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By Gregory Go.

You’ve started an online business, picked a profitable niche market, and have a website or blog that is getting a decent amount of website traffic.

Now it’s time to start thinking how you are going to start making money with your online presence.

The list below provides ways to monetize that won’t take up a lot of your time, so you can focus on building your site with good content and growing your traffic.

These are the most basic (and arguably the least profitable) methods, but they are effective interim monetizing strategies.

In the long run, you’ll probably want to incorporate other ways to make money with your blog or website including things like affiliate marketing and possibly selling your own information products.

As with most strategies regarding money, diversification is key. Try a combination of these methods to maximize earning potential (without making your site too ad heavy). Play around with your layout, if it’s flexible, to give different ads more or less exposure (don’t let them overshadow your content). Test a variety of networks. Make sure you are being paid accurately and in a timely manner. Monitor your performance and if you are not happy with the service or results, try another company.

1. PPC Ads (Pay Per Click)

Google Adsense is the most popular and widely used option.

They serve contextual ads (image or text) based on your content and pay when someone clicks on the ad. How much you make on Adsense depends on several things. First, advertisers bid on keywords, so if you happen to write about a topic that has high paying keywords, then each click will be worth a lot more than another topic with low valued keywords (keywords that have really low bids).

Also, people who came to your site from search engines are more likely to click on these ads than people who are repeat visitors. It makes sense then to spread out your Adsense ads to provide easy access for search visitors.

See Also: 5 Ways to Grow Your Audience and Make More Money Blogging

2. CPM Ads (Cost Per Thousand)

Unlike CPC ads, CPM ads pay per impression. Viewers don’t need to do anything for you to be paid. You just need to serve the ad to them. The downside is that you’re paid almost nothing for each impression, meaning you have to get A LOT of traffic to make serious money.

Rates can go as low as $0.10 per thousand impressions. But it’s still a good option to use in conjunction with CPC ads. CPM ads can be placed in less prominent spaces (below the fold) whereas CPC ads should have a better position. Most ad networks that offer CPM ads have CPC ads thrown in as well. You can set your own prices and remove unappealing ads.

See Also: 4 Ways to Get Massive Amounts of Traffic to Your Website

3. CPA / Affiliate Ads (Cost Per Action)

CPA ads pay per action. Viewers don’t just need to click on them, but they actually have to do something, either sign up/register with their email address or make a purchase.

Not surprisingly, they are the highest paying ads. However, how likely your visitors will click on the ad and perform the desired action will depend very much on how relevant the ad is to your content. For example, a site about digital photography may do very well showing digital camera CPA ads. Some sites are much better suited for CPA ads. Consider whether any CPA ads would add value to your visitors.

You can find CPA ad networks related to your market simply by doing a Google search for “your niche” + CPA networks. Popular CPA ad networks include Conversant (formerly Commission Junction), Adfish, and Amazon Associates.

See Also: The Most Profitable Niche Markets for Affiliate Marketing

4. Text Links

Text links work the same way as the other ads described above. You set aside a space on your page and text links will start showing up when they are purchased. You need to submit specific pages you want to display text link ads on your site, so be sure to enter your most popular pages (usually your homepage, category pages, and most popular blog post or article pages). Rates are based on how much traffic your website gets; the more traffic the higher the fees you will get. If you get a lot of traffic to your website and are considered an authority website then text links may be profitable for your site.

See Also: 3 Free Ways to Market Your Website Online

5. In-text Advertising

In-text ads don’t require any additional real estate, which is attractive to many site owners. Ads are attached to text in your content, showing up as underlined or double underlined words that are clickable. Some will pop up a little advertisement when the word is moused over. Many viewers, however, find these ads distracting and may get confused thinking that the underlined text should be linking to another page on your website.

As mentioned at the start of this article, there are much better ways to make money online.

6. RSS Feed Ads

Offering a feed of your content is essential. More and more readers are using feeds to catch up with their favorite sites, and not offering one will alienate a lot of readers who would be interested in your content. There is yet to be a lot of advertising options within feeds, but for now, you can still monetize the traffic to your feed.

No matter how you decide to monetize your website, one of the most powerful things you can do is capture the information of the people visiting your website so you can bring them back to your website and ideally get them to take multiple actions on your website – utilizing the power of email marketing.

By Gregory Go

Sourced from the balance

By Frank Strong.

If you’re looking for short, easy answers to some common blogging questions, here you go:

  • How long should a blog post be?

Answer: 1,000 words

  • How long should you take to write a blog post?

Answer: 3 hours and 16 minutes

  • How often should you publish blog posts?

Answer: Weekly

Short answers aren’t always the same as thorough answers, of course. Read on to understand why:

Two comprehensive studies about blogging

Bloggers are publishing longer posts these days-and spending more time writing them. Bloggers are also publishing less frequently and focusing more on distribution.

In other words, bloggers are devoting more time to promoting fewer, but more in-depth, content pieces. This is the top conclusion from Orbit Media Studios3rd Annual Survey of Bloggers. The survey’s data are consistent with another recent and fairly comprehensive survey by ConvertKit. Additionally, the data in both studies mirror my experience in B2B content marketing.

How long should a blog post be?

According to the Orbit study, the average length of a blog post is about 1,050 words. This is up 19 percent from the same study the previous year. Additionally, the study found that the percentage of blog posts with 2,000+ words has doubled.

Similarly, ConvertKit found that the most popular blog post length is between 500 and 1,000 words. However, when ConvertKit segmented its data between professional and amateur bloggers, it found that professional bloggers are about 70 percent “more likely to write posts of 1,000 words or more.”

Study after study has demonstrated the trend toward long-form content—and length is broadly characteristic of high-quality content. However, just because a post is long doesn’t mean it’s of better quality. Quality content often begins with research and analysis and careful vetting of sources and data.

When clients ask me how long a blog post should be, my answer is: As long as required to effectively communicate an idea.

[RELATED: Ragan creates custom content, from white papers to emails to intranets and more. Find out what our team can do for you.]

My posts (whether or not they are for a client) are usually around 1,000 words. I don’t set out to write 1,000 words, though; I aim to explore an interesting topic and write good content.

How long does it take to write a blog post?

The Orbit survey found that people take about three hours and sixteen minutes to write a blog post. That’s a 26 percent increase over the same survey last year. However, the study also found that “twice as many bloggers are now spending 6+ hours on their average post.”

There appears to be a correlation between the time invested in a blog post and its results. About one third of bloggers who spent six or more hours on a post reported “strong results,” whereas only a quarter of bloggers who spent less than six hours reported “strong results.”

The ConvertKit survey didn’t provide statistics for how much time bloggers take to write a post. My experience tells me it takes somewhere between four to eight hours to write a high-quality post. This includes preparing for and conducting interviews, researching a topic and closely vetting research sources.

However, many factors are involved, such as the topic’s complexity and the writer’s experience. There are also intangibles, such as the seemingly unexplained behavior of a digital community.

For example, I’ve seen posts that took only an hour to write go unexpectedly viral. I’ve also seen carefully constructed copy that the author has painstakingly rewritten over and over receive, at best, a muted response. I’ve also seen old posts spontaneously come back and sail around the web on a second wind.

There are best practices and techniques bloggers can implement to encourage shares, but sometimes you’ll write a post that simply strikes the right nerve.

How often should I publish blog posts?

The Orbit survey found that daily blog post publication is down 50 percent from last year. Interestingly, “weekly is now the most common answer to the question of frequency.” However, the survey also found that 38 percent of bloggers publish posts monthly.

The ConvertKit study also found that the “vast majority of people intend to publish weekly,” but that professional bloggers are far more likely to publish daily or even several times a day.

Blogging is central to content marketing, and consistency matters more than frequency. It’s important to have a cadence to publishing, or else deadlines will slide and the effort will never really get off the ground.

That said, two of most successful corporate blogs I’ve contributed to publish daily or twice a day. One had the staff for it, and the other didn’t. We simply made publishing a priority and put some processes in place to make it work.

Consistency fosters discipline to publish on deadline and, more importantly, cultivates audience expectations. Whether you publish once a month, once a week or once a day, make sure that your schedule is sustainable. It’s much more acceptable to ramp up production than slow it down.

Once you develop a content marketing process—brainstorming, writing, reviewing, approval, publication, promotion, analytics and content repurposing—then you can gradually increase frequency.

Blogging best practices

What works best will vary from organization to organization, because audiences are different. This is why the most successful content marketing initiatives focus on audience needs rather than a brand’s agenda.

Corporate blogging is a marathon, and you will make mistakes along the way. Learn from them, and keep moving forward.

A version of this article originally appeared on Sword and the Script.

(Image via)

By Frank Strong.

Sourced from PRDaily

By Joe Griffin.

Although 95% of marketers say they know how vital multi-channel marketing is for targeting potential customers, only 14% say they run coordinated marketing campaigns across all channels, according to CMO.com.

That disconnect wastes marketers’ two most valuable resources: time and money.

How do you unify efforts with different team members, initiatives, and strategies for your blog, email, and social media marketing? You need to come up with a content marketing strategy that accounts for each channel.

The following five steps will lead to the creation of a cohesive cross-functional marketing plan.

Step 1: Define your goals

Successful content marketers document their content marketing strategy; yet, only 32% of B2B marketers do so, according to the 2016 Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report from MarketingProfs and Content Marketing Institute.

First, define your goals at the top level and then down to individual channels as part of your overall content marketing strategy. Among those high-level goals might be the following:

  • To generate leads
  • To build brand awareness
  • To increase engagement
  • To boost followers

Both defining and documenting goals are crucial for enterprise organizations, where distributing projects among several teams often ends with the creation of silos. A documented bird’s-eye view keeps everyone’s eye on the bigger picture.

When defining the goals for your blog content, email marketing, and social media marketing, take into consideration how each channel will support, promote and work with the others. Define how the team will promote your social campaigns via email, for example, and how you’ll use your social channels to distribute a new blog post.

Step 2: Set brand and editorial guidelines

Establish the guidelines and processes that will enable your team to produce consistent content. All your messaging should look and sound as if it’s from the same brand—because it is—regardless of which channel it’s pushed through or which marketing specialist wrote it.

Though tone, mood, and topic may somewhat vary for each channel (for example, social media might be more lighthearted than other marketing channels, and email might be more sales-oriented than your blog), your brand voice should stay consistent. After all, it’s been carefully crafted to appeal to your customers and evoke certain feelings.

Develop guidelines for brand content and establish editorial standards. Guidelines should dictate things like tone, style, and format, so anyone at your organization can create on-brand content. Include do’s and don’ts and examples of on-brand writing.

Brand and editorial guidelines help your brand voice to become recognizable to your audience and ensure consistency across campaigns and channels.

Step 3: Tailor distribution for individual channels

The days of individual start-and-stop campaigns are long gone. An integrated, holistic approach requires that your campaigns work in harmony.

Let’s say you create an e-book. Document how each channel will distribute and promote that asset:

  • Blog. Carve up your e-book and post each chapter as a blog post. Include a CTA that asks readers to perform the desired action: You could ask readers to sign up for an email list or to download the full e-book, for example.
  • Social. Promote those chapters/blog posts on your social pages. You likely have a presence on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and YouTube, which are the top four social media platforms used by marketers, according to the 2016 Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends report. Create campaigns tailored to those channels, as well as any other social networks your brand deems beneficial. If, for example, your goal is to build community on Facebook, plan a Facebook contest around the e-book.
  • Email. Again using content from various chapters, send out teasers for your e-book via a drip campaign to nurture potential customers through your sales cycle. Make sure you’re segmenting your list, because not every potential or existing customer will want every email you send, depending on what their needs are at the time. Include a CTA to the desired action—for example, “get a demo” or “hear from a salesperson.”

Plot all your campaigns and marketing channels on the same calendar, and look for ways they can support each other. Having everything in one place makes it easier to ensure timelines sync up and every team is providing consistent information.

Step 4: Have the team(s) sync regularly

When you’ve integrated the plans for all your marketing channels, you also need to make sure your team is just as unified. Doing so is vital if you want to avoid the silo effect.

Marketing messages are fragmented across channels and therefore out of context when they reach the consumer, a study commissioned by Responsys and conducted by Forrester found. To overcome this problem, marketers should embrace “marketing orchestration,” defined by the report as “an approach to marketing that focuses not on delivering standalone campaigns but instead on optimizing a set of related cross-channel interactions, that when added together make up an individualized customer experience.”

Having your teams sync regularly creates opportunities to update each other, share insights, and bounce ideas off one another. Stakeholders get a full view of the campaigns and goals they’re contributing to, and how they can support each other and not duplicate efforts.

Involve everyone in initial content planning and creation as well, as each specialist can bring insight regarding the channels they know best. Moreover, different channels might have standalone projects in the works that need to be factored into campaign planning.

Step 5: Measure

The final step: Have your marketing team look at specific metrics and KPIs, such as…

  • Unique visitors
  • Newsletter subscribers
  • Conversation rate
  • Bounce rate
  • Time spent on page
  • Leads
  • Customers
  • Average order value

To keep each channel focused on the same business results, each specialized goal or key metric should work toward or support overall initiatives.

To make it easier to see how different channels’ results contribute to overall marketing goals, take advantage of marketing tools and data that bring everything together. Boost your Google Analytics configuration, for example, to customize how Google Analytics classifies your traffic, such as organic search, social, email, etc. Attributing results to specific channels, once again, helps with the overall strategy. Look at both long-term and short-term progress toward your goals on both a high level and channel-specific basis, and work with your team to adjust the tactics as needed.

By Joe Griffin

Joe Griffin is the CEO and a co-founder of ClearVoice, a content marketing technology company for high-quality blogs and other content destinations.

Twitter: @joegriffin

LinkedIn: Joe Griffin

Sourced from Marketing Profs