Seo Blogging Software – The Best Search Engine | WorldPace SEO
Filed under: Social Media, Traffic Generation, Website Design, Website Flipping
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Seo Blogging Software – The Best Search Engine | WorldPace SEO
Seo Blogging Software – The Best Search Engine | WorldPace SEO
Filed under: Social Media, Traffic Generation, Website Design, Website Flipping
http://www.OrderFirepow.com – Seo blogging software can be hard to find online. Thankfully Firepow seo and traffic generation blogging software has just been. ..
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Seo Blogging Software – The Best Search Engine | WorldPace SEO
Web site Flipping â Makes Money easily
Web site flipping is one of the major sources for making huge profits on the Internet these days. There is always no doubt of making profits if the web site flipping is done in a professional manner; plus thereâs no need for investing money. There are two major ways for conducting this business or starting off with web site flipping.1.Create your web site: You can create your own web site and save money without investing on other created web sites. For this purpose you should write good and quality contents. You should buy a good and attractive domain name, know the value of web site flipping and then create it in a suitable way for buyers to buy the web site. This is one of the best ways. You should post the details in a famous auction site. Â 2.You should purchase an attractive web site and then renovate it. It is the easiest and fastest way in doing the web site flipping work. The important steps that are involved in the making of money through the web site flipping business are as listed below.1.Buy a good domain name: you should buy a domain name that is short as well as sweet. It should reflect the contents. So a good domain name is an intelligent choice and you can add value to the web site and flip it then. This will increase your profit level. 2.Create a template or find one: Next step is to establish a template or you can find a suitable one. This should go well with your niche. This will require some basic HTML skills which will ensure that the other pages are linked with the home page. You can add free Photoshop templates which will flip the web sites in a professional way and this increases the value of the sites in a considerable way. 3.Value your web site flipping: you should monetize the web site flipping and should make them attractive for when the buyers are ready to pay a good amount. The monetized sites will save time and money for the buyers and they will definitely look forward to buying a monetized web site. You should consider the products from clickbank and the Adsense, so that the buyers will not face problems in the future. 4.Sell the web site after flipping: you should flip your web site before selling it. You should cover all the necessary steps and improve the rank of the web site in the search engines. This will help your web site sell for high prices. And finally, you should make everything perfect and sell on EBay, Digital Point or Site Point. UntitledFor more information about flipping websites for fast profits, visit http://www.101waystomakemoney.com
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Flipping: Sell your Site and Get Fast Money
The concept of flipping applies, not only in the Internet world, but in other industries as well. Taken from the term “flippers” which is used to refer to traders in the stock market who buy and sell only during a short period just to make fast money, flipping is now gaining popularity as a way to make fast money online. Here are some of the things you need to know so you can make fast money out of flipping.
The concept of flipping websites is a broad one. You have many options how to go about it. Aside from just selling your blog or your website, you can also buy a website to keep it or simply to sell it again. Venturing into blog or site flipping is a bit risky. It requires a high level of investment at the beginning. Still, all of the blog flipping options are geared towards making you some fast money.
Let’s look closely at the first option. Selling websites may not be a typical option for many webmasters, even with the prospect of making fast money. After creating a website, taking care of it, and making it grow, it is expected that website owners somehow become attached to the site. However, if the website is doing really well, the prospect of selling it becomes even brighter. You may want to keep your site, but consider the perks of selling as well. Remember that the better your site is doing, the greater its value. You can earn a lot from selling your site, and it is also guaranteed to be fast money. Besides, selling gives you a chance to start a new project. So if you think selling your website is an option for you, here’s how to go about it. First, you have to determine how much money you are making with your site. Even if the customer will be the one who will ultimately decide how much the site is worth to him, having a ballpark figure to work with will make sure you get your site’s worth. Once you have an estimated price, compile information about your site to pass on to the buyer. This should include traffic statistics, revenues generated by the site, the site’s history, the reason why you’re selling it, and the benefits the site has given you as its owner that you are now passing on to the buyer. Those are the things that count, so make sure that you should check your site’s performance first before selling. See if you can still improve it before you sell so you can increase the amount you get from it. After all, you’re not just looking for fast money; the amount also matters, of course.
Now, let’s look at the other side of the picture. If you can sell your site, you can also buy sites. In buying sites, you have two options. You can buy a website with the sole intention of selling it at a higher value, and you can also buy a website to improve and keep it. With the former, there is no need to begin from scratch. You only need to improve the website a bit and try to increase its value so you can sell it as a much higher price than when you bought it. The trick is to look for sites that show some potential but is not maintained well. The owners of these sites are most likely to sell, and you will also get a small price for it. On the contrary, if you choose to buy a site and intend to keep it, you need to look for a site that’s performing fairly. Also, it has to complement any existing site or online business you may have. People buy sites and keep them for many reasons, one of which is for the purpose of advertising and widening their reach for an already existing business.
There may be plenty of ways to make money online, but there are only a select few that can make you some fast money. If you are a website owner, keep in mind that selling your site is always an option.
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Is Flipping Houses Illegal
1st part of the problem I think is we investors have our own lingo we use that means something to us, yet may imply something entirely different to an “outsider”.
The “outsider” immediately thinks about negative press about illegal property flipping scams. Yes, there are illegal ways to flip property, but when we investors refer to a flip we mean a legal, morally ethical way of doing it.
Examples of a “flip” the right way.
Wholesale Flip: You find a smokin’ good deal, that deal that has enough margin for a “buy and sell” profit for a retailer. Typically it’s a junker and the owner will take a discounted price for a quick, “As-Is” sale. The wholesaler (you in this example) ties it up and offers it (either the house or the contract to buy the house) to another buyer who wants to actually do the fix up, rehab, and get it ready to sell on the retail market and then does so. The wholesaler makes a profit by finding a good deal another investor wants.
Retail Flip: Same as above without the wholesaler in the middle. You are now a retailer. You find a smokin’ good deal and this time, you buy it as is, below market value and instead of “flipping” as-is to someone else, you fix it up and sell it in top retail condition yourself (meaning you hire a top agent to sell it).
Terms Flip: You find a situation where you can structure terms to meet a seller’s need and you then assign or sell your deal to someone else, either an investor or end-user/owner occupant.
Terms Flip+: You find a situation where you can structure terms to meet a seller’s need and then, instead of just assigning it, you create another terms deal for someone else and you stay involved. For instance you create price and payment (rate) spread, so now you flip it with terms and continue to be involved with each party till the end user pays you off in full or refinances.
So what about the “flipping” scams we hear about in the media?
To put it simply, it becomes illegal when loan fraud is involved. Typically this is because the resale relies on over-inflated appraisals, fake documents, “straw” buyers, or “silent” second loans. These fraudulent activities have been named by the media as “flipping” which, in their terms is synonomous with loan fraud. NOT how we as ethical investors refer to it. Kind of like football in the states, vs pretty much any other country. In America we think of big dudes in lots of padding running and passing the ball down the field. An oblong ball. Everywhere else, what they call football, we call soccer. Different sport altogether.
And loan fraud scams and ethical real estate flipping are two entirely different sports.
The people who defraud lenders should go to prison and often do, but their “sport” often reflects negatively on ours.
Real estate investors who operate a legitimate business of flipping houses as wholesalers or fix-and-flip rehab/retail investors are actually playing a vital role in our economy, and shouldn’t be lumped into the category of “unethical” or “illegal” just because they invest in real estate.
Ultimately, if you buy ugly houses at a below-market value, sell them higher for a profit, and do so honestly, ethically and without committing loan fraud, then you’re not doing anything illegal.
Below I posted some information about loan fraud taken directly from the FBI’s website. It describes, in detail, the various scams and cases that have resulted.
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Below is an article from the FBI’s website describing illegal activities. It is reproduced in it’s entirety at: http://www.fbi.gov/page2/dec05/operationquickflip121405.htm I don’t see any copyright information on that page to”recite” but I did not write the below information it was created and posted on the FBI’s site – see link above.
OPERATION QUICK FLIP
* Operation Quick Flip is designed to show that federal law enforcement recognizes the mortgage fraud threat. The Federal Bureau of Investigation Criminal Investigative Division (CID), the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Office of the Inspector General (OIG), the United States Postal Inspection Service (USPS), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and the Department of Justice (DOJ) have participated in this case round-up to provide information to the public regarding the federal government’s efforts to combat mortgage fraud. The federal agencies involved are targeting mortgage fraud groups in order to disrupt and dismantle them permanently.
* Mortgage Fraud is one of the fastest growing white collar crimes in the United States. Mortgage Fraud is defined as a material misstatement, misrepresentation, or omission relied upon by an underwriter or lender to fund, purchase, or insure a loan.
* There are two types of Mortgage Fraud: fraud for property and fraud for profit. Fraud for Property, also known as Fraud for Housing, usually involves the borrower as the perpetrator on a single loan. The borrower makes a few misrepresentations, usually regarding income, personal debt, and property value or there are down payment problems. The borrower wants the property and intends to repay the loan. Sometimes industry professionals are involved in coaching the borrower so that they qualify. Fraud for Property/Housing accounts for 20 percent of all fraud.
* Fraud for Profit involves industry professionals. There are generally multiple loan transactions with several financial institutions involved. These frauds include numerous gross misrepresentations including: income is overstated, assets are overstated, collateral is overstated, the length of employment is overstated or fictitious employment is reported, and employment is backstopped by co-conspirators. The borrower’s debts are not fully disclosed, nor is the borrower’s credit history, which is often altered. Often, the borrower assumes the identity of another person (straw buyer). The borrower states he intends to use the property for occupancy when he/she intends to use the property for rental income, or is purchasing the property for another party (nominee). Appraisals almost always list the property as owner-occupied. Down payments do not exist or are borrowed and disguised with a fraudulent gift letter. The property value is inflated (faulty appraisal) to increase the sales value to make up for no down payment and to generate cash proceeds in fraud for profit.
* Typical fraud schemes:
o Backward Applications: After identifying a property to purchase, a borrower customizes his/her income to meet the loan criteria.
o Air Loans: These are non-existent property loans where there is usually no collateral. An example would be where a broker invents borrowers and properties, establishes accounts for payments and maintains custodial accounts for escrows. They may set up an office with a bank of telephones, each one used as the employer, appraiser, credit agency, etc. for verification purposes.
o Silent Seconds: The buyer of a property borrows the down payment from the seller through the issuance of a non-disclosed second mortgage. The primary lender believes the borrower has invested his own money in the down payment, when in fact, it is borrowed. The second mortgage may not be recorded to further conceal its status from the primary lender.
o Nominee Loans: The identity of the borrower is concealed through the use of a nominee who allows the borrower to use the nominee’s name and credit history to apply for a loan.
o Property Flips: Property is purchased, falsely appraised at a higher value, and then quickly sold. What makes property flipping illegal is that the appraisal information is fraudulent. The schemes typically involve fraudulent appraisals, doctored loan documents, and inflation of the buyer’s income.
o Foreclosure schemes: The subject identifies homeowners who are at risk of defaulting on loans or whose houses are already in foreclosure. Subjects mislead the homeowners into believing that they can save their homes in exchange for a transfer of the deed and up-front fees. The subject profits from these schemes by re-mortgaging the property or pocketing the fees paid by the homeowner.
o Equity Skimming: An investor may use a straw buyer, false income documents, and false credit reports to obtain a mortgage loan in the straw buyer’s name. Subsequent to closing, the straw buyer signs the property over to the investor in a quit claim deed which relinquishes all rights to the property and provides no guaranty to title. The investor does not make any mortgage payments and rents the property until foreclosure takes place several months later.
* Federal law enforcement is working with state and local law enforcement, regulators, and the financial institution industry to combat the problem.
o OFHEO (Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight) has passed a regulation requiring Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to report suspicious mortgage fraud activity on a Mortgage Incident Notice (MFIN).
o FBI, OFHEO, and FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) are working to establish a reporting device similar to the banking industry’s Suspicious Activity Report. This is in progress, but will likely take some time as regulations and possibly legislation will have to be passed.
o The FBI, HUD-OIG, USPS, and IRS conduct criminal investigations into Mortgage Fraud Activity with a goal of disrupting and dismantling mortgage fraud rings. We strongly support joint investigations to effectively utilize all of our limited resources while strengthening investigations by tapping into everyone’s expertise.
* From July 5, 2005, until October 27, 2005, the FBI, HUD-OIG, USPS, IRS, in coordination with the DOJ, indicted 156 mortgage fraud subjects. A total of 81 arrests were made. A total of 89 convictions were obtained, and 60 subjects were sentenced during this time frame.
o The combined loss to the industry by the above-subjects is $606,830,604.
* In fiscal year 2005, the following stats are available:
o 21,994 SARs were filed (up from 17,127 in Fiscal Year 2004).
o 721 pending FBI Mortgage Fraud cases (up from 534 in Fiscal Year 2004).
o 1,020 pending HUD-OIG Mortgage Fraud cases (up from 920 in Fiscal Year 2004).
o 206 FBI indictments/informations (down from 241 in Fiscal Year 2004).
o 170 FBI convictions (consistent with 172 convictions in Fiscal Year 2004)
o $1,014,000,000 (FBI) reported loss (up from $429,000,000 in Fiscal Year 2004).
* Top ten hot spots for Mortgage Fraud activity in 2003 (per capita): California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
* Top ten hot spots for Mortgage Fraud activity in 2004 (per capita): California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, Illinois, Maryland, Georgia, and Florida.
CASES:
* OPERATION BROKEN LOAN (Detroit): On 10/18/2005, an undercover operation targeting five criminal mortgage fraud organizations culminated in the execution of 18 arrest warrants, seven search warrants, eight seizure warrants for subjects’ bank accounts, and two vehicle seizures. Among those charged were several mortgage brokers in the Detroit metropolitan area who allegedly defrauded mortgage lenders through inflated appraisals and straw purchases. Subjects were charged with violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1344 (bank fraud) and 1343 (wire fraud). On 10/06/2005, six individuals were indicted and six complaints were filed. On 10/07/2005, seven complaints were filed against subjects in this case, and on 10/13/2005, an additional complaint was filed.
Operation Broken Loan was initiated to target widespread fraud in the home mortgage industry in the Detroit metropolitan area. Detroit successfully utilized a Title III in this investigation and made controlled purchases of real estate. The investigation confirmed that dishonest mortgage brokers were creating fraudulent W-2s, paycheck stubs, and employment verifications in order to qualify straw buyers for real estate purchases. The victim lenders relied on inflated appraisals and borrower certifications arranged by subjects.
* CHALANA MCFARLAND (Atlanta): This case involves a mortgage fraud property flip scheme which operated from the summer of 1999 through March 2004. This case was worked by the FBI, HUD-OIG, and USPIS.
Chalana McFarland was an attorney who operated her own law firm. She acted as a title agent for title insurance companies as well as the closing attorney for various lenders.
McFarland used the stolen identity of numerous victims to submit false fraudulent loan applications. Appraisals were inflated and straw buyers were used to complete the fraudulent sales of over 100 properties. McFarland paid her identity thief $10,000 per stolen identity, as well as paying the appraiser who inflated property values over $400,000. Fraudulently obtained mortgages valued in excess of $20 million with losses in excess of $12 million.
McFarland and 16 other subjects were indicted. Fifteen have been sentenced, with McFarland receiving 30 years in prison-the largest sentence ever for Mortgage Fraud.
* THOMAS FAUNTLEROY/DAVID BOWIE (Newark): This case involves the subjects’ alleged inducement of the FHA to insure mortgage loans valued over $1 million, made by Neighborhood Mortgage (owned by Bowie) to unqualified buyers. In support of the FHA loan applications, the defendants allegedly created and submitted false and fictitious bank statements, leases, IRS Forms W-2, verifications of past mortgage payments, pay stubs, attorney escrow letters, gift letters, verifications of employment, deposit checks, and fraudulent property appraisals.
To date, the following have occurred: one complaint, three informations, two indictments, three arrests, four federal convictions, and one state conviction.
* MARK YOUNG (Nevada): This case involves a former Nevada First Residential Mortgage Company branch manager (Young) who directed loan officers and processors in the origination of 233 fraudulent FHA loans valued at over $25 million. Young conspired with other mortgage company employees and with employees of General Realty to manufacture and submit false employment and income documentation for borrowers. Most of the borrowers were illegal immigrants from Mexico. To date, 58 loans with a total value of $6.2 million have gone into default, with a loss to HUD of over $1.9 million. The Nevada First Residential Mortgage Company is no longer in business.
On 09/01/2005, Mark Young was found guilty on 32 counts of submitting false information to HUD, and one count of conspiracy. This case was jointly investigated by FBI, HUD-OIG, and the Nevada Mortgage Fraud Task Force.
* RANDALL DAVIDSON ET AL (Cincinnati): Randall Davidson used his companies Knab Mortgage and Capital Properties to commit Mortgage Fraud. He used unsuspecting buyers from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for the purchase of depressed properties in the Dayton, Ohio, area. These properties were purchased at an inflated rate using falsified documents to secure the loans. Davidson maintained a business office in both Pittsburgh as well as Dayton. The closing agent would disburse funds prior to receiving the down payment checks in order to provide Davidson and other co-schemers with money. The closing agent was aware that many of the documents used in order to secure the loans were falsified, but continued to close the loans. Davidson would inevitably receive a large cash profit during the disbursement of funds. Currently the known loss is over $8 million. This case was jointly investigated by FBI and IRS-CID.
* ROBERT A. AMICO ET AL (Buffalo): Robert A. Amico and his sons Robert J. Amico and Richard Amico engaged in a large conspiracy with loan brokers, appraisers, and buyers to submit over 100 fraudulent mortgage applications that overstated the value of all houses so that no down payment was made and so that the buyers could qualify for loans that they could not otherwise afford. All of the conspirators plead guilty, with the exception of the Amicos. Some of these conspirators were sentenced to probation and testified at the Amicos trial. Others were sentenced to jail terms of up to five years. After a six month jury trial the Amico sons were convicted and the father died of cancer. Fraudulently obtained mortgage applications were valued at $58 million with losses totaling $14.7 million. Robert J. Amico was sentenced to 17 years in prison and Richard N. Amico was sentenced to 9 years in prison. This case was joint investigation with IRS/CID.
* OPERATION CLEAN DEED (Charlotte): Promoters and other industry professionals obtained/brokered loans based on inflated property values and false application information for recruited buyer/investors. Participating attorneys falsified closing documents showing non-existent down-payments and closed the sales as “primary residence” purchases rather than as investments. The excess amount of the inflated loan was diverted to the promoters and other co-conspirators with a payment typically made to the buyer/investor following the closing. Loan payments were not made and houses eventually went into foreclosure. Fraudulently obtained loans valued in excess of $71 million with losses in excess of $9.5 million. To date, 14 subjects have been convicted, including promoters, attorneys, mortgage brokers, and builders.
AMERIFUNDING (Denver): This joint investigation with IRS/CID involved kiting of mortgage loans by utilizing stolen identities to facilitate the scheme. Further investigation determined that the scheme involved over $200 million in fraudulent loans over a 24 month period. One of the subjects obtained fraudulent identities by placing “help wanted” advertisements in a local newspaper. Information from the victims applications were used to apply for mortgage loans between $300,000 and $500,000. The proceeds of the scheme were used to pay personal expenses of the defendants. In a related fraud scheme, the lead defendant paid prior loans and purchased defective properties that were then resold for a substantial profit with inflated appraisals. To date, six subjects have been indicted. Losses totaled $37.5 million and approximately $16 million in assets were seized.
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Maintaining Your Business Website
QUESTION:
Should I build and maintain my business Web site myself or pay someone else to do the work for me? — Wesley L.
ANSWER:
When you say, pay someone else to do the work for you, Wesley, I am going to assume that you are talking about hiring a professional Web site designer to do the work and not your next-door neighbor’s teenage son. If my assumption is correct, then read on. If not, go ahead and flip over to the comics section. You will get no good out of the advice I’m about to give, so you might as well consult Dilbert for your hot business tips.
Should you build and maintain your business Web site yourself or pay someone to do it for you? Let me answer your question with a couple of my own. Number one: is building and maintaining Web sites the key focus of your business? Number two: could your time be better spent doing more important things like, oh I don’t know, say running your business? If your answers were no and yes, respectively, then you have no business building and maintain a Web site.
Remember this: every minute you spend on tasks that are not related to the key focus of your business is time spent to the detriment of your business. In other words, every minute you spend focusing on tasks that do not contribute to the growth of your business and thereby increase your bottom line is time wasted.
If you want to be a web designer, be a web designer. However, if the key focus of your business is building widgets, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that your time would be better spent building widgets, not Web sites.
Case in point: I once had a very wealthy dentist ask if I could teach him how to maintain his Web site so he wouldn’t have to pay me to do it. Now my teeth had helped put this guy’s kids through college, but that didn’t seem to matter. At that moment he was more concerned about having to pay for changes to his Web site than my personal oral hygiene. Sure, I said, I’ll be glad to teach you how to update your Web site, just as soon as you teach me how to clean my own teeth so I don’t have to pay you to do it. He got the point. And he charged me enough for the cleaning to keep his site updated for months. Smart man.
Many business owners think they can’t afford a professionally designed Web site and that simply is not true. While the old adage, “you get what you pay for†is never more true than when applied to Web site design, having a professional web designer do the work for you is money well spent. A well-designed Web site can bring you a many-fold return on your investment. You can’t say that about too many other collaterals.
While it is best to leave Web site design and maintenance to the experts, it is up to you (or someone considered a subject matter expert within your company) to provide the designer with the content (text and photographs) that best conveys your company’s message to your customers. A Web site, no matter how well designed, is meaningless if it lacks the content required to interest customers in the products you sell or services you provide.
Here’s are a few questions that, once answered, will help ensure that your Web site’s message is as appealing as its design. Go over these points with the designer before the design process begins as the answers will help determine the direction your Web site’s design should take.
What Is The Purpose Of Your Web Site?
Most business Web sites have two purposes: (1) to educate the consumer and, (2) to sell them products or services. If you sell shoes, for example, the purpose of your Web site is to educate potential customers on the quality and durability of your shoes and as a result, to sell them shoes. If you paint houses the purpose of your Web site is to educate home owners on why your services are superior to other painters and sell them on hiring you to paint their house. By defining the purpose of your Web site you will give the designer the information required to create a Web site that best conveys that purpose to your target audience.
Who Is My Target Audience?
Your target audience consists of those folks you want to attract to your Web site: potential and current customers, future and current employees, possible investors, etc. Anyone who might be interested in your company and its products or services is a member of your target audience. Correctly identifying your target audience is vital since your Web site should be designed specifically to appeal to your target audience.
Put yourself in their shoes (or in front of their computers). Imagine your Web site through their eyes. If you were visiting a Web site such as yours what would you expect to find and what would you be disappointed not to find? Identify your target audience, then have your Web site designed to fulfill their needs and surpass their expectations.
What Content Should My Web Site Feature?
Your Web site content should be driven by the nature of your business. If you’re a real estate agent, your site should feature photographs of homes you have for sale and information on buying and selling a home. If you own an auto body shop, your site might feature before and after photographs of cars that you have repaired. Remember to determine the purpose of your site, then develop the content to serve that purpose.
What’s My Competition Doing?
The last question you should ask is one of the most important: What is your competition doing on the Web? Do a Google search for similar businesses and click around their Web sites. How are their Web sites designed? What message are they trying to convey? Are they doing a good job of conveying that message and as a result, selling products? What do you like about their Web sites? What don’t you like? Make note of the things you like and the things you hate, then share your findings with your site designer.
Remember, you’re not stealing trade secrets here.
You’re just borrowing ideas.
Tim Knox is a nationally-known small business expert who writes and speaksfrequently on the topic.For more information or to contact Tim please visit one of his sites below.http://www.dropshipwholesale.nethttp://www.smallbusinessqa.comhttp://www.timknox.com
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Increasing Ad Revenue on Your Website
Controlling your blog and staying on top of the advertising, content and every other small detail can be a hard task and not very fun at time. But you do want your blog to look nice and attract others, but at the same have plenty of good advertisers. This may sometimes seem like a hard task. But if you know what you are doing and get a little help, you can get everything placed in exactly the best spots possible. But it may take a bit of work and even some trial and error.A lot of times a small, simple change in where you place your advertisements can make a huge difference and you can sometimes even double what you were making beforehand. But these changes need to be strategically placed and improve the look of your blog, not take away from the content and still be appealing enough to draw back more customers. Most of the time you want to place your ads in spots where they will get noticed but you are not trying to make them the focus of your page either. Google Adsense has made a few recommendations for spots for good advertisements.They suggest that you place ads as banners across the top of your page or also in rectangle sizes which don’t take away too much from your page but are easy to notice. Another thing to consider is placing the ads close to your content. That way they will notice them as they are reading along or words may just jump out to them that are similar to what is in the content. You also want to try and keep it simple. If you have too many advertisers all over the page, your blog can get too complicated and hard to read or find where the content starts and ends. You could try and place your content just above the fold of the page. This means that they will first be looking at your advertisements and Adsense before even getting to your content.But if you content isn’t even viewable until they scroll down, they may lose interest quickly in scrolling down to see everything. But putting a small chunk of content above the fold, this will cause your readers to have to scroll down and see more. On the flip side, if you do not put much of your content above the fold, this may not increase your chances of having frequent and steady readers, but it may increase the responses to your ads. When your blog comes up and the first thing they see are a lot of different ads, their first response may be to click on a few.By placing your ads just right, you could make a lot of good money. What it may come down to is whether or not you want frequent readers or lots of clicks on your ads. Depending on your motives and what your main goal is, it may be different for every blog. But you can still take advantage of your ad space by placing them in the right spots to attract more people. And if you do it how you should, your profits will more than definitely increase.
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