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Archives for 2010

Upcoming “Getting a 6-Pack” Experiment

March 17, 2010 by Neville

Does this blog need more pictures of my half-naked body on it?

YES. Definitely.

Before you stop reading in disgust, I’d like to ask your opinion on an upcoming experiment for the month of April 2010 where I’m attempting to get a REALLY ripped 6-pack stomach.

QUICK EXPLANATION:
Even though I was satisfied the way my body looked in that “How I Lost Weight” Experiment, I still didn’t have a PROPER 6-pack set of abs.

There was still a decent sized layer of fat between my abdominal muscles and the real world.

From everything I’ve learned, this experiment will be primarily about controlling what I eat very carefully.  Before, I didn’t have the self-control to do this, but over the last year I’ve become pretty good about controlling what I eat….so the time has come.


THE EXPERIMENT:

I want to see how hard it is to get a true 6-pack, and if it can be done within about a month (for someone like me who’s already in decent shape and physically active).

…so over the course of the experiment I will be training and eating properly for it….and documenting the steps of course.

Will this 6-Pack be sustainable? I doubt it.
So why try? One of my friends called me out on this and said, “You just want to get a picture of yourself with a 6-pack so you can show off later.”

He was absolutely right.  In case I have the urge to brag to my future kids about “how cool dad was back in the day”…at least I’ll be able to pull up the photo and say, “Check THIS out” as they roll their eyes and accuse me of Photoshopping the picture.


THE CURRENT SITUATION:
Unflexed, my abs look like:

When flexed, my ab region currently looks something like:

It’s not bad….but it’s not lean enough for a true 6-pack either.  If I pinch the fat on my stomach, you can tell there’s a definite barrier between those sweet abs and the adoring world:

By the way…I took that fat-pinch picture while writing this in the library, and one of the librarians saw me lift up my shirt, pinch myself and take several pictures!  She just whispered a comment to the librarian next to her…Hahah, I wonder what they’re thinking!

Anyways, I’m curious if anyone out there has actually done this successfully…and maybe share some of that advice?  I’m not a fitness guru by any means, just some guy who wants to shove it in his future-kids face that dad had a 6-pack!

Point Down

March 13, 2010 by Neville

A friend told me that an interesting (yet effective) marketing technique on
webpages is to make the text slowly start pointing downwards to
the place where you want the visitors to click. It kind of makes sense to
make the text itself form an “arrow” down to the button, plus it all seems to
lead down a path, and the click (or whatever action) is the final stage.  I
suppose this works well because of the naturally down pointing text.  It’s
probably some sort of human reaction to follow the path that’s marked out,
like a crowd of people walking through one door when the other doors are
all open.  They simply follow the crowd.  This seems like one of
those techniques that makes you say, “Why am I still
reading this” …but you keep reading all the way to
the bottom.  By the end you’re so invested in
reading that you’ll naturally be much more
inclined to click or fill out some form or
whatever the author wants you to
do.  I’m not exactly sure how
effective this is from hard
numbers…..but I bet it
works decently well.

Have Sales Gone Down In the Poor Economy?

March 11, 2010 by Neville

Here’s a question I’ve been getting more and more geared towards my business House Of Rave:

Have your sales gone down in the poor economy?

It’s actually a fantastic question and relatively interesting to hear different answers from different business owners.

So, have your sales gone down in the poor economy?

MY ANSWER:
YES…..but not in the traditional sense. Let me explain:

Most people expect that sales simply stopped coming in after the economic downturn, this hasn’t been true even though House Of Rave sells things people buy only on disposable income.  In fact, if you never told me there was a “recession” going on, I probably wouldn’t have noticed too much….people still order all the time (although I’ve seen a very significant drop in big orders from large corporations).

The MAIN problem I’ve had which takes a DIRECT shot at lowering my sales is all the cool products are out of stock.  Almost all of my previous best sellers are no longer being manufactured.

HouseOfRave sells “hard to find” and “unique” products….which often means “they don’t sell it in big stores”.  This has been great so far, but a problem I’m seeing now is manufacturers are on tight budgets and don’t have the capital required to mass produce slower selling items.  I may be able to sell 10 per day of an item, but a manufacturer might need to sell 10,000 of them per day to keep cash flow moving.

….so unless an item can move HUGE quantities quick, the product might be discontinued.

This has been the predominate way that my business has been affected.  The cool part is, with more marketing and more effort I’ve been able to maintain and grow both the profit and sales of the business, but it’s required more effort than in the past (keep in mind I used to put NO effort into it at all).  Before, I would just slap products on the site and they sold….it doesn’t seem to be quite as easy anymore.

Many smaller manufacturers and product patent holders are going out of business now.  Think about it, to manufacture just ONE simple product you must spend hundreds of thousands of dollars for materials and labor, store them, then find people to buy them.  Before you make even one CENT from the product, you could blow through a half-million dollars on credit.  If the product is a flop (note the importance of beforehand PRODUCT RESEARCH) you’re screwed…..and I’m just using the example of small-scale manufacturing of novelty products.

While my business doesn’t have the extreme overhead of these manufacturers, I feel their pain indirectly when a cool product of theirs goes out of stock.

March 2010 Goals

March 7, 2010 by Neville

Do you have your March 2010 goals lines up?  I do:

Remember, I keep them on my iPhone:

Weird Alexa Rankings

March 5, 2010 by Neville

Do you ever use Alexa to quickly judge a website’s traffic?  I do…all the time.

On Google Chrome tab I use an SEO extension that quickly grabs all sorts of info on a website, including Alexa traffic rankings:

In case you don’t know:
The lower the number, the higher your traffic (kind of like golf).

Google is the #1 most visited site in the world, so its Alexa rank is 1.  Got it?  Good…

NevBlog is currently ranked: 170,476 (at one point I was #75,000)!
…and my business HouseOfRave is ranked: 492,856

The funny thing is, House Of Rave gets a lot more visits per day than NevBlog (it used to be the reverse a few years ago).

So here is a monthly Google Analytics snapshot of NevBlog traffic (keep in mind the number is usually higher as I don’t have Google Analytics installed on all my visitor pages):

Here is a monthly Google Analytics snapshot of House Of Rave:

You’ll notice that House of Rave gets something like TWICE the traffic NevBlog gets every day, yet NevBlog’s Alexa rank is nearly THREE times lower!  Whhaaa!?

Theoretically the Alexa rankings should be switched, but they’re not. It’s not hard to figure out why:

NevBlog draws a lot more people who might be web designers or tech people….this means they’ll be more likely to have the Alexa Toolbar installed (or some variation of it), which is how Alexa gets their rankings.  I’m also presuming the larger the site, the better stat accuracy you’ll get.  Compete.com seems to have a more accurate view:

They got the traffic wrong (although they can’t ever TRULY know without you telling them), but they got the comparison estimates pretty close.

For January 2010, Compete.com says:

  • NevBlog got 10,386 visits
  • House Of Rave got 15,202 visits

In reality, according to Google Analytics:

  • NevBlog got 14,259 visits
  • HouseOfRave 34,970 visits

    It seems the webmaster tool bar effect also applies to Compete.com…but their results seem far more accurate.

    I’m curious, do your website and Alexa/Compete rankings add up??

    I’ve moved…

    March 2, 2010 by Neville

    …from Blogger to WordPress. It’s hard to believe I stuck with Blogger so long!  I loved Blogger, but they kicked all FTP users off.  I’m happy for that because it finally forced me to make the move and it’s great for Bloggers’ business (why use so many resources to support such a small sub-section of their clientele)?

    It actually feels kind of like a real life move.

    THE GOOD:

    • Updating WordPress is WAY easier.  I used the self-hosted FTP version of Blogger, which means anytime I want to update anything on the main template, my ENTIRE site is erased from my server then re-uploaded via FTP…EVERY SINGLE TIME.
    • Customization and Plugins: There’s a plugin for pretty much anything on WordPress.
    • Migration was easy with the newly improved Blogger to WordPress tool (included with WordPress).  There was also great 301 re-direct method I used (Shout out to Adam for notifying me of this helpful BlogBloke post).  It’s not perfect, but it worked about 75% of the time to re-direct old posts to new posts (like this).

    THE BAD:

    • Adsense revenue went down from roughly $12/day to $3/day (probably because I currently have one ad instead of three).
    • I can spot a WordPress blog from a mile away.  They all have a relatively generic feel to them, even the cool looking and highly personalized themes.  The Blogger template felt old, clunky and ugly…but it was unbelievably easy to navigate the site I felt.  I’ll try to add some of the user friendliness back in.
    • Traffic dropped just slightly since people across the internet were getting to my site via broken links….but this is just a personal blog so who cares.  You can always access the old NevBlog by taking any URL and adding /old right after the nevblog.com.

    I purposely got a template that maintains a relatively narrow reading area because I like reading like that.  The old Blogger template let me have images:

    The new WordPress template can handle images only slightly bigger:

    Anyways, enough blog talk.  If you see any weird issues, please notify via comments.  I’ll be continuously updating the template for the next week, but feedback is greatly appreciated!

    -Neville


    —UPDATE—

    Small interesting side note, while trying to quickly finish up this post, the library closed and I got locked in.   Me and a homeless guy had to break out of the library!

    It Works!

    March 1, 2010 by Neville

    You were brought here from the post Text Pointing Down.

    HOLY FREAKIN CRAP What Happened??

    February 27, 2010 by Neville

    Don’t worry, I’m just migrating from Blogger to WordPress, so this weekend you most likely will see a bunch of wonky formatting, dead links and other weird things going down on NevBlog.

    Cheers :-)
    -Nev

    My Affiliate Marketing Experiment – Part 7

    February 25, 2010 by Neville

    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5
    Part 6
    Part 7:

    ….so eventually I pulled the plug on this little experiment (it ran for roughly 5 weeks) even though I was still making some money.

    One of the negative parts about affiliate marketing I mentioned was the price of Pay-Per-Click varies wildly, especially when people are bidding up keywords.  This can be the difference between a profit and loss if you don’t watch out. This happened several times and the cost I had to pay shot up too much to be as profitable.

    Basically I got these campaigns running for the experiment, but when I stopped paying attention, most of the good keywords stopped running because they exceeded my set budget.  Eventually most traffic died down, a sale was made here and there, but nothing big.

    Ultimately I ended up bringing in $727 from the BluCigs campaign and $360 from the GreenSmoke campaign (about 90% of that money was from that first 5 weeks) and paid a total of $166 for Google Adsense.

    I could have kept on going, but the amount of effort for a short-term profit wasn’t worth it, especially when I already have profitable businesses of my own that offer a more long term payoff.  I can already see some of you trying to signup and start your own experiments with these ;-)

    …however…hopefully this experiment demonstrated the POTENTIAL this sort of business model has in a more legitimate form.  I wish I knew about it a long time ago when I was an active “financial” blogger.

    I learned a lot and made a net profit!
    -Neville Medhora

    My Affiliate Marketing Experiment – Part 6

    February 23, 2010 by Neville

    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5
    Part 6:


    At this point in my little experiment I’ve made some money and learned a few pro’s and con’s about this affiliate marketing industry (at least the low-end type):

    Pro’s of simple affiliate marketing:

    • It’s possible to start making money very quickly with relatively little work.
    • It’s possible to scale up successful campaigns to large levels.
    • It’s possible to “sell” a product without knowing anything about it.

    It’s not hard to see why so many get-rich-quick books teach this very method of making money…because it SEEMS like it could work for anyone.  Some people might even have some nominal success trying something like this, but very quickly the con’s start showing their head:

    Con’s of simple affiliate marketing:

    • It’s possible to LOSE those quickly-gained profits very quickly also.
    • Most successful campaigns you create will start to garner much attention from other affiliate marketers who quickly start copying you.
    • You have to be hush about your work….you can’t openly talk about what you’re promoting or your methods.  This is why many people I talked to about this were so secretive.

    By and far the largest con I see with doing this simple type of affiliate marketing is there is no long term value being provided. With my business HouseOfRave for example, everything I do today pays off for months at a time, even years.

    With these small affiliate promotions, there is very little value ultimately being imparted to the customer.  Ultimately a beginner trying to simply “make money online” with these almost-scam-like promotions will probably end up disappointed.

    But screw that, I was now up to $371 in profit with JUST BluCigs and I’d barely spent $70 to get there!

    ….and this experiment called for finding out how to make a landing and optimize it with Google Website Optimizer, so that was the next step.

    Basically what I’m trying to do in this step is have several versions of the same page and measure the effectiveness of each.  After X-amount of people cycle through each version, a clear winner is usually identified.  This is called an A/B Split Test…and if you do this enough, you can identify which pages convert the most people.

    For this I had to do several things:

    • Make a separate landing page to send traffic (I chose ecigaretterecs.com).
    • Make three different versions of the page.
    • Enter all this stuff into Google Website Optimizer.
    • Drive traffic to the site, wait for results.

    I didn’t say this experiment was going to be pretty, I just wanted to learn the underlying lessons in it, so here goes:

    Step 1.) Buy the domain name.

    I chose ecigaretterecs.com because all sorts of other combinations were taken.  Ultimately it didn’t matter what the domain was.  Even I kept forgetting what name I had purchased.  I setup the site on my server and was up and running.

    Step 2.) Make three versions of the page.

    I wanted a basic page that looked sort of like a reviews site, a site where you go to get reviews of a particular genre of product.  I actually first purchased a WordPress plugin that makes a fully-functional reviews site, but I wanted this experiment to be extremely quick and dirty so I did it the ghetto home-made way.

    Since E-cigarettes are quite new, there are multiple brands people want to look through before choosing one.  I would provide this review information for them on this (ghetto and poorly made) page (ecigaretterecs.com).

    I decided I would make three very different versions: 1 stylish, 1 simple and plan, 1 supper-ghetto:

    (This was the “stylish” one…shut up, don’t make fun of my web design skilzz).

    (This was “plain and simple”).


    (This was the bare-bones and ugly one).

    …the point of this is to simply test out different versions and see if there was any statistical difference in how each of them converted into sales.  Sometimes the data is very surprising.  I find from many friends who do this on a large scale that ugly and simply is often better.

    NOTE: An A/B Split Test doesn’t need to have versions that are so dramatically different like this experiment, it can simply be a different picture or different headline text for each version.

    Step 3.) Enter into Google Website Optimizer

    I went through the Google Optimizer process and outfitted each version of the page with special snippets of code (keep in mind this is something almost ANYONE can do) and set all the links to go to the affiliate sites I earlier created with the custom headers.

    Now when someone lands on the webpage ecigaretterecs.com, it randomly selects which version of that page to show the visitor. So if you look at that page from your computer and your friend views it from a different computer, there is a good chance you will see a completely different page.

    Google Website Optimizer then collects information over time and tracks the conversion rates to see if there is a statistically “better” version.  When I ended up pulling the plug on this experiment there were 190 page visits, but no statistical variance shown (you usually need around 50 conversions per variant before conclusions can be drawn).

    I didn’t get the final results before I pulled the plug on this experiment, but I didn’t care.  I had learned how to A/B Split Test which was the important thing….now I can use it to make already-profitable pages more profitable.

    So far I’ve accomplished almost everything I set out to learn with this experiment, and I even made some money.

    I was still making money, so why did I finally end up pulling the plug on this experiment?

    Go to Part 7.

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