Yes, I’m still alive, and still plugging away, albeit without much success. The microniche sites aren’t really working for me. My dozen or so are good for maybe a few dollars a week, but I doubt they’ve yet to earn back the marketing expense I put into them.
Out of all the sites I’ve built over the last 5 or so years, (around 60) only 3 have been successful beyond making a buck or two a day.
Gevalia
One site was built to promote the Gevalia introductory offer. It’s about 4 years old now. It didn’t do squat the first couple of years, then traffic started trickling in. I did some occassional link-building, and after the site was around 2.5 years old, it started makeing a pretty steady income to the tune of selling 1-5 Gevalia offers a day. Each of these offers was worh $22, so I was making, on average, about $2,000 amonth. Around the holidays, it could climb as high as $4,000. This was true passive income. The site was static, hand-coded using a free CSS template. It’s about 10 pages or so, themed around coffee obviously, with the Gevalia offers front and center and all over.
Well, about 5 months ago, Gevalia pulled their special offers off the affiliate market. Dunno if they hired a new VP of marketing or what, but the offers where gone. They ran a 20% off coupon on CJ for a few months after they pulled the special offers, but my revenue dropped from $60 – $80 a day to about $40 a month. Unfortunately, that single Gevalia offer made up 75% of my income. Despite all my other efforts, I never got anything else going with anywhere near that level of success. Then Gevalia dropped out of CJ, and that was that.
I slapped Adsense on the Gevalia site and started making a buck or two a day, about the same the 20% offer had been making me. I added a Tassimo special offer page, but have yet to convert one of those (I’m also not ranked for any Tassimo terms, although I’m still well position for Gevalia, shoudl it ever come backl). Link-building for Tassimo…? Maybe.
About a month ago, they came back on Pepperjam with their 20% coupon, so I immediately added it. Now it does $1-2 a day on Adsense and maybe another $10 a week through the coupon. A far cry from where it used to be. Fingers crossed that they’ll push out their special offer again.
Swivel Sweeper
About the same time I built the Gevalia site, I also built a site to promo the Swivel Sweeper. While the Gevalia started seeing some success after the first couple of years, the Swivel Sweeper site didn’t. A few vistors a day would trickle in and I’d do 1-2 sales a week for an extra $100 – $200 a month. Not chump change, but not quittin’ money, that’s for sure. I tried some PPC with it, but the margin was too thin to be worth it. I built out some more pages a couple of years back for parts (battery, slides, charger, etc), pushing through Amazon, and added about $30 – $50 a month.
Then, a few months ago (only a few weeks after Gevalia pulled their offer), organic traffic started showing up. It went from from 5-10 visitors a day to 30 – 40. Now I was averaging a sale a day. Nice. August has been crappy – only 6 sales so far, but July was good for $476 and June for over $700. And it still does $30+ a month on parts through Amazon too.
Odds n’ Ends
I used the Gevalia/Swivel Sweeper model for many other sites over the years: Collectible Jewelry, Clarisonic Face Brush, Cigar Samplers, and many others, but none of them ever did much. Maybe another $50 a month all added together.
So I guess the upshot of this, at least for me, is some niche sites work, and some don’t, but I’m unable to figure out the key to figure out which ones will do $10 a day and which will do $10 a month.
Or maybe my expectations are unrealistic. I can build a niche site that can make a few dollars a week, so maybe I should buckle down and build 500 sites? Seems as though that would be a nightmare. Plus, it took years for some of these sites to start doing anything, even the crappy ones. Bleh.
So….
Those are my big earners over the last 5 years. All the rest of my sites together bring in another few hundred a month, but none of them looks like a break out. I do, however, have some other sites I wanted to talk about. The thing that’s different about these sites is that I didn’t build them to make money.
And they don’t.
But they do get more traffic than all my niche sites combined. I just haven’t figured out a way to monetize the traffic. What’s different about these sites is that I built them around topics I was interested in. After being an Internet Marketer for so long, I think it’s impossible for me to approach building a site without having some sort of money-making intent, but nevertheless, money-making was not foremost in my mind when I built these. And they also take effort. A lot more than throwing up a niche site with some purchases articles.
So how are these sites different than all the micro-niche and CPA sites I’ve built? The main difference is original content.
One of these sites is a book review site I started because I like to read. Another is about bodybuilding supplements because I like to lift weights. A third is about nutrition, exercise, and lowering cholesterol becasue I wanted to get my diet in shape, maximize my workouts, and lower my cholesterol. And the last was simply a programming experiment in that I wanted to build a site where people could add text to images online.
These sites have three main things in common:
- They are all about topics I was interested in and wrote original content for (or provided a real, usable functionality)
- They all get a decent amount of traffic (the lowest gets 100+ visitors a day, the most popular get 1,000+)
- Realtively speaking, they don’t make any money
They all have Adsense. The bodybuilding supplement site does the best out of these. I averages $5 a day in Adsense and another $100 a month in supplement sales through Amazon and Shareasale. Now again, you might be thinking “hey, an extra $250 a month is nice” and you’d be right. But, as I said above, it’s not quitting money.
At it’s peak, the book review site was doing 3,000 visitors a day. But guess what? Sell a book for $7 at Amazon and you make about 45 cents. So even though I was selling 100+ books a month, it was rare for me to see more than $50 in earnings. And despite the traffic, I couldn’t sel advertising. They best I go was some crappy banners off ProjectWonderful that earned me $2 a day. But those days are long gone. After years of growth, I decided to invest in the site in an attempt to really grow it out and make it a player. I purchased vBulleting CMS and moved everything off my home-grown, cobbled together site I’d built myself (and used to teach myself programming). My investment was a resounding failure. Despire all the features of vBulletin (maybe too many) my community faded away. Now I’m lucky to see 100 visitors a day. Go back to the old version> Been considering that for a while now.
What’s the point of this ramblingm useless post? I guess Iv’e vioalted the rule of blog posting because there is no point. I just wanted to fill you in on the stuff I’ve done. Maybe you can take some useful info out of here, or maybe not.
What next?
Glad you asked.
There are people out there making a very good living online. I still want to be one of them. My next project will be an incentive CPA site. Complete offers, get points, exchange points for Amazon gift cards. You m ight not ever get that free iPod, but you can get points for completing the offer, and if you get enough points, you can buy that iPod yourself right off Amazon.
I’ll keep you up to date.
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