James Avery’s blog

October 7, 2009

I’ve got my first 1,000 twitter followers - so what?

So, I’ve fed my ego and gone out to get my first 1,000 twitter followers, both on my personal account, and on the account we use for Flightmapping.com. So what? Well, to be honest, so not very much. My vanity, and my desire for traffic, and hence revenue, want as many twitter followers as possible.

I have guestimated that I’ll need about 10,000 to start seeing any worthwhile difference. This is based on an assumption that 1% of people will respond to tweets about new blog posts, and that five new blog posts and site updates each day could generate 2 x 10,000 x 1% x 5 = 1,000 new visitors. At this stage, I am dealing with very crude maths, and I’ll adjust my forecasts as I go along. I’m interested to hear from other twitter users who are out there to build decent traffic to content related blogs, and not just to get people to sign up to online get rich quick programmes. How are you doing?

Thoughts on Compound Growth - Possibilities and Dangers

Compound Growth of an Online Business

Compound Growth of an Online Business

On Sunday, I posted about how little I was actually earning from my blogs, and how I hoped to enter a steep learning curve in order to improve this. I’ve never been shy of writing content, but the social media arena has always been something I’ve never quite got round to entering. So I decided to hold my hands up and admit to being a total newbie, and see where things go from here. I have entered the steep learning curve of twitter, blog promotion and blog optimisation, and I am looking forward to enjoying the ride. So how realistic is it to expect to follow a growth curve which keeps on going up, and how can website builders ensure that their growth is exponential, rather than just solid and linear. Or is linear growth better?

Well, I have always found the prospect of compound growth far more exciting. Prior to turning my attention to blogging and offline print maps, I maintained a 60-70% annual growth rate on Flightmapping.com. Of course, the big question when anyone makes claims of massive growth is what level they are starting from. It doesn’t take a maths genius to work out that 1000% growth from £10 per month is still just £100 per month. But what if that is just the start, and within a few short months, you can double that figure again several times over?

Of course, the possibilities are endless - and there is no reason why a relative beginner can’t build up a substantial and stable income through building highly relevant content-focussed blogs - providing that there is a revenue stream which can be built from them. It is no use blogging about a subject which either has very few potential readers (although believe me, on the internet, there are people out there into just about anything), or which is just not going to generate much revenue (note to self - stay away from long political rants!).

So what are the dangers?

Judging by the endless streams of spam on twitter, the first pitfall has to be to go down the ‘I made millions of dollars online and so can you’ route - almost all of these systems are built on bringing more people in below you in the pyramid, and they just aren’t actually out there to generate any kind of sustainable income, except for those who are in right at the very start. Quality content blogs take time to build up, and this is the big question. Do you have the time to spare? Can you sit back and wait for your websites to grow? Well the good news here is that you will never have to sit around twiddling your thumbs - on the internet, everything can move like lightning, so it’s totally unlike opening a retail store and waiting for the punters to come in off the street. The simple question is - can you build up your website(s) quickly enough? Well, as long as you are starting off by building your website as a secondary income generator, the answer should always be yes. Expecting to become a millionaire overnight is almost certainly going to land you in disappointment.

So even if the rate of growth slows down as you get bigger, it still pays to go for explosive growth.

Happy blogging!

October 3, 2009

Last month I made a paltry £10 through blogging. I just want to double this each month!

Forget about all these wild claims about making thousands online from signing up to someone else’s automated scripts programme!

I don’t want to earn a fortune, I just want to double this amount every month for a year! Hang on a minute, after a few months, this starts to look quite juicy:

September £10
October £20
November £40
December £80
January £160
February £320
March £640
April £1,280
May £2,560
June £5,120
July £10,240
August £20,480

Oh, the powers of compound growth! Of course, doubling for the next few months should be child’s play, but who knows what will happen after that.

To clarify - I am looking at building up Adsense and perhaps other affiliate revenue from blogging alone, and not from Flightmapping.com, which is a dedicated travel website, albeit one built using very last millenium web 1.0 Architecture! Flightblogging.com is a standalone blog related to, but getting very little traffic from, Flightmapping.com, and my own personal blog is now building up slowly too. I also expect to re-instate a couple of other long standing blog projects, whereas the World Tube Map concept may evolve into an online discussion with some revenue opportunity, but the main aim of this is to actually sell physical printed maps, which don’t count as online revenue.

You might ask why current earnings are so low. The reasons are simple - I am a relative latecomer to the social networking and blogging scene, having put so much effort into building Flightmapping.com as a content portal, and focusing purely on SEO around the quantity of text, rather than playing the link building and social networking game. I am declaring my hand as a newbie in this field - and I want to learn - FAST!

Hopefully progress will develop with some good advice from friends old and new.

As always, keep your seat backs firmly upright, Pay Attention Meticulously, and enjoy the journey!

October 2, 2009

Another week, another blog post

Filed under: Blogging, Social Networking — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:32 pm

Hmm, looking back to last Friday’s post, I know I should be posting 3 times each week. But better to post just the once than not at all. Still nothing revolutionary to say this evening, but I hope a few quick notes about what I’ve been up to can show that things are moving along slowly:

  • Monday - I went to a debate about Heathrow’s third runway and the future of air travel marketing, hosted by CIMTIG. Lot’s to write up about this I promise, but not sure when I will get round to it. I’ll have to say that some of my reservations about Heathrow’s 3rd runway have been mitigated, but I’m not yet fully swayed.
  • Tuesday & Wednesday - I’ve made further progress on the first draft of the “World Tube Map” - talking about it to a couple of people on Monday night also got an excellent response. I have something ready to print off, and I’ll probably do an upload early next week.
  • Thursday - not really up to much, apart from watching Question Time in the evening - two excellent contributions from the non-politicians David Starkey and Dambisa Moyo.
  • Today - pretty quiet too, but I am doing a bit of a twitter catch up. I have a lot to learn before I get the social networking balance right, but this should all come together by the time I have the World Tube Map ready to publish, and Flightmapping’s long awaited new site launch is finally underway.

So can I offer one decent tip for the week? Well, one thing about getting more active on twitter is that there are hundreds of people out there to learn from who will be much better than you. That’s not to say that newbies can’t carve their niche - of course, there is plenty of space for everyone, but to quote Emmerson, ‘Everyone is superior to me in that I can learn from them’. Tonight, I’ve read a couple of posts by Bob Wheeler, and his comments on why blogs are the most important tool in social media are pertinent. To quote his own blog:

In fact, if you listen you’ll hear just about every social media guru say, “If you don’t have a blog you don’t exist online”. 

Of course, there’s no point in having a blog if it isn’t kept updated. So I’ve set the reminders to have something worthwhile posted up before this time next week!

Have a good weekend.

September 26, 2009

Hmm, apparently I should be posting 3 times a week

Filed under: Blogging — Tags: , — admin @ 12:38 am

I’m just in the process of doing a massive skills update for this new fangled ’social media’ arena, which has apparently grown threefold in the past year. A very good guide I’m reading from Bourn Creative is telling me to post 3 times each week. So how to get started? Well, sometimes I guess it is just best to put fingers to keyboard and worry about the rest later.

So sorry if this post is hardly going to be the best ever written. It is solely to get the fingers back on the keyboard - and to make sure I close the week out with posting something. I promise to get back next week with something more useful - heck, this week has been interesting in terms of discussions I’ve been attending - from ‘Global Warming and the tourism industry’ at the Royal Geographical Society on Tuesday to Chris Gibb, Managing Director of Virgin Trains speaking in Rugby on Wednesday to watching last night’s return of Questiontime.

Anyway, enough for now, hopefully back with a lot more next week, assuming my ‘jA380′ pilot plan keeps working at the same rate it has this week ;).

March 26, 2009

A few bookmarks about Social Networking and Affiliate Marketing

I’m going to expand on this list over the next few weeks, and I know I have a fair bit of reading to do to play catch up.

A few useful blog posts with suggestions for expanding websites through Social Networking:

March 19, 2009

Can you map tomorrow’s internet — Introducing Thinkansen and Linkansen

Right now, the world economy might be going through turbulent times, but what is the Internet landscape going to look like when all of this dies down? The only thing that is certain is that there will be uncertainty — the only thing that will remain constant shall be the pace of change — business will proceed at the speed of thought (as per Bill Gates) — how many more clichés do you want?

I’m looking at the Internet, and constantly asking three questions — 1) if the methodology that made Flightmapping.com successful two years ago is no longer relevant, how do we change to adapt? 2) how can I use the Internet to discover new opportunities, especially in the field of architecture, where my real passion lies, and 3) how will the concept of social networking evolve, and will that genuinely create new opportunities to find like-minded contacts, or will it just be a way of keeping in shallow contact with people who I don’t really have much in common with anyway?

Ultimately, all of these questions are irrelevant if they aren’t considered in the context of the real world that is out there beyond cyberspace. I have seen a number of Internet commentators try to draw up maps of the so-called Web 2.0 environment, based on Tube maps of one city or another, but cyberspace extends well beyond the boundaries of any city walls. Again, there is the oft quoted cliché of the global village, but what does this really mean, when most of us don’t even know our actual neighbours?

Last night, I was looking at a blog post about how to get 2000 followers on twitter, but I was repeatedly asking myself what the point of that would be? On the other hand, there are still some similarities between the thinking behind Flightmapping and the basic concept of twitter. Twitter is all about condensing messages into 140 characters or less, and they perhaps most famously gave an acceptance speech at an Internet awards dinner in twitter format by saying ‘we’d like to say thank you in 140 characters or less, and we have just done so’. Mapping flights is all about looking at two cities, and the links between them. So in Flightmapping language, LHR-JFK-BA (eight characters and two spaces) would represent a flight from London Heathrow to New York JFK with British Airways. Twitter might condense a whole speech into 140 characters, but just three letters of an IATA code can represent an entire city.

Unfortunately, in the real world, we are actually moving backwards in many ways — following the demise of Concorde, the quickest flight time between London and New York has doubled, whereas many cities around the world are becoming increasingly difficult to get around due to road congestion. There is also the prospect that people will actually physically move less as they seek to shrink their carbon footprint.

Meanwhile, London commuters stuff themselves into crowded trains, but instead of being able to enjoy any kind of social atmosphere (thanks for the alcohol ban Boris), people are more likely to blather on twitter to users who might be thousands of miles away, rather than speak to the person sitting next to them.

This brings me on to the two words I put in the headline to try and describe where I think the Internet is heading. They are both taken from the Japanese word Shinkansen, which means bullet train:

Thinkansen

This is simply the idea that in today’s world of constant media overload, the mind can be distracted into thinking about anything at any time, and that there are no physical barriers to the speed at which the thought process might jump from one activity to another. This creates huge opportunities for digital marketers to draw attention to the products they are trying to push, but how does the individual person make him or herself heard above all the noise? In terms of travel, and urban planning, how can a city ever keep up with the constant fluctuations in interest which are taking place on the Internet?

Linkansen

This is the Internet response to the concept of 6 degrees of separation, and the combined effects of millions of people interacting with websites due to ‘Thinkansen’. Random Internet surfing, especially on social networking websites, can lead the user all over the place within the space of a few short seconds. Does that mean that it is best for websites which have built themselves up over a period of time to continue to invest in traditional content, or is it better to look for that holy grail of viral marketing? Can you ever formulate a business plan based on viral marketing?

What does this mean?

Where does that take us over the next few years? Who knows, but right now I feel that there are a lot more questions out there than answers. We might keep on hearing on the news about the impact of the credit crunch, but I still think that many websites in the affiliate industry will owe their success or failure far more to Google, and their ability or otherwise to benefit from social networking, than they will to surviving the credit crunch and other economic challenges the country may be facing.

So jump on, and get ready for the ride of your life. There will be many more ups and downs, and you may well have to change train many times before you find yourself moving towards the right destination. But one thing is for certain - nothing will ever stand still.

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