Skip to content

Results for: yugatech com average salary

July 31, 2007

Going Pro: Network or Indie?

I went to meet an old acquaintance last week who was pitching an idea to me. Our discussion revolved around the choice between putting up an independent blog or writing for a blog network. I explained that there are two sides of the coin when going pro — would you consider it a business or a career? To illustrate, I compared the advantages and disadvantages of the different salary models currently being used by blog networks.

Early this year, when I was still writing for BlogHerald, I wrote this little observation…

Continue Reading

April 11, 2006

Pinoy Problogger: Jayvee Fernandez

Jayvee Fernandez Most of you may already know or read about Jayvee from the popular mobile gadget magazine, m|PH (among others).

You can also read another write-up of him here.

The rest, we can just read from his personal blog. Now, we’ll learn how this prolific writer/editor got into problogging.

  • How would you define problogging?

    Problogging is the term used to describe online publishing as a legitimate source of income.

    As a corollary, problogging also means using your blog as an online reference for certain topics of interest. It is your own “personal wiki” if you may call it that.

    In sum, problogging may be the combination of two things – it is making money directly from your blog through different revenue sources, or making money indirectly using your blog as a self-promotion tool.

  • 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 have been blogging casually since the 3rd quarter of 2003.

    I got into problogging in August of 2005 – and as most bloggers will tell you, by accident.

    I wanted to utilize my writing skills to make money online so I surfed for possible writing gigs. Turns out I was at the right website at the right time – I discovered The Blog Herald, owned by Duncan Riley, who is now one of the directors of b5media. At that time, he was looking for writers for an existing technology blog and I immediately expressed my interest.

    A few weeks later, I found out that the position was filled but Duncan told me that he found something “more suitable and more exciting for my style of writing” so I kept my fingers crossed and next thing you know, Cellphone9 was served to me on a silver platter.

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

    My main blog where I concentrate most of my efforts is Cellphone9, the b5media blog on mobile technology. I also write for The AfterMac, a lifestyle blog on Apple products. I co-blog with Dickoy Magdaraog of Fight Pompe and Adel Gabot, the current EIC of m|PH magazine.

    A Bugged Life
    is my personal blog.

  • 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?

    I see problogging as a part time gig. This is because I cannot guarantee that problogging will yield a consistent stream of income to pay for everything – at least not yet.

    Darren Rowse of Problogger.net once wrote about how “going pro” should and will NEVER happen overnight. You can’t just decide to make blogging your life, quit your job tomorrow, blog like crazy, and then earn a few hundred dollars from Google the next week. It doesn’t happen that way, unfortunately.

    Ask me again a year from now and I might give you a different answer. There are many variables in the blogging world that may affect how income streams are generated or cut off.

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

    It should be known that the ads are carefully chosen by the b5 network and not me. Right now there’s Google AdSense of course. But other than that there’s BlogAds, TextLinkAds, TextLinkBrokers, Kontera, AdBrite and BizRate. We used to subscribe to Chitika but not anymore. Feedback was that it wasn’t that great.

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

    We follow the “you make your blog work for you” system. Although we don’t have a “fixed salary” I can sort of predict how much my sites make just by looking at the PageRank-based ads that pay a fixed rate. Getting your site’s PR up a few notches increases the value of your blog to advertisers.

    Increasing your PR means blogging like crazy, linking to people and getting links from relevant sites.

  • How much time do you spend on problogging?

    On the average I give around 30 minutes to an hour a day. Sometimes two hours, when I get all giddy on the keyboard. I go really slow on weekends because I believe that bloggers need some “fresh space” every now and then to recharge on ideas.

    One of the pitfalls of problogging is when you turn it into a boring routine. You’ll start to notice that your post quality goes down and your level of enthusiasm depreciates. And that’s a big no-no.

  • What other benefits do you get from problogging?

    People start to recognize you from your blog. Your blog becomes a legitimate source of reference for future jobs as fellow b5′er Aaron writes in Technosailor.com.

    I also get insider knowledge about the blogging industry and get to interact with the b5 family from around the world. It keeps lonely nights happy.

    As a “company benefit”, b5 hosts our personal blogs for free.

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

    Too early to tell as of this moment. But so far, it would be when my site got mentioned in Gizmodo, giving me over 2,000 unique hits on that one post – in one day. In the long run, my site stats doubled in one month just because of that.

    Money-wise, the most significant moment was when I went over the $100.00 mark in income, which happened over two months ago. If you put that in perspective, people from the Philippines won’t even believe me if I tell them that I make money out of blogging. The ‘blogging industry’ here is unheard of.

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

    Blogging, just like journalism, the publishing industry, and the arts is a passion-based type of job. You gotta love what you’re doing – and be knowledgeable with your field of interest. It can be as niched as knitting, flying an airplane, gaming, or following the latest celebrity gossip.

    Without the passion for something, no one will read you. Passion markets itself, and that’s where you should begin. Find your niche, blog about it and really “own” it.

April 07, 2006

Pinay Problogger: Gloria Gamat

Gloria GamatGlo often refers to herself as a tech-ignoramus for being such a novice in the blogosphere. A dear friend based in Germany lured her into the wonderful world of blogging a year ago, mainly for better tracking on each other’s lives. But blogging awakened in her a long-forgotten passion which is writing.

Glo is originally from Gubat, Sorsogon and came to Los Baños in 1989 to study Chemistry. She never got to leave LB since then. At present, Glo is a proud single-mom to Raine (Rainier Brando: born 29 December 2002), a task she juggles with being a Researcher but has already resigned from her work to become a fulltime problogger this month.

  • How would you define problogging?

    When you are earning because of blogging. Otherwise, blogging is a hobby or a passion that is being pursued.

  • 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 blogging sometime in August/September 2004. A year after, august 2005 i started a blog under one network. That’s when i realized that you can earn from it through advertisement and affiliates.

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

    Currently, I blog for the following:
    Know More Media: The Pharm Voice
    Creative Weblogging: Straight From The Doc
    B5media: Filipina Soul

  • 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?

    Starting next month (April 2006), I’ll be problogging full time. If you are a risk taker and has bumped into the right network that really pays big time and on a fixed monthly payment scheme, then you can say that problogging can be a career.

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

    I have Adsense and some affiliate on my personal blog but it’s hardly earning. Well, if you consider 0.01 cents per month. On the networks that I am blogging, I get monthly fixed payment.

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

    Depending on the network, most common is revenue/profit sharing but the really big ones give monthly fixed payment. I am not allowed to divulge the exact rate let’s just say that the range is $200-1,000 USD per month (per blog).

  • How much time do you spend on problogging?

    Average, 4 hours a day currently. But that may change soon when i go full time.

  • What other benefits do you get from problogging?

    The only thing i could think of is that because I reside in the Philippines, what i currently earn may not be enough to sustain a family if i were based in Europe or US, but because I live in the Phils, the amount I get is always times 50 so i guess that’s the advantage. It’s not the only reason but problogging gave me enough “strength” to quit my current regular job.

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

    The most significant event was being connected with Creative Weblogging because it paved the way to getting another big science blogging gig.

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

    I feel that I am not in the position to give any peronal tips on problogging. I just happen to be at the right place at the right time. Knowing the right people helped a lot beacuse they lead me to the networks where there’s money. But of course, you have to be equipped too with the right blogging/writing knowledge.

March 17, 2006

A blog’s potential with AdSense

Noemi writes about Blog monetized by Google Adsense?. The Filipino Librarian emailed me and Marc a few weeks back about the same. Since I believe Marc has still a lot of backlogs in his Inbox, I’m taking this one for the meantime.

For the uninitiated, projecting the prospects of your blog to earn from AdSense is close to impossible because of a lot of factors involved. As a point of reference, when we talk about a good prospect from AdSense, it means that you regularly (read: monthly) receive a cheque from Google. That means, you ought to earn at least $100 by the end of each month to be able to say your blog is doing good.

For the regular 8 – 5 office employee, this amount may represent somewhere between 10 to 50% of their salary. Let’s just say it’s 25% — that figure is still significant. (Read my “Has Adsense been good to you?” for some classic examples of these.)

Going back to the topic, when we want to compute the “prospect” of a blog (or even a website like a forum or portal) to significantly earn from any contextual advertising programs like AdSense, we look at several major factors and inject them into this formula:

Potential Monthly Revenue (PMR) = {average daily pageviews} * {click thru rate} * {cost per click} * {revenue share} * {30 days in a month}

The average daily pageviews is self-explanatory with the assumption that this is also equivalent to your ad impressions (how many times the ads are viewed by the visitors). However, if you have two ads placed on a single page, you get 2 ad impressions per pageview…. and so on and so forth.

The click thru rate is the ratio between the number of clicks on the the ads over the total number of ad impressions (or pageviews). The average for blogs here is between 1% to 3% (based on experience). This figure is influenced by ad placement or how you blend your ads close to your content, ad relevance or how the ads are related to your content and your niche or what type of people are visiting/reading your blog. The more internet-savvy your visitors, the lower the chances they’d click on your ad. Additionally, regular and repeat visitors do not frequently (or not at all) click on ads while accidental visitors (those who found your blog thru search engines) are more likely to click on them. Thus, it’s good to know how many of your visitors come from search engines.

The cost per click (CPC) is more complicated to determine because it depends on type of ads that appear on your blog. A good rule of thumb here is that if the ads are for products or services that are expensive, then the cost of the ad should be high as well. So, an ad about flower deliveries that costs $20 may have a CPC of say $0.20 while an ad for digital cameras might go as high as $2.

Up until now, there has been no clear statement as to how much is the percentage share between Google and the publisher (you). A recent article in New York Times puts the figure at 78.5% (something which I highly doubt). My hunch is that it’s just in the proximity of 10-20%. (How else can one get a $0.01 click?)

How about we plug in the numbers? Say a very optimized digital camera blog with 5k pageviews:

PMR = {5,000 pageviews per day} x {3% CTR} x {$2 CPC} x {20% rev share} x {30 days/month}

PMR = $1,800 (nice figure huh?)

Let’s look at your regular personal blog with 1,000 pageviews/day:

PMR = {500 pageviews per day} x {3% CTR} x {$0.20 CPC} x {20% rev share} x {30 days/month}

PMR = $18 {does your blog comes close to this number?}

You will notice that the two most significant elements in the formula are the CTR and the CPC but of course one cannot also ignore how your traffic comes into the equation.

Use this formula and see if it holds true for your blog. Please note though that it’s against Google Adsense’s policy to reveal details fo your revenues (except total monthly earnings).