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- Oct 14, 2017
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Hey all:
I've been loving this forum, so to see a different type of discussion going on, everyone trying to help each other out, telling it as it is etc :-)
I haven't posted a lot, other than an intro etc, but I feel a need to get some feedback. And in a way, I feel kinda foolish asking because I've been around the block a bit with online business, MFA micro-niche sites back in 2009, working building email lists with free mixed media bundles and affiliate between 2014- end of 2016.
But, self-doubt has always been one of my biggest foes, never too far away, and the mo-fo is back with a vengeance.
I finally came to realise, after doing a shitty job working in a gym for around $10 an hour (converted roughly from UK pounds, and I'm still working there) that I really need to get building a site again and hopefully get back to my own personal glory days of making my living online.
Sure, there is loneliness (oft overcome with coffee shop adventures) but fuck!!!!!!, working for someone else is FAR worse :-( I truly despise it!
So I started a site in a lifestyle niche I guess you'd call it, but with many verticals in there that I can build one at a time. And I haven't done too bad. The first article went up on 8 August and I now have 75 posts, around 130k words in total.
The original idea was to go the Adsense and Amazon affiliate route, affiliate reviews with no ads, and the informational products monetized with ads.
I picked up Chris Lee's Adsense course to get some ideas on how to build the thing out. Probably didn't really need it, although it's not bad at all.
So, I have probably 8-10 decent length review posts, 2500-5000 words, and then some loser product related posts with some affiliate links scattered in there, and then quite a few informational posts linking to each other, and to the money posts.
I've tried to keep the linking relatively contained within a loose 'silo', just to try to create some relevancy for Mr. G.
So, I've recently started getting a little traffic, only around 40-50 visits a day, with 15-25 of them from Google, some social traffic, a bit from Reddit and some direct stuff I have no idea on :-)
Made my first Amazon sale a couple of days back, gonna net around $12...whoop, whoop!!!!!
BUT....I'm kinda broke, we're getting by but I feel so terrible that we're struggling. I finally realized, after years of trying to convince myself that I wanted to do something for the 'greater good', that what I actually want is to give my wife and kids a good life.
I know I have to give value to my visitors of course, but I was a personal trainer and nutrition coach for a few years (still do a bit) and I couldn't get my head around the fact that I wanted to make money, to be able to help my kids and to take my wife on city breaks, to just let her relax and not worry about money anymore.
We were doing ok until the end of last year, but shit fell apart with the guys I was working with, and that $4000 pm income vanished overnight. Should have been planning for that...but I didn't.
Anyhoo, here I am, with 2 websites, one new with 80 posts and little traffic, my other (in the health niche) sitting still but getting around 400-500 visits a day. That site is 5 years old.
I've never sought links for it, and only have around 59 referring domains, but I rank well for a few terms around a certain type of diet. All informational content but I did chuck a few Amazon links in there and have had a few sales.
I also tried Ezoic for some ads, and make $2-3 per day with that amount of traffic...not going to retire on that anytime soon.
I also have a digital product that I created a couple of years back, it's quite good but I've never really been able to sell it well via the site, a few here and there but that's it.
So, if I am dead set on Amazon affiliate income for now (plan to do that for now and then think about other monetization methods in a year or two) what would YOU do?
Keep on with the new site and forget the older one?
Try to start some product review for the old site and just let the new one sit and age for a few months, and see how the traffic picks up?
Do both in some ratio?
I am just thinking that the older site with a little authority behind it might find it much easier to rank for some review based articles and get some dosh rolling in more quickly than the new one.
I actually wrote a couple of books on Kindle a couple of years back, and have now repurposed them as pillar content on the health site, 2 articles around 15,000 words each, quite a scroll :-)
I know this is down to me, I know that I succeeded before (albeit when it was easier to succeed), but I tend to suffer from overwhelm and then get frustrated and the self-doubt creeps in.
Any thoughts or observations, or a damn good kick in the ass appreciated :-)
Happy to answer any questions or queries about my sites etc if you need more info.
Thanks for reading :-)
PS. Thanks so much for all the incredible amount of work that has gone into the course and the time you all give to helping each other, it's a truly wonderful thing to see people looking out for each other like this.
I've been loving this forum, so to see a different type of discussion going on, everyone trying to help each other out, telling it as it is etc :-)
I haven't posted a lot, other than an intro etc, but I feel a need to get some feedback. And in a way, I feel kinda foolish asking because I've been around the block a bit with online business, MFA micro-niche sites back in 2009, working building email lists with free mixed media bundles and affiliate between 2014- end of 2016.
But, self-doubt has always been one of my biggest foes, never too far away, and the mo-fo is back with a vengeance.
I finally came to realise, after doing a shitty job working in a gym for around $10 an hour (converted roughly from UK pounds, and I'm still working there) that I really need to get building a site again and hopefully get back to my own personal glory days of making my living online.
Sure, there is loneliness (oft overcome with coffee shop adventures) but fuck!!!!!!, working for someone else is FAR worse :-( I truly despise it!
So I started a site in a lifestyle niche I guess you'd call it, but with many verticals in there that I can build one at a time. And I haven't done too bad. The first article went up on 8 August and I now have 75 posts, around 130k words in total.
The original idea was to go the Adsense and Amazon affiliate route, affiliate reviews with no ads, and the informational products monetized with ads.
I picked up Chris Lee's Adsense course to get some ideas on how to build the thing out. Probably didn't really need it, although it's not bad at all.
So, I have probably 8-10 decent length review posts, 2500-5000 words, and then some loser product related posts with some affiliate links scattered in there, and then quite a few informational posts linking to each other, and to the money posts.
I've tried to keep the linking relatively contained within a loose 'silo', just to try to create some relevancy for Mr. G.
So, I've recently started getting a little traffic, only around 40-50 visits a day, with 15-25 of them from Google, some social traffic, a bit from Reddit and some direct stuff I have no idea on :-)
Made my first Amazon sale a couple of days back, gonna net around $12...whoop, whoop!!!!!
BUT....I'm kinda broke, we're getting by but I feel so terrible that we're struggling. I finally realized, after years of trying to convince myself that I wanted to do something for the 'greater good', that what I actually want is to give my wife and kids a good life.
I know I have to give value to my visitors of course, but I was a personal trainer and nutrition coach for a few years (still do a bit) and I couldn't get my head around the fact that I wanted to make money, to be able to help my kids and to take my wife on city breaks, to just let her relax and not worry about money anymore.
We were doing ok until the end of last year, but shit fell apart with the guys I was working with, and that $4000 pm income vanished overnight. Should have been planning for that...but I didn't.
Anyhoo, here I am, with 2 websites, one new with 80 posts and little traffic, my other (in the health niche) sitting still but getting around 400-500 visits a day. That site is 5 years old.
I've never sought links for it, and only have around 59 referring domains, but I rank well for a few terms around a certain type of diet. All informational content but I did chuck a few Amazon links in there and have had a few sales.
I also tried Ezoic for some ads, and make $2-3 per day with that amount of traffic...not going to retire on that anytime soon.
I also have a digital product that I created a couple of years back, it's quite good but I've never really been able to sell it well via the site, a few here and there but that's it.
So, if I am dead set on Amazon affiliate income for now (plan to do that for now and then think about other monetization methods in a year or two) what would YOU do?
Keep on with the new site and forget the older one?
Try to start some product review for the old site and just let the new one sit and age for a few months, and see how the traffic picks up?
Do both in some ratio?
I am just thinking that the older site with a little authority behind it might find it much easier to rank for some review based articles and get some dosh rolling in more quickly than the new one.
I actually wrote a couple of books on Kindle a couple of years back, and have now repurposed them as pillar content on the health site, 2 articles around 15,000 words each, quite a scroll :-)
I know this is down to me, I know that I succeeded before (albeit when it was easier to succeed), but I tend to suffer from overwhelm and then get frustrated and the self-doubt creeps in.
Any thoughts or observations, or a damn good kick in the ass appreciated :-)
Happy to answer any questions or queries about my sites etc if you need more info.
Thanks for reading :-)
PS. Thanks so much for all the incredible amount of work that has gone into the course and the time you all give to helping each other, it's a truly wonderful thing to see people looking out for each other like this.