners on the site and geo-target them to the visitors. I’m thinking of revitalising and relaunching the whole site since people seem to still like visiting it.

I’ve also set up a PC at home with Fedora Linux so I can do development work, launched some PPC campaigns and done some tweaks to another one of my sites. All in all I feel I’ve been quite productive and I’ve certainly got more done in one day than I would have done in a week of just doing affiliate work in the evenings. Unfortunately you don’t get quick results in affiliate marketing (at least I don’t) so it’ll be a while before I see if my hard work pays off. In the meantime it’s back to the day job tomorrow - only four days until the weekend :-(