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Results for: hp pinoy exchange

November 15, 2010

Sony Bravia Trade-In Sale Offer

If you’re looking to upgrade your old TV set at home, Sony’s offering something interesting in exchange for a 32″ Sony Bravia LCD TV this November 19 – 21, 2010.

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August 27, 2009

Yahoo! Philippines gets a new GM

Yahoo! officially announced this week that they have a new General Manager for the Philippines in the name of Jack Madrid, replacing former GM Jojo Anonuevo.

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February 12, 2009

KGB Philippines lays off 600+ agents

A source from inside KGB Philippines sent a tip about the latest mass lay off of agents in KGB Philippine’s Sta. Rosa contact center. The head count — 600 and growing.

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May 21, 2008

CURE’s U Mobile Ad-Supported Service Not Entirely Free

Last Monday, CURE’s new U Mobile service was officially launched. About 350 units of phones were given away to pre-approved U Mobile subscribers. Part of the monthly credits will be free and supported by ads. Anything beyond the Php100, you have to pay for yourself.

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October 24, 2007

Spamming at PEx?

PEx is probably the largest and one of the oldest existing forums in the country. Despite the growth and the amount of traffic it gets, the happy problem of making money off of the eyeballs is still a constant challenge. Looks like PEx is squeezing out all it can do to bump up the effective CPM. However, lately, there have been some allegations of spamming though.

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September 23, 2007

Gimme some juice!

Marc and I were shopping for some suit last week in anticipation of next month’s SEMCON 2007 and Aaron Wall’s wedding with his would-be Filipina wife. While discussing details of the conference, I told him that he should be blamed for locally popularizing loaded terms such as link juice, link love and link bait. He replied, “that’s why I don’t blog anymore!”, or something along those lines.

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July 03, 2006

Forum Monetization & PEx’s Business Model

PinoyExchange (PEx) is probably one, if not the oldest, of the commercial sites in the Philippine cyberspace that breezed thru the dotcom boom and survived the bust. With memberships of 171,729 and 15,258,823 posts since July 1999, PEx could very well be the second biggest site in the country in terms of traffic next to Inq7.net.

There’s no available public stats for PEx but a quick check with Alexaholic showed it’s neck-in-neck with PhilStar for the second spot.

Alexaholic

Still, despite the relative success in the online business, PinoyExchange is still under the red and funds are always short (mainly from advertising and co-branding). The site is currently suffering from slowdowns/overload and the admins admit they could not upgrade the servers because there’s no available funds for it.

I’m not sure how many servers they have but I reckon it could be around 2 or 3 costing as much as Php50,000 in monthly hosting cost. That’s on top of the cost of operation and salaries of the admins, sales and marketing people. So you’re looking at a conservative estimate of Php 300,000 monthly burn rate.

They’ve already scrapped AdSense altogether so I guess they’re not earning enough from the real estate it used to occupy. What’s getting a lot of heat right now are the huge ads that came along with the Server Busy page (makes people think they’re doing it to pad ad impressions). Another option they will be trying is “interstitial ads” which is similar to what you get in YahooGroups (much like an 8-second pause for an ad when you flip pages).

Active users are now suggesting that maybe the subscription model alongside the advertising model would help ease the cash-strapped forum/community. They used to have PEx Plus+ which is an annual subscription for premium members a few years back but they discontinued it. I think it’s time to revisit that idea. With over 170,000 registered members (ok, there’s a lot of multiple and dead accounts in there), even if only 2% of that are premium subscribers paying Php50 a month, that’s already Php170,000 — more than enough to quadruple (4x) their server capacity with some spare change for a good Web 2.0-ey redesign.

Of course, the rest of the 98% of the members will still have the free and basic services they get from PEx, maybe with the search function enabled as well.

April 09, 2006

Filipino Problogger: Paulo Ordoveza

Paulo Ordoveza Our next Filipino problogger is Paulo Ordoveza, more commonly known online as browpau. I’ve known him way back in college though we didn’t really got to know each other personally until he interviewed me back in 2000 as his replacement for a start-up company affiliated with PEx. He may not know this but he practically got me into blogging. He now lives in Washington, DC, where he works as a graphic designer and website developer.

  • How would you define problogging?

    Weblog as work: regular production of written online content, directed at a specific audience, with the purpose of profitably filling a specific topic-focused niche.

  • 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 writing my personal weblog, “How Now Brownpau,” in September 2000, and added Google banners to it sometime in 2004. I didn’t really think of it as being “professional” while the ads were on HNBP; it was just a way to offset some of my web hosting costs, and also provide context-based external content to some of my entries for people arriving by way of nonrelated search terms.

    Later on, realizing that I had bought several little low-end electronic devices, I decided to try starting a site on these same electronics to see if it would attract any interest — and profit. I had originally intended to make Cheap And Tiny a static clump of affiliate product pages with a few ads, but I then decided to see if the Gizmodo/Engadget way might not be a better route.

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

    On a professional basis, just Cheap And Tiny, though there are a few other projects in the pipeline. I’m not affiliated with any particular weblog network, and I like my independence.

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

    Part time — very, very part time. I don’t think I’ll ever take it beyond that, because I’ve discovered that I find much more happiness and fulfillment in my day job as a graphic designer.

  • How do you monetize your blog? Which ones bring in the most revenues?

    Google Adsense, Chitika ads, Amazon affiliate links, and Thinkgeek and Macmall affiliate links via Commission Junction. Adsense and Amazon bring in the most money.

  • What are the requirements to go into problogging for a network? Flat fee or profit sharing? How much is the salary range?

    Definitely a flat fee to start. I’ve found out the hard way that profit sharing means there’s not much to share for the first couple of years, and that in turn means less motivation for your writers, who produce less content, which means less profit. Hence, a flat fee to provide incentive; you really need to spend some money at the start to gain more later.

  • How much time do you spend on problogging?

    Not much, and I haven’t been counting. The original aim, however, was to make one post a day to Cheap And Tiny, with not more than an hour per day devoted to each post.

  • What other benefits do you get from problogging?

    Aside from the [still-meager] income, you get a nice cross-pollination of interest. People who wouldn’t normally find your less popular sites or projects can discover them via links in your more interesting ones. Keep at least a few links in your sidebar for that purpose.

    And if you’re not just duplicating links from the big pro weblogs, you find a lot of interesting content all on your own.

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

    Probably the time I got a link from Matt Haughey, of Metafilter fame. Sadly I haven’t really capitalized on the popularity I got from back then, so the flood of inbound clicks from that day have sunk back to a trickle.

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

    Keep at it. It takes a long time to become a popular, widely read, much-linked online cultural flashpoint — I’m talking years. You can’t be “ningas-kugon” about it; if it’s pro, you have to act pro, and actually work at it consistently for a long time, investing the same time and effort over the months and years as you did in the heat of excitement on the first few days.

    Don’t attack other weblogs, don’t plagiarize, and for crying out loud, DO NOT SPAM. I know you’re impatient to get the word out about your wonderful site and become famous, but DO NOT SPAM the link all over email, weblog comments, and message boards. Spam will only establish you as an annoyance to be avoided, shunned, and blacklisted.

    Also, be ready to adapt, and don’t be too enamored of the latest buzzwords. We say “blog” and “problog” and “Web 2.0″ and “AJAX” now, but remember that five years ago, “push” and channels” were all the rage. Things change fast in these modern times, and your medium — and revenue sources — may transform to something else entirely before you know it. Be ready to react.

February 22, 2006

PLDT Phone + DSL Bundle Promo

Got this new PLDT promo at PEx:

Promo Period: January 23 to April 23, 2006

Coverage: Nationwide

Target Market: New Postpaid Residential Subscribers who will also subscribe to any myDSL package

Offers:
Discounted Installation Fee: P500
Free MSF on the 12th month
Pre-activated NDD access
Free Speed Calling 20
Free first 10 ndd unlimited calls (P10/call)
Optional: Free Activation of Megabundle + Free 1st 2 months MSF of Megabundle (subs must have a CID unit)
Discounted TEL.+ DSL Bundled Rate

1. P 750 + 999 = P 1,749 – 200 = P 1,549 MSF (net)

2. P 750 + 1,499 = P 2,745 – 400 = P 2,345 MSF (net)

3. P 750 + 3,000 = P 3,750 – 600 = P 3,150 MSF (net)

Guidelines:

Application may be filed thru Business Office, 171, CSFs** & all Bilis-Kabit Blitzes
24-month lock-in period (for both voice & data service)
Pre-termination fee of P2,500 (for voice) + 3X MSF for the DSL Plan

**For more details and to apply, contact:

Rene Bautista
PLDT Agent Code: 5003632
(02) 8740183 // (0927) 4567254 // (0918) 22312423
add616reneb@yahoo.com // add616reneb@gmail.com

December 01, 2005

What happened to Rebelde.com?

I almost totally forgot about my “What happened to” series. I only remebered it after seeing some search keywords that ended up in my blog. See, there are still people who are wondering what happened to these sites/projects.

Anyway, I’m not sure if some of you remembered or knew about Rebelde.com but it was one of the “most controversial” sites during the forums era in the Philippines (circa 2000). Rebelde.com is a new forum and free email service launched in 2000 and owned by some Fil-Am family based in Las Vegas. They literally had hundreds and hundreds of Tagalog domain names used as free emails powered by Outblaze.

It was the only Filipino-targetted forum which offer to pay from Php1.00 to Php10.00 per post to all members That got it to become the talk fo the town. The management tried to buy into PinoyExchange.com but after they were rejected, they reckon they’re better off using the supposed fund to kick-start a new forum and what better way to pump-up membership than to promote pay-per-post. A lot of people were skeptical and there was a huge fight debate amongst the members of both forums.

Anyway, 2 years into the project, and hundreds of thousands of payouts later, the project was canned. The forums were doing well, the shopping service was bringing in sales from OFWs but the emails from Outblaze sucked (though it got Edsamail into some stiff competition). Later on, the forum DB got corrupted and was never restored back.

The plan was scrapped since it was not going the way it should be, which I didn’t understand in the first place even if I was one of the assigned mods in the forum and their “contact person” in the Philippines. It was a classic Bubble 1.0 disaster.

October 11, 2005

What happened to MyPhilippines.com?

Ok, first I used to work there as Design Executive back in 2001. A startup Philippine portal backed by the Ayalas, ImpactNET and DMCI Holdings, one cannot go wrong with it.

Dubbed as the next big portal after Yehey and PinoyCentral, MyPhilippines.com was using AltaVista’s proprietary search engine to crawl Philippine sites. It was also the sister company of PinoyExchange.com which is still alive and kicking but the stakeholders realized they have to part ways (and offices too). It has over 40+ employees when it started and trickled down to just 3 in it’s last months of operation.

Anyway, the company burned almosy half a million every month and only earned a measly Php50,000 in its 18 months of existence.

First off, the advertising model didn’t work back then. All banners and ads were just exchange deals. Then, they allowed kids straight from college to run a company and relied on gut feel. Good thing they had deep pockets or they wouldn’t have lasted a year.

July 21, 2005

What if you earn $14,436.45 a month for blogging?

Sounds incredulous but it’s very well true. Darren of ProBlogger.net just got his biggest monthly cheque from Google at the amount of $14,436.45. That’s more than Php800,000 at the current peso exchange rate. And he got all that just for the month of May.

This got everybody talking about him even before he got Slashdotted a couple of days ago.

Even if you only get 10% of that a month around here, it’s still big bucks. And all I get is a measly hundred bucks each month. Mr. ProBlogger has already even bought a house from his previous earnings.

Darren’s blogs (all 20 of them) are a living proof that one can really make it full-time just blogging. Well, he spends 8 to 12 hours a day reading and writing blogs but, he’s getting hits even while flying to some conference or seminar. And he’s been at it for years now.

In the local scene, I only know of a handful (2 or 3 other people) Pinoy bloggers who are able to get past the $100-barrier each month. There are still others though who run online directories, link farms and content factories (re-publishing lifted text) to earn the clicks.