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Archive for April, 2006

Blogger Interview: Rickey Yaneza

This is supposed to be my interview on professional blogging for Rickey but since he claims he is not a problogger, I changed the title of the entry.

Given that, half of the questions here might not be appropriate for him. However, since Rickey’s blog has been consistently on top of Pinoy Top Blogs and he monetizes his blogs with Adsense/YPN, Amazon and BlogAds, I’d still consider him to be a professional blogger (see my official definition here).

Let’s move on with the interview…

  • How do you define problogging?

    Blogging for the sole purpose of making money. This of course disqualifies me since this is not what I do. I just happen to have ONE popular website (which happens to be a blog) with Google Ads that a tiny percentage of my readers click on — this doesn’t make me a “professional” blogger. I had Google Ads on my blog for two years earning nothing and then one day, I earn $10, and then all of a sudden I’m a pro. That doesn’t make sense.

  • When did you start blogging? When did you get into problogging and how did you realize that there’s some money to be had from it?

    I started using Blogger.com in 2001, but I was making online journals since 1996. I have never gotten into problogging, but I realized that I could leverage my blog traffic when sometime in 2004, I got 15,000 visitors and earned $3 from one Google Ad.

  • Which blogs are you writing for and which blog networks are you affiliated?

    rickey.org
    pinoy.rickey.org
    live.usa.ph (Basang Sisiw Show)

    I am affiliated with the rickey.org blog empire network (evil laugh)

  • Are you problogging part time or full time? Do you see this career as a part time gig or you are looking into going problogging?

    Again, non-problogger here. I only blog part-time like everybody else and keep a job during the day. Recently however I have been possessed by the entrepreneurial spirit and would like to start a new website.

  • How do you monetize your blog? Which ones bring in the most revenues? How long did it took you to significantly earn from your own blog/s?

    Adsense, YPN, BlogAds, Amazon Associates … and the most lucrative, selling t-shirts. However, since I have no new t-shirts to sell this year (yet), I get the most from Adsense. My blog started to pay for part of my rent early 2005 when I added a Google leaderboard at the top of my home page.

  • How long before you got significant revenue from your blogs? How consistent are the revenues and what affects it?

    I don’t remember when, it just happened. Weekends are slow. Website traffic is a major contributor to AdSense earnings. I think it is more stable to go for direct advertising, which requires a lot more work in marketing (and has nothing to do with the act of blogging).

  • How much time do you spend on blogging? (in est. hours/day or hours/week)

    I think I blog 24/7 — at least it seems like it.

  • What other benefits do you get from problogging?

    Rickey is not a problogger! Gifts from my Amazon wishlist. Friends. Fame.

  • What’s the most significant event/moment you had in your entire problogging career?

    I don’t have a problogging career. I don’t do SEO, buy links, link-bait, etc. and all these tips and tricks supposed probloggers do. The only SEO I do are use relevant titles in my blog posts and link to a site high on a search term I want to move up on — do these little tidbits of information make me a “professional?” I’m just a lowly blogger that found my audience. Technically, I’m just running a website.

    My blogging life however from the past two years has been good. The most significant moment I’ve had as a blogger was identifying myself as a Filipino after years of obscurity.

  • What personal tips can you share with bloggers who want to try out problogging?

    I am not a problogger! I cannot give any tips on the subject. Just go to Darren Rowse’s site and help cement his position as the #1 problogger on Google forever.

    However, some tips for general blogging success:
    1. Write clear, value-laden posts everyday. To establish identity, narrow your topics considerably.
    2. Establish a meaningful and lasting friendship with Marc Macalua.
    3. When your blog reaches critical mass, seize the moment and don’t let go.

It would seem that Marc’s SEO advocacy has greatly influenced how Rickey defines a problogger, thus the angle of the response.

I would like to clarify though that SEO and problogging are not exclusive to each other. You may not know anything about SEO and still be a problogger like our previous examples with Gloria, Ruth, Stef and Jayvee.

Most of the independent probloggers I featured here did not actually expect they could successfully monetize their blogs. It just happened. And these are their personal blogging stories.

Smart 3G Connection Rates

Smart Telecoms will commercially roll out their Smart 3G services this May 1.

Here are the listed 3G connection rates as reported by Inq7.net:

- Real-time TV streaming : Php15 per 30 minutes (this is just access charge)

- Content Subscription : Php20/day per network (GMA and ABS-CBN) on top of access charge above

- Audio and Video streaming : Php5/hit

- MMS rates : Php1/message within network and Php2/message to other networks

- Web surfing : Php20/hour

- Game Downloads : Php50/download

- Music : Php50/track (wow, iTunes price!) I suppose in mp3 format

(* streaming movie trailers, live traffic and summer hotspots cameras and music videos will remain free of charge.)

Out on a Summer Vacation

In an hour, I will be off by 3 days for a short summer vacation somewhere in Mindoro (not yet sure which resort). If you’re expecting an email reply form me, I hope I already did. If not, will try and see if there’s wifi around there (will be rbinging my laptop just in case).

Been up for more than 36 hours already trying finish some stuff before I leave. I did a couple of future posts while I’m away so you can still check back from time to time.

See yah around!

A quick lesson for “Sigaw ng Bayan” on web stats

Manolo points out the claim of Sigaw ng Bayan (www.sigawngbayan.com) representative Raul Lambino (People’s Initiative) that their site got 9 million hits in the first 3 weeks that it was up (yes, a 3-week old website!). A screenshot of their website 3 days ago showed a “bandwidth exceeded” notice.

Dean Jorge Bocobo
follows it up with a deeper scrutiny of the site’s profile on the net and its exposure on the search engines. The Village Idiot Savant got a good laugh and even wrote Inq7.net to humor Ms. Belinda Cunanan who originally mentioned about the stats in her column.

It got me laughing real hard actually. This Lambino guy must not know what he is talking about, telling a flat lie or he was just being fooled by their webmaster.

Here’s a quick review of some web analytics concepts:

pageviews – a request for a file whose type is defined as a page (usually in html, php, asp, cfm, pl or even txt or pdf)

visit – requests from the same uniquely identified client (usually defined by IP address with session or time). Sometimes, if there’s no time-limit, a pageview can be considered a visit in itself.

hit – a request for a file from the web server (any type of file or data including images, css, html, mp3, txt, etc.).

Visits can be time-bound. Meaning, if the time limit (session timeout) for a visit is 60 minutes, the same visitor can be counted as many as 24 times on a single day. This figure can geometrically increase for a single unique visitor if the time limit is lowered. So, reducing the session time out to 15 minutes instead of 60, can quadruple the visitor count even if in reality, only a single person browsed the site on a 24-hour period (that brings the count to 96 visits). And I don’t even think it doing just that for their website anyway.

A single visit can generate one to any number of pageviews. A single pageview can constitute a single to any number of hits.

If you look closely and dissect their website’s homepage, you’ll end up with the same count as mine:

- 1 header image
- 3o button images (most of the buttons are counted as 2 since you have on-hover and off-hover images)
- 3 picture images on the stories
- 1 html page

That’s a total of 35 objects on a single page. So, if you view that page, it will generate 35 hits (34 for the images and 1 for the page itself). If you refresh your browser, a second later, that’s another 35 hits. Do that a hundred times and you get 3,500 hits in less than 10 minutes.

Ok, let’s just say that the visitor count of 371,414 is accurate or true and their counter has no limitations, then that number is also equivalent to their pageviews.

Now, we can compute their total hits since April 8, which is basically (371,414 pageviews) x (35/pageview) and we end up with 12,999,490. So the 9 million hits that they claimed a couple of days ago might just be true.

Manolo’s blog got 208,343 pageviews last month. If his blog has the same number of images/page as Sigaw ng Bayan, he would have had 7.3 million hits. Close match, considering Manolo doesn’t keep on hitting the F5 button every minute.

Ooops! I must have added 70 more hits from my last 2 visits on their site.

[tags]metrics, stats, analytics[/tags]

Poker Tourney for SEOs and Bloggers

SEO Black Hat is hosting a touney — SEO No Limit Texas Hold’em Poker Tournament open to the SEO and blogging community alike.

Some big names in SEO have already agreed to participate including: Jeremy Shoemaker (AKA shoemoney), Jim Boykin (we build pages), David Naylor (AKA DaveN), and Jason Duke (Strange Logic). You can listen to DaveN and JasonD on Strikepoint and shoemoney here.

As we SEOs are always battling the search engines, I invite Matt Cutts, Jeremy Zawodny and Robert Scoble to play: I will pay their entrance fees should they choose to participate and, if I am knocked out of the Tournament by any of them, I will donate $10,000 to a charity of their choice. (note: They must accept in the next 7 days for the bounty to apply).

High-profiles names there. I would love to join the contest and learn how to play Texas Holdem’ but thet $110 seems to steep for me to. *hehehe*

[tags]seo, contest, poker, texas holdem, cards, gambling, shoemoney[/tags]

The Washington Post on v7ndotcom elursrebmem

The Washington Post covers a story about Google Juice and the seo contest for “v7ndotcom elursrebmem“:

Searching on “v7ndotcom elursrebmem” on Google yesterday yielded more than 6 million matching pages. My favorite is the site ranked No. 2, which purports to be the official site for “The Grand V7ndotcom Elursrebmem Hotel,” a nonexistent hotel in London, complete with photos and a virtual tour.

Holding the No. 1 spot is a page maintained by Jim Westergren, a Swedish search consultant. In an e-mail, Westergren said his winning formula involves writing material “relevant” to the contest phrase, getting lots of links to his page from elsewhere on the Web and already having a good Google rank for his personal site, where he writes a blog.

And while my blog is still hanging tight with G, my rank has slid off from a record high of #13 to just around #30 as of this port.

I think I need mo link juice for the keyword from high PR sites. There’s still time. :D

[tags]v7ndotcom elursrebmem, v7n, seo, contest, sem, link juice, google juice, ranking[/tags]

Technorati blocked by the Great Firewall of China

Technorati Technorati has been reported to be blocked by the Great Firewall fo China. Other Chinese bloggers made the same observations but it’s not fully confirmed yet.

Just like any huge search engine (Google, Yahoo and MSN), Technorati may possibly pose the same threats to censorship efforts by the Chinese government especially because Technorati specifically indexes blogs.

However, I don’t think Technorati indexes non-English content yet so there’s not much Chinese blogs in the database.

[tags]technorati, blog, search, china, censor, block, great firewall[/tags]

Lifehacker’s Coolest Workspace Contest

Lifehacker is doing a “Coolest Workplace” contest and I want in!

* Your photo(s) should be at least 340pixels wide. By sending them into tips at lifehacker.com, you’re giving us permission to publish them here on Lifehacker.com.
* The Lifehacker editors will choose their favorite workspace submissions to feature on the site. Not every submission will be chosen.
* Your submission’s more likely to be chosen if you tell us about your setup and if your pictures really show off your space. Impress us!
* All the submissions that will be featured on the site will get voted on by Lifehacker readers in our “unscientific” polling application.
* To verify that the workspace is really yours, get Lifehacker.com up on the screen at your computer. Any photos that look like they’ve been nicked from an Ikea catalog won’t be chosen.

Coolest Workplace

Been polishing up my area for some time now and I think the YugaTech™ Labs is ready to rock and roll for another photoshoot.

Then. there’s another $100 of Amazon GC waiting for the winner.

[tags]contest, workplace, desk, cool, lifehacker, gawker[/tags]

Chitika Spamming

I thought the email I got from Chitika last night was something really special. But then again I have this gut feeling they’re just spamming me…

Here’s a copy of the email:

Abe,

yugatech.com/blog is a great site! Proud to offer the industry’s first interactive ad unit, eMiniMalls, I feel we would really rock on this site. Adsense compatible with a huge 10% referral commission. Check us out today, www.chitika.com

Best Regards,
Karla Escolas
Chitika Sales Manager
www.chitika.com
Fax: 508.302.0793
Yahoo IM: karla.chitika

To Karla,

If you really thought my blog was that great, you should have known I am already a member of Chitika. I did post quite a number of entries about it here, here, here and here. A quick search for Chitika was just a click away.

And when you sent me this email, did you bother checking my email in your database because it’s the same email I used to sign up with you? You would have then figured out that I am still using eMiniMalls, although not on this blog.

That brought me to conclude that your email was purely spam. I won’t reply to that email but instead will post it here so we’ll see if you’re really reading my blog and prove me wrong.

Update: Ms. Escolas emailed me back disproving my ealier allegations that Chitika is spamming and I thanked her for clarifying that. I am still hesitant to use Chitika on this blog since a majority of my traffic is from Asia, which their campaign still does not support.

[tags]chitika, ads, eminimalls, adverts, spam, referral, commision[/tags]

HSBC Security Device

HSBC Security Device Key Though HSBC did not bother to inform me that they have re-activated my credit card account, they did sent me a note about a new security measure they will be implementing soon.

It’s a Security Device Key (SD Key) that generates a single-use, time-sensitive number which can be used to gain access to their internet banking site (online@hsbc). The key looks like the one for your car alarm and the battery that runs the LCD screen can last up to 5 years. It’s a quick way to recover your online banking account in case you get hit by phishing scams, identity theft, trojans (keylogging/screen capturing), or shoulder surfing.

The Security Device has been selected by HSBC as the technology that best meets our customers’ need for flexibility and portability, and our business volume requirements.

- The Security Device itself generates the Security Code. As there is no dependency on a third party for security code generation, our customers do not need to rely on another party’s service standard to access Internet banking.
- The generation of the security code is not dependent on capacity issues, signal availability or the geographical location of our customers.
- The Security Device is small, light and portable. It can be used on any internet-enabled PC. It does not require downloads, set-ups, system adjustments, etc.

A quick search on the net brought me to their Hong Kong website. I have yet to receive my SD key though.

[tags]security, online, banking, finance, money, gadget, device[/tags]

Smart Bro replaces Smart Wifi

Smart BroSmart Communications thought their Smart Wifi brand is knee deep in the mud right now that the best thing to remedy the bad publicity is to re-name it. So, they came up with Smart Bro (is that a shortcut for broadband?)

They did some clean-up and even remove pages from their official site which mentioned Smart Wifi. Too bad that page is already #1 on Google, Yahoo and MSN for the term “smart wifi”. (I suppose my blog will take over that spot, eh?)

Migs pointed out that that Smart Bro is also a browser and a few days after the switch, Smart’s pages are already in the front page for the keyword. (I’m hoping this page will be somewhere near in the next couple of days.)

PLDT’s myDSL-w has also been consolidated under this single brand name. Subscribers comment that there’s really nothing new in terms of service improvements — just pure PR and bundling of services.

A commenter at Smart Wifi Chronicles adds:

Kaya lang nagpalit ng pangalan ang Smart Wifi To Smart BRO para maitago yung negative feedbacks ng Smart WiFi na masesearch sa Google. Kung Smart BRO nga naman ang search mo, wala pang negative feed back kasi sariwa pa.

… and I kinda agree with him.

The subscription plan did change to Php999/month, which is more expensive than the old one.

P.S.
They already registered smartbro.com.ph but left out .ph, .net.ph and .org.ph.

[tags]wifi, wi-fi, broadband, wireless, internet, dsl, isp, internet[/tags]

Chernobyl, Zeitgeist, Google Current

Current is a new, independent cable and satellite TV network (Channel 336 on DirectTV). Nice thing about this is that anyone can actually contribute stories which viewers can vote to be aired (participatory production platform), much like YouTube+Digg for TV.

Chernobyl Pictures

A short segment of it features Google Current. Hosted by Conor Knighton and Kinga Philipps, stories on Google Current covers popular search terms for the week (see Google Zietgeist). (This week’s feature covers the 20th year annivesary of the Chernobyl disaster.)

Videos segments are streamed on their site and available eveyr 30 minutes. Pretty interesting and informational, IMO. Prolly more useful for SEOs and probloggers. ;)

[tags]google, television, tv, search, cable, youtube[/tags]

Testing out a new Opteron Server

Just got the new dedicated server rolled out today and I’m in a rush to set it up. Will be moving this blog once I’m done just to see how this rig burns:

AMD Dual Opteron 248
2GB ECC RAM
2 x 160GB SATA HDD
2 Terabytes bandwidth
CentOS 3.4 + cPanel

Will take a couple more days to patch things up and have this ready to take over the growing site.

I should be done before I hit the waves this Saturday. *heh*

This is basically the 2nd dedicated server we got for all the blogs and sites we maintain. :) Next step, get them advertisers to sign up for the whole year and let them pay for all these expenses.

[tags]webserver, amd, opteron, server, cpu, hosting[/tags]

Try out Yahoo!Mail beta

Wanna try out the new heavy-in-ajax-powered Yahoo!Mail beta? See how to configure your existing Yahoo! Mail account at PTB. Check out the right-click function!

Yahoo! Mail

A little warning though, it’s not that cool for dial-up users — too slow.

[tags]email, yahoo, beta, ajax, account, inbox[/tags]

Seeing blank Adsense Ads?

One of my blog readers emailed and asked “Why are some of the Adsense ads appear blank?”

There are a couple of reasons for this to happen. You may also refer to the Adsense Stop Words I discussed here before.

Continue reading ‘Seeing blank Adsense Ads?’

dot.PH for better SERPs?

Notice that everytime you visit Google.com, you’re automatically redirected to Google.com.ph? And you will notice that results from Google.com and Google.com.ph will not be the same in terms of results placement.

So what contributes to the difference?

1) Web Hosting location or IP

2) ccTLD or Country Code Top Level Domain

It means that if your site is hosted in the Philippines (or an to an IP that is known to be assigned to the Philippines), Google.com.ph will favor you more in the search results.

The same is true for .PH domains. Assuming that everything else is the same, sites on .PH domains will rank higher when searched thru Google.com.ph.

So, aside from the branding (and Intellectual Property) spiel, you have another reason to use .PH domains for your site (IF you are targetting visitors from the Philippines).

If only the cost of registration would go down a little bit. (As I have always discussed this with their Channel Manager and I hope they are re-considering the cost aspect.)

(* SERP – search engine results page)

[tags]doamins, ccTLD, TLD, PH, search, local[/tags]

Not everything is about the money.

In line with Darren’s post about Blogger Credibility, I’d like to share a few thoughts of my own not only about blogging but the internet as a whole.

First, there were several suggestions to me that I should do some referral incentive program with my hosting business. While that sort of program which pays people just by referring your business may have worked with other companies, I have always refrained from such activity. Credibility should be given freely and not bought, so if someone refers a friend or collegue to me or my business, I strongly believe it is because this someone really thinks I am worthy of such recommendation and not because there is compensation involved.

Second, not every project should have profits first in mind. When I registered smartwifi.org.ph and wanted to move all the discussion from my blog to that site, what I had in mind was the subscribers and how I could help them and not how I could cash in on the keywords (at the same time, keep the rude ones away from my blog).

When I started PinoyTopBlogs, what was going thru my mind was that this project could prove useful and interesting. A couple of people even mentioned I could be making a killing out of it which I promptly denied. In fact, the cost of running it on a dedicated server far outweighs the few cents (Adsense) I get out of it each day. Talk about a costly project, huh? (Tip to those who are doing the same project: once the users inflate to the hundreds, be prepared to buy the Pro version and get some really really nice web host who are willing to take in the cpu load.) The same is true with PinoyBlog though it’s cheaper to maintain it than the former.

The litmus test here is whether you are still willing to continue with the project even if it’s slowly burning a hole in your pocket.

If you start all projects with money in mind, people will always question your motives and it erodes credibility. Start projects with “others” in mind and though it will not bring you tons of green bucks, it will surely earn you accolades.

FilmCrowd: Collaborative Movie Reviews

Luis is already on his 3rd Web 2.0 projectFilmCrowd.

FilmCrowd is a people-powered, movie discovery engine. As a participant, you can either explore the current movie listings and review stuff you find, or you could contribute movies that aren’t there yet and review those. That’s basically all there is to it (but you’re welcome to check out the lengthier description and explanation here, if you’ve got time to kill.) Ideally, it allows users to quickly find new (and old) movies that other users have picked up and enjoyed. Kinda like Amazon.com’s review/recommendation engine, except that it’s smaller, simpler and doesn’t ask you to pull out your wallet every other page-load. Additionally, you can use FilmCrowd’s social-networking functionality to form friend-networks as well as “focus groups” (i.e., groups that focus on specific types of movies, or movies from a specific publisher).

He could have practically done this overnight, after churning out previous Web 2.0 sites like Oks.ph (news) and Gibbity (gaming).

I got to give it to this guy (read: entrepreneurl and visionary). We met a couple of weeks ago for another ongoing collaborative project and talked about a lot of things. What impressed me a lot is that he never went corporate — 4 years of doing it on his own right after college. You got to have a lot of nerves, discipline and talent to be able to do that and make really good money out of it.

[tags]web 2.0, ajax, films, movies, reviews, community[/tags]

Globe Postpaid Plus ++

Just read from the newspaper this afternoon that Globe Telecoms will be permanently offering unlimited NDD calls from Globe landlines to any number in their network (fixed lines, mobiles phones TNT, G, etc.). That beats PLDT’s unlimited Php10/call any day.

The Globe PostPaid Plus package also includes unlimited internet access to GlobeQUEST Dial. All that for a fixed price of Php750 per month. Regular landline subscribers will need to upgrade to this service plan while new subscribers are automatically upgraded.

I forgot the rest of the details but if you’re interested, you can call them at (02) 79SUPRT (797.87.78) if you’re in Metro Manila or 1800-8-79SUPRT (1800-8-7978778), toll-free from your Globelines or Handyphone.

Their website for dial-up subscribers isn’t updated with this info though.

[tags]sim, phone, mobile, telephones, telco, telecoms, landline[/tags]

Blog Editor is one of CNN’s 2006 Trendy 7 New Jobs

Marc blogs about Blog Editors making it to CNN’s 2006 7 New Trendy Jobs:

Blog Editor: I blog, you blog, we all blog apparently, judging from the proliferation of blogs in the past two years. The success of influential ones like Wonkette.com has companies wanting in on the perceived edginess of the blogosphere.

“Blogging” is not only starting to creep into people’s job descriptions, but recruiters are starting to see blog-related job listings.

One on Monster.com seeks a blog editor “to manage and moderate blogs for clients and to write for the company blog on PR and new media topics.”

{full story here}

This is good for personalities and politicians who wants to have a blog but does not have time to personally write on them.

[tags]problogging, career, jobs, 2006[/tags]

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