Friday, May 3, 2013
How to Get an At Home Paid Blogging Job
1. First decide whether you are going to blog for yourself, or for a network. Blogging for yourself and blogging for a network will open up different ways to earn money. How much freedom you will have over your topic, the time that will need to be invested, and structural limitations will all be a factor in how you answer this.
2. Blogging for yourself will have standard ways of earning money. Things like Amazon affiliates, Google Adsense, and Other affiliate programs will all vie to be part of your blog. Amazon affiliates will pay a percentage of the sale for everyone that comes to purchase at their shop from your website or blog. This is great if you do many book reviews or highlight certain products in your blog. Google adsense starts paying out once you reach a $100 threshold, and pays when people click ads or links from your blog. This is good when you have topic that has higher paying keywords. Other affiliates, such as Art.com and other site specific places, will typically pay you a percentage of sales generated from your site. You can register at places like Commission Junction and pick which advertisers that are similar to your topic and have them on your blog.
3. Blogging for yourself can also pay you for things called a PPP. A PPP is a pay-per-post, where advertisers pay you a set fee to include links to them and a short write up (usually positive) about what makes them tick. Some of the companies that do this are Blogsvertise, PayPerPost, and BlogHer Ads. These places typically pay -X- amount for a write up in your own words. Some require the blog to be a certain age or a certain page rank on Google. Check with the companies prior to signing up to see if your blog qualifies. Blogsvertise is good for beginners, while BlogHer typically has a better reputation.
4. Blogging for a network will usually pay you either in ppv (per page view) or a set amount. Blogging for companies like B5media are highly respected, while blogs like About.com come with some serious perks. About.com currently has a minimum payout of $725 a month. In a land of Suite101 and being paid per page view, B5media and About.com can really show that you've made it in blogging. Requirements are varied for network blogging. B5media requires six to eight posts a week. About.com requires two full-length articles every 14 days and update to your blog one to three times per week.
How to Set Up Google Analytics Integration
1. Navigate to the Google Analytics home page at Google.com/analytics. Click the 'Sign Up Now' link under the 'Access Analytics' button.
2. Log in to your Google account when prompted, or click the 'Create an Account Now' link to create a Google account for use with Analytics. Click the 'Sign Up' button in the 'Sign Up for Google Analytics' box to begin the Analytics signup and setup process.
3. Enter information about your website when prompted. Google Analytics requires your website's URL, an account name for your Analytics profile, and the country and time zone that your site uses for its country of origin. The account name defaults to your website address, though you can adjust this as desired. Click 'Continue' once information is entered.
4. Enter your first and last name as well as the country where you live. Click 'Continue.' Accept the Google Analytics terms and conditions when prompted to do so, then click 'Create New Account' to finish signing up for Analytics.
5. Select the website configuration that best describes your website in the 'What Are You Tracking?' portion of the setup page. The JavaScript code in the 'Paste This Code On Your Site' text box will update depending on the option you select.
6. Right-click in the text box and choose the 'Select All' option to highlight all the JavaScript code. Hold the 'Ctrl' key on your keyboard and press 'C' to copy the code to the clipboard. Click the 'Save and Finish' button once you've copied the code.
7. Open the index page of your website for editing. This can be done in a standard text editor or dedicated HTML editor if working from files on your computer, or in the code editor of your website's control panel if you are working from files online.
8. Locate the '
' tags in your index file. Place the cursor in front of the closing '
' tag, then hold 'Ctrl' and press 'V' to paste the code into your index page. Save the file, then upload it to your website if working from files saved on your computer.
9. Log in to Google Analytics after at least 24 hours have passed to confirm that your tracking code has been detected. No data can be collected until Google has detected the code. Once the code is detected and Google Analytics begins processing data from the site, you can check usage reports from the Google Analytics website.
How to Make My Google Ads Better Fit My Site
1. Open up the 'Google AdSense ad formats' page in your web browser.This page shows the formats and sizes for all the different types of ads that Google displays. All of the measurements given are in pixels, which is a standard measurement used in website design.Review these ad types carefully, as there are various types and sizes.
2. Open up the website on which you already display or wish to display ads.Consider the best places to put ads on your site or how to change existing ads given the content and layout of your site. As a general rule, place ads near navigation elements and in prominent positions.
3. Open your Web browser and log on to your Google AdSense account. Your AdSense home screen will appear.
4. Click on the second option along the blue menu bar labelled 'My Ads'.To create a new ad, click the 'New ad unit' button. To edit an existing ad, find it in the list of current ads and click it.Edit your ads to your satisfaction and ad them to your website.
What Is the Meaning of Website Advertising?
Web vs. Real-World Ads
Both similarities and differences exist between ads on websites and in the real world, such as those you find in magazines, newspapers and billboards. In either instance, one party pays to be able to promote a product or service in an area large numbers of people see every day. On the other hand, while placing an ad on a billboard or in a newspaper always requires a fixed-fee payment by the company advertising, website ads sometimes generate revenue for the site owner on a per-click basis -- the more visitors to the site that click the ad, the more the owner earns.
Third-Party Ads
When a website uses ads that generate revenue based on the number of clicks, a single third party sponsors and hosts them, usually for a larger and more diverse body of clients than a website owner would otherwise be able to procure. A well-known example of a third-party provider is Google, through its AdSense program. Merchants and other online outlets pay Google to be able to advertise through the program. Webmasters wanting to earn revenue from advertising agree to put the ads on their site. In this instance, advertisers and the websites who place their ads never come into contact.
Pitfalls of Per-Click Advertising
One temptation after putting per-click ads on your site is to click the ads yourself or have others click them for you. Whether or not you use Google AdSense, third-party advertising sponsors have the ability to track visitors based on their IP address -- and if they trace fraudulent clicks to yours, it could result in your being banned from the program. Another disadvantage of using a third-party ad program like Google AdSense is that per-click yields are often nominal -- and unless your website generates huge amounts of traffic and a certain percentage of your users click your ad, your potential for revenue can fluctuate over time.
Big-Name Advertisers
Another way to generate revenue from ads is waiting until you grow your website substantially and contacting large companies to advertise on your website. If your website becomes extremely popular or well-known, companies may even solicit you for the opportunity to advertise on your site. This process works in the same way as traditional advertising -- a fixed-fee payment upfront and, in some instances, a percentage of subsequent sales -- and generates more consistent and often higher revenue.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
How to Make a Google Ad Center
1. Paste your Google ad into the place you want it to appear on your website. If you don't have the ad code, access your Google AdSense account and click 'Setup,' and then 'Manage Ads.' Click 'Code' to retrieve the code next to your specific ad.
2. Move to the beginning of the ad code. You should see this:
3. Add the following HTML tag to the beginning, so the snippet looks like this:
5. Type the closing HTML tag to center the ad. The result should look like this:
How to Allow Authentication for User
1. Look up the User Agent authentication for a particular bot. For example, the Google crawler is represented by the user agents 'Googlebot-2.1,' 'Googlebot-Mozilla-x.x,' or 'Google-AdSense-x.x'
2. Call the 'http_user_agent' variable in the '$_SYSTEM' global array of the PHP interpreter in your script to determine the user agent of the bot:
3. Check the bot authentication against a list of bot agents. If the http_user_agent variable matches, allow the bot access:if ($agent == 'Googlebot-2.1'){
/*authentication code*/
}?>
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
How to Insert Adsense in the Header of a Thesis Theme
1. Enter your WordPress dashboard and find the plug-ins box in the left-hand tool bar. Click 'Add New.'
2. Type 'Thesis OpenHook' into the search field and submit your query. The top result should be the OpenHook plug-in. Install the plug-in following the on-screen cues.
3. Return to your WordPress Dashboard. Click the OpenHook plug-in settings link in the 'Appearances' box.
4. Click the 'Header' tab in the OpenHook plug-in and insert the following code where you would like your ad to appear:Adsense codeReplace 'Adsense code' with your own adsense code. Save your changes.
5. Change the '' line in the code to '' if you need to alter the alignment, spacing or margins of your code. Add these additional style elements to the 'custom.php' stylesheet in your Thesis theme, using the tag '#header_ad.'
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)