More Project Updates

A few days ago I made a post about the BANS software. While I haven’t made any significant revenue yet from the sites, I haven’t given up. However, I have shifted my focus in regards to affiliate marketing. I’m not going to give out too many details just yet, but I’m working more with leads rather than sales, and SEO rather than PPC. A few days ago I spent three hours writing 20+ articles for this project. I’ve just started building everything on a solid website; I’ll post an update once more progress has made.

As for my other new project, AdminAddict.Com, I’m waiting on the design to be finished by the designer. I would guess it will be done within a week.

Another project I’ve had in the works for a while is focused around Fox’s new show, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. I was fortunate enough to get the domain name www.sarahconnorchronicles.org; because the domain name is very search engine friendly, and because I started posting on the site months ago, the site is ranked in the top 5 for most terms related for the show in most search engines. The result is a massive amount of traffic (for me, anyway) coming overnight. I was already having problems with the new VPS, and the new traffic did not help whatsoever.

Sarah Connor Chronicles

Traffic aside, I did have some problems monetizing the site. I tried various sale and referral campaigns with commission junction, but had no luck. Amazon ads had been running for the previous month with only a few sales. With the boom in traffic, I switched ad sense. Sunday and Monday I made a decent amount, but had a very low CTR. I made some changes and it improved. I’ll keep experimenting. I’ve added TV episode listings of the recent episodes on Amazon and iTunes for purchase, so we’ll see if they’ll convert.

Sorry for not posting for a week or so; I’ve been busy. :D

Forum Inactivity - Another Forum Killer

There are many things that scare users away from your forum. Perhaps even more than excessive advertising or a poorly design skin, an inactive or empty forum will keep users from participating. Contrary to the popular saying, “if you build it they will come,” an empty forum rarely, if ever, gets posted in. They may come, but they won’t post. Even if your forum has 100,000 posts or more, if it’s inactive, no one will post. Doing so would be like talking to yourself; your post would echo, and no one would hear.

The truth is that unless your forum is active - getting posted in daily, it won’t grow. Even if the admin posts, it’s unlikely a user will post consistently because they’d only be talking to one person.

So, what’s the solution?

Simple. make your forum active.

How? That’s a good question.

Three Ways To Start Your Forum Posting:

  • Invite Friends - If you have any real life friends or acquaintances who are interested in the topic of your forum, let them know about it! I never did this myself, but I know that it would have helped my forums in their beginning days significantly. An additional bonus to having your friends post on your forum is that they’re much more likely to stay, simply because they already know at least one person who posts there. This is very beneficial to your forums growth. You want to develop a tight-knit community.
  • Talk to Yourself - Create three or four accounts and post on all of them. Make conversation with yourself. This gives off the impression of activity, even if it is fake. This can get tiresome, but it looks better than an empty forum. This is useless if you’re not getting traffic, but if you are getting a steady flow of traffic, your visitors have a much higher chance of actually signing up.
  • Post Exchanges - Trade posts with other beginning forums to help initiate conversation, increase activity, and build content. This accomplishes the same thing as you creating multiple accounts, except these accounts are fake. They’re from real people who might stick around after your post exchanges are completed.

The three methods above are only three of many methods of generating posts for your forum. Having an inactive forum is having a useless forum. Even if your forum isn’t active with genuine discussion, you need to, at the very least, give off the impression of activity.

Three Ways Not to Generate Posts:

  • Paid Posting - A year or two ago, paid posting was the hype. There were tons of forum posting services promising quality posts for your forum. While there are some legitimate forum posting services out there, most are from 14 year old foreign children who’s first language isn’t English. Most posts are a sentence or two long. Regardless of the quality of posts, paid posting doesn’t do much for your forum. While it does accomplish nearly the same thing as you conversing with yourself, paid posting is temporary; you “talking to yourself” is not.
  • Automated Content - Following the paid posting craze was a surge in automated content. I’ll admit, the aspect of having 100,000+ posts automatically was intriguing and I took the bait. It was too good to be true. The software I purchased was buggy and only worked sometimes - a few weeks later it didn’t work at all. On top of this, I was publishing duplicate content. In addition to the technical issues I faced, the idea of having thousands of fake posts also devalues the community. If the forum does get off the ground, it’d be hard to get a community feel from a forum that has a fake majority of posts and users.
  • Nothing - The worst possible thing you can do to help your forum grow is nothing. While this may seem obvious to some people, to others it is not. Some people think that if they set it up, a forum will build itself. This is rarely the case. I was fortunate enough to have this happen; I set up the forum and didn’t visit it for months. I returned to it later and was surprised to see it active. This happens less than 1% of the time, so it’s not something you should count on. Keep in mind that typically what you put into it is what you get out of it. If you work hard, you’re likely to get good results. If you slack, don’t say I didn’t warn you.

Blog Updates

As you may have noticed, I’ve made several changes on the blog today. Most noticeably, I’ve added a new, custom style to the blog. For the most part I’m pleased with this new style, though the change will take some getting used to. As you can see, we have our primary links on the left column, the secondary links on the right column, and the navigation bar in the center with the posts below.

In addition to changes in the style, we’ve totally revamped the about page with details about the site and myself. I’ve also added a recommended page that show you several of the online services I personally use and recommend. Furthermore, I’ve added a contact page if you have any question for me or would like to advertise on the site.

Needless to say, I’ll be making additional changes and tweaks in the next few days, as well as posting more. Stay tuned!

Why You Should be Active in Your Community

Each day I’m finding out more and more how important it is to be active in your online community each daily. Recently, my forum had a period in which I only had limited time and limited access to a computer for about three weeks. During this time I was extremely busy and adapted to not doing much work on the forum. As a result, my forum’s daily post rate dropped down from an average of 350 posts/day to about 150 posts/day for most of the month of November.

Once I returned to the site, I made a few minor changes and improvements the users were asking for, and began to participate more on the site. Almost immediately after I returned the post rate increased steadily by nearly 80+ a day more than the previous day. Now we’re sitting around 550 posts/day and still growing. Moreover, instead of having around 80 users login in the past 24 hours, we’re now back to around 105.

If you take a look to the right you can see a chart of the posts from each day. I’ve marked it with when I returned. You can clearly see the posts/day rate. Keep in mind that the 100-200 posts/day were consistent for the whole month of November.

Posts Per Day

I don’t take sole credit for increasing the posting rate because it really is the members that did it. I just supported them as they posted. I helped spur on conversations. The only real changes I made were rearranging some forums in response to suggestions and improving what subscribers received, which I honestly don’t think had much effect. I think there are several reason for this. One reason that comes to mind is simply the psychology of having a leader - if the board feels there’s someone in charge, it makes the board more strong and official. If an administrator never logs on, the user begins to think that the administrator no longer cares.

While I cannot say with 100% certainty that the forum posts/day increased because I became more active, I feel that this did strongly play a role. If I were to leave the forum for another three weeks, I feel confident that the posts/day count would drop back down to below 200 posts/day instead of the more healthy 550 posts/day. I believe that if I continue to be active in my community each day, the number of posts each day will continue to increase.

To summarize, you should be active in your community daily, because this can significantly increase activity.