Archive for the ‘Blogging’ Category

The Stumbleupon effect

I’ve been “hit” yet again by StumbleUpon for a post in the same subject area ie on The France Show.

As before, there are the usual hundreds of hits and diddly in terms of adsense income from them as, on the whole, StumbleUpon people tend to be looking for something fairly specific (which is pretty ironic given the nature of it, of course).

What I keep meaning to do is to use StumbleUpon in some way as I feel sure that there must be some way to keep the arrivals on the site in some way. So far though I’ve not sat down and done more than think a little about it.

Ideas welcome!

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Recycling old posts

I read one time on a high profile blog that they recycle old posts if they can’t think of anything new to write on the basis that a) the content of the old post was still valid and b) nobody would notice because they had so many posts on the blog already.

Whilst I don’t do that myself, it isn’t such a copout as you might think on first reading that. Some of my older posts get quite significant amounts of traffic and bringing them to the attention of new subscribers might not be such a bad idea now and again. There’s also the reference nature of some of them and it would probably be useful to do a tidy-up now and again in some cases that takes account of the various comments made.

What do you think? Is it a valid way of moving the blog onwards or is it just a copout?

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

The peculiar incoming links continue: mostly banking and finance

The run of peculiar incoming links to this blog continue.

Every time I mention something finance related, a whole raft of blog aggregation blogs pick up the post and republish it. The theory is that they’ll make money on the ads on their site and, of course, they don’t have any nasty work to do once they set up the aggregator.

I write a fair bit on various finance topics so I can understand them monitoring this blog for any appropriate key words and then picking up on them. Or is it simply the category “banking & finance” that they are picking up on? Well, this entry is tagged with that as an experiment so I’ll know better tomorrow.

Other places are a bit more unusual. For example, my piece on The Color Purple was picked up by a literature aggregator and the one on building your own house by a home aggregator. I’m very tempted to play games with them to see just what they’ll pick up 🙂

Still, it does help the incoming links which is all to the good.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Did google really target the paid posters in this pagerank review?

Googles pagerank review was due in the Summer but didn’t arrive with us until a few weeks ago and it still seems to be in progress.

I suspect that this is one review that they may end up wishing they’d thought some more about as so much money has been lost as a consequence of it that law suits are sure to follow in its wake.

What did they do though?

Well, it would appear that in addition to the normal juggling of sites up and down as their popularity changes over time, they have added a downgrade to sites that accept paid posts. They haven’t hit all such sites though as many are sailing on unaffected, at least for now, whilst others have dropped as many as five points in some cases (PR5 to PR0).

So great are the drops seen that one wonders if they’ve screwed it up completely this time. After all, the majority of the paid posting sites insist that their blogs aren’t 100% paid ie that there is some “normal” content as well. In fact, the advice is that your blog should be able to stand alone should all the paid posts be stripped out. So, blogs that accept paid posts have substantial non-paid for content.

The impact on the income of the pro-bloggers is quite substantial in many cases. For example, take that PR5 blog which is now PR0. The author could have clocked up around $100 to $150 per day easily ie something around $3000 per month. That’s a large enough sum to live on and that particular author is now effectively out of work as at best he can now manage around $15 per day. That’s an extreme case, of course, but many other blogs have gone from PR3 or PR2 down to PR0. Even that equates to a drop from perhaps $30/day to $15.

Google would argue that paid links devalues the worth of their index. Perhaps it does, but does that mean that they will similarly be downgrading the pagerank of all paid directories too? There certainly are a great many of these around and none of the links that they provide are in context as the links within paid posts are.

Of course, none of these changes affect the worlds largest paid for link business. Yes, of course, googles adwords programme isn’t affected by this downgrade.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

The changing face of the blog

The category cloud on the blog is probably the best indicator of the direction which the blog is taking.

I tidied it up a little this morning and it’s interesting to observe the difference in emphasis that it has now as compared to what it was like even as recently as six months ago.

France is still way up there as a topic but primarily for historical reasons and it’s quite striking how fast both America and the UK have started to catch up on it in terms of sheer number of posts. Six months ago neither were even in there as categories!

Holidays seem to be really important and may soon topple France from its perch. Of course, most of the early topics have dropped out of the running. There’s no sign of Buying a House in France anymore of course and French Administration is only just holding onto its position.

Web development has overtaken Working in France and indeed Blogging is quite a major topic as you’d expect given the amount of it that I seem to do these days.

I wonder what it’ll look like in six months time?

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.
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