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5 Steps To Successfully Monetize Your Blog

By Frugaling 24 Comments

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5 Steps To Successfully Monetize Your Blog

For Love Or Money?

After making over $10,000 in 6 months of writing at Frugaling, a number of people inquired about how they might mimic the results. No single recipe will get you from start to money, but there are some things you can do to put yourself in a position to succeed.

Too many people are focused on pumping out a certain number of articles per day, week, or month. The goal makes sense: The more I publish, the more I’ll get my name out. But when you’re just starting out, there isn’t a network to share and enjoy your content. Eventually, most sites/blogs/independent writers lose momentum, and the strategy fails.

We’re all motivated by the idea that our work may someday be read, and it can be challenging to publish and parish – losing sight about what intrinsically interests you about a subject. Simultaneously, in the most productive push, people make the least amount of money. It’s a lose-lose – a recipe for disaster.

This article will walk you through a process of creating and cultivating a site worth visiting. From there, I’ll talk about how you can start making money. Between advertisers, private connections, and affiliate sales, you can begin raking in some serious dough.

Here are 5 steps you must take to monetize your blog successfully:

1. Create Content Worth Sharing, Network Like A Boss

A number of people have approached me and asked how they can make five figures in 6 months. The road is circuitous and doesn’t always end up with the success I had. There were a number of pleasant accidents that led me here, but it all started with a fundamental building block: Creating strong stories and content.

I didn’t set out to create a money making machine. Frankly, my writing style is more opinionated and personal than financial. I wanted to put the personal in personal finance. This was going to be my story. If I made a little money along the way, great! At the heart of my decision to write about student loan debt and other financial concerns was my own desire to write about what I was learning. I intrinsically wanted to be doing this – money wasn’t the sole motivator.

From very humble beginnings, I wrote what I considered to be deep, thoughtful pieces about struggle and areas of my life that I needed to improve. There were many cracks in my budget, ideas about finance, and how to make my small salary work. Through writing and getting feedback from others, I gained some confidence in my monthly budget, created some rock solid plans, and became more frugal. By writing, I was embodying what I wanted to become, and it became a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Beyond my content and spending time to better my writing style, I networked as much as I could. I found people of all personal financial stripes to trade links, comment on work, and email for help. There were times when I frustrated, pestered people or asked for too much. I realized that some people didn’t really like human-to-human interaction in this world of personal finance. But others loved it, and that’s where I devoted 80 percent of my time.

Every website I visited was an opportunity to network and connect. Those connections led to Twitter followers, Facebook likes, and much more. Between creating content worth sharing, reading others’ sites, commenting on great articles, and establishing relationships with those in the field, I was primed for advertisers.

2. Invest In Your Theme, Design

When I first turned the server space on and started Frugaling on May 4th, 2013, this site looked like a patchwork quilt. It was cute and homey, but unprofessional and unattractive in certain parts. I felt limited in time and money to change the website’s look and feel. Unfortunately, by not evolving the website over time, I was limiting my potential for growth and new readers.

Dezzain Mesocolumn Free WordPress Theme
Dezzain’s Mesocolumn Theme – This is what I use!

A theme and solid, consistent design cannot guarantee you success. Similarly, great content that isn’t accessible and easy to read will just be swept under the rug. To be in the right place for success, you need the content and theme to match. I’ve been to many personal blogs over the years, and when I see something that’s poorly contrasted, uses strange fonts, and/or doesn’t offer me an easy way to navigate, I lose interest.

If your theme doesn’t seem professional, you may be losing traffic; at least, from people like me. Colors should be themed throughout your site. Text should be black on a lighter color – preferably white. Use smoother fonts for easier, more friendly reading. These things should be common sense, but mishaps occur all the time. Don’t make it challenging for me to read your site!

Over the last few months, I’ve received a few different emails about my own themes. Generally, I point them in two directions: buy a theme or modify a free theme. Buying one is simple and opens the world to terrific customer service. There are traditionally money back guarantees that help reassure you as well. Personally, I’m frugal and cheap. The theme you see today is absolutely free. You can check it out here.

3. Apply For And Install Google AdSense

Now you can actually think about making money. That day has come. You’ve created a wonderful entrance to your site and you’re publishing terrific articles. The flow of traffic to your website has steadily increased. Maybe you even have a little following.

For many, their first advertisement dollars start rolling in from Google’s AdSense platform. Overall, AdSense has been the second largest money maker for me. It’s one of the largest ad networks in the world, and provides advertisers access to nearly every popular site, and publishers with a steady stream of financial support. Somewhere in between, Google takes a hearty chunk out of the profits and provides a seamless process.

The Google network is relatively easy to apply to and setup. Once you’ve been approved, you can begin plastering your site with advertisements. Meanwhile, your visitors may be shocked by a sudden onslaught of ads. This can be a seriously unwelcome and unfriendly wakeup call to many. If you can, be cautious and deliberate when choosing the placement and number of ads.

Initially, I placed ads in the content of single posts, but I quickly learned how annoying that is as a reader to withstand that advertising onslaught. To be popular with more critical social networks such as Reddit, you cannot place ads inside an individual article. If you do that, you’re setting yourself up for failure – and it’s clear you’re only in this for money, and not reader enjoyment. All I’d suggest is be contentious about ad locations and frequency. Respect your readers and they will honor the service you provide them.

4. Available, Accessible, And In Demand

As your Alexa rankings rise and traffic statistics show a growing, thriving audience, you should begin thinking about private advertising opportunities. Month-to-month Frugaling regularly has around 14-15,000 page views. At that rate, I’m about a fifth of some of the large personal finance sites’ traffic. While there’s room to grow, advertisers may be interested in a niche audience.

Private advertisers tend to pay per month, which necessitates that they understand your current traffic. All of this information needs to be packaged up and easily accessible to possible companies. Just like making your site easy to read, offer advertising opportunities that are easy for companies to understand. Create an advertising page with some basic information.

Offer some ability for companies to get ahold of you. I recommend a contact form because it shows the IP address of the person. If you’re approached by a scammer or spammer, showing an email address may aid them in stealing something from you. I’d highly recommend the default contact forms within WordPress’ Jetpack plugin.

Private advertisements are far and few between, but landing something like this puts you a cut above the rest. Following these aforementioned steps will put you in good territory to get one.

5. Share Top-Notch Affiliate Offers

Making over $10,000 was a shock, and the big money was with affiliate links and articles. One day, I logged into my bank account to find about $2,000 deposited from a leading affiliate company. Suddenly, I felt this infusion of energy and confusion over why I had made so much.

I looked at my Google Analytics account to find a huge amount of traffic frequenting one of my affiliate articles. Naturally and organically, people were finding and making their way to my site. I didn’t have to do anything and suddenly I was making up to $3,000 in some months.

Affiliate companies and links can be great fun to work with, but I highly recommend you establish a strong audience before applying in a network. First of all, it’ll make you less likely to be outright rejected from the entire network. Secondarily, you’ll be far more likely to be accepted by individual companies. The best affiliate offers require some serious website traffic. You’ll just be declined time and time again if you go into a network without a sufficient baseline.

Affiliate offers are like the top of the food pyramid: use sparingly. In my experience, they come in handy when recommending products I already use. For instance, I use BigScoots web hosting, which can be purchased here. If you signup for an affiliate company and just share all the links you can, you’ll likely lose readers and credibility. I find it to be one of the more annoying parts about visiting certain personal finance sites. They clearly aren’t writing about a product because they truly love it, but you’ll find tens of articles that gush about for-profit products. Both as a consumer and publisher, you should be wary of selling out in this manner – it may tarnish your reputation to visitors.

Now What?

Google has an unofficial company motto that says, “Don’t be evil.” It just means, do what’s in the best interest of most and be kind while doing it. Sometimes Google fails to live up to that standard, but the philosophy is still exceptionally important.

You may want to monetizing your blog and make a few bucks doing something you love, but don’t lose sight of why you started writing. If it was simply to make boatloads of cash, you’re likely not going to make it very far in this business or with your motivation to continue. Blogging and writing regularly must be a labor of love – don’t become evil in the need to monetize your blog.

Keep your affiliate articles, ads, and private deals at a minimum. The ideal is a safe, comfortable place for visitors to stay for a while and browse around. There’s no need to inundate them with popups, popunders, multiple ads in content, and affiliate links everywhere you look. Over time, hopefully, readers will see what you have to offer is worth it and give you a referral. But you have to start with the fundamentals: great content and design. Once you’ve built a solid foundation, get ready for some profits.

Good luck!

Filed Under: Make Money

Buy Nothing Day: Boycott Black Friday

By Frugaling 13 Comments

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So Many Offers, So Little Time

Black Friday. It’s nearly two weeks away. The special ad sections will likely be arriving at your doorstep, and people are already cataloging all the rumored offers. What will you buy? What will you “save” on? Look at those incredible deals in the special ads! I haven’t seen [Insert your item here] at these kind of prices anywhere! Wow, glorious corporate gods, you’ve smiled upon us today.

The infatuation and energy is enough to forget what we’re actually celebrating next week. Hopefully you can read through my dripping sarcasm to realize that Black Friday is not a favorite of mine. In fact, I think it’s a travesty and an assault on families all over America. My family included, we compromised plans for Thanksgiving in order for a Fortune 500 company to reap the rewards of increasing consumer demands and take my relative away.

Buy Nothing Day Black Friday
Photo: ABCNews

Goodbye Holiday, Hello Deals

Following a slew of similar announcements from stores including Target, Best Buy and Macy’s, Walmart said Tuesday that it will hold two major sales events at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Thursday, two hours earlier than last year.
–USAToday

This year, many retailers will be encroaching even further on family and friend time by opening at 6 PM on Thanksgiving. The early start is forcing people to rethink the concept of “Black Friday.” Rather than recognizing what we are thankful for, helping others, and bringing people together, this holiday has been entirely co-opted by major businesses for gargantuan profits.

Marketing campaigns of epic proportions convince us that now is the time to save – the only time. The fact is Black Friday deals are temporary, and most if not all items will eventually hit these prices. These “steals” and “deals” are made up to capitalize on psychological vulnerability.

The Answer: Buy Nothing Day

There’s an alternative to mall trampling stories, waiting out in the cold, and losing our Thanksgiving dinners. It’s time to start talking about Buy Nothing Day. Started by the protestors at Adbusters (credited with starting Occupy Wall Street), the holiday from Black Friday tells us one thing: resist the urge and enjoy your friends, family, and what you already have.

This horrible holiday of consumerism only comes once a year. Try something different, and save your wallet the punishment of swiping away your savings accounts for “once-in-a-lifetime deals.” Life is about more than a low price and your time with those you care about is truly priceless. There are only 30,000 days to make this special, and it doesn’t start with a weekly ad.

For more information about Buy Nothing Day: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buy_Nothing_Day

Filed Under: Make Money

7 Ways To Save On Prescription Medications

By Frugaling 4 Comments

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On Prescription Medications

This is a contribution from Syed of The Broke Professional! He runs an up and coming personal finance site for working professionals. On top of that, he’s a practicing doctor. Thanks for the article, Syed!

America is sick. It is reported that around 70% of Americans are on at least one prescription drug and around half of the country is at least on two. That’s a lot of pills for a lot of people.

As a doctor, I can definitely confirm this. I see multiple patients every day who are on a cocktail of medications. This is a tremendous problem – financially and physically. Medications can get expensive, especially if you have to take a lot of them.

So today, I’ve compiled a few ways that I think can really change the game when it comes to paying for prescription medications:

1. Ask For Generic Medications

This should be the first thing you ask your doctor. Doctors may give you a brand name medication because of incentives from a company or just because they are used to writing it. It never hurts to ask for a generic, and there can be huge cost savings. Now, there are times when brand name medication may work better than a generic, but it definitely pays to ask. Usually, it is actually cheaper to pay for a generic out of pocket than a brand name that is covered. Always ask your doctor if there is an appropriate generic medication you can take for your condition.

2. Shop Around

Many people are unfortunately unaware that you will pay different prices at varying pharmacies for the same medication. Call ahead and around to your local pharmacies to see if there might be savings. Some pharmacies even have low prices for commonly prescribed medications. Generally, warehouse stores such as Costco and Sam’s Club have much better prices than other pharmacies. It is definitely worth it to call or visit different pharmacies in your area to get the best price.

I prescribe medications on a regular basis, and when patients come back for their follow up exams I always ask how much they paid. I’ve gotten wildly different answers for the same medication, even with insurance coverage! It really is worth your time to call around to your surrounding pharmacies and get the exact price.

3. Consult The Drug Formulary

To add more confusion to the health maze, not all insurances cover medications the same way. Because of this, it pays to check the formulary, which is the list of medications that your insurance will cover. Insurance might cover medication A for a disease, but not medication B. You should check with your doctor to see if they can preferably prescribe a drug which is already on the formulary. Being prescribed a non-formulary drug and getting sticker shock at the pharmacy is no fun.

4. Ask For Samples

Ralph The Simpsons Drugs Medications Pills

Doctors get bombarded by drug reps who want them to prescribe their companies’ medication. Sometimes they give doctors samples of prescription medications. If the doctor tells you a brand name medication is necessary, be sure to ask for any samples they may have. That will at least give you a few days supply so you can shop around at different pharmacies.

5. Ask For Coupons

Similar to the last point, drug reps sometimes leave coupons for certain medications. Some websites (such as needymeds.org) also have coupons for various medications. Many drug companies have reduced cost programs for certain drugs. It never hurts to ask if something like this exists.

6. Get A Second Opinion

There can sometimes be more than one way to treat a condition. Certain levels of high blood pressure, for example, can be treated with a medication, or simply with diet and exercise. When you get a potentially serious diagnosis and the doctor insists on one way of doing things, it might be worth your wallet to get a second opinion.

You can ask family and friends for any trusted doctors in the area and see if there may be an alternative. In the aforementioned example, controlling blood pressure with diet and exercise may be all that is needed, which can lead to better health overall and definitely some money saved. Some doctors may be quick to pull the trigger on prescribing medications, so that could be the right time to seek another opinion.

7. Use An FSA Account

Many workplaces offer flex spending accounts to their employees. What these accounts do is set aside a portion of your pay for the year, decided by you, and give you a debit card with that amount that can be used on certain medical related expenses. It can be a game to see what exactly is eligible, but FSA money is definitely eligible to be spent on medication.

The main advantage of an FSA is that the money you have set aside is not calculated as part of your income. So instead of using money that has already been taxed, you can use pre-tax money to pay for medication. Even if you do not go to the doctor much, FSA money can be used for other things like dental work or glasses and contact lenses.

As the famous saying goes, prevention is always better than cure. Practicing healthy habits such as staying active every day and eating right will lessen the chance of needing certain medications. Most people need the occasional antibiotic, but conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes are preventable for the most part. These chronic diseases can be debilitating to your well-being and your wallet. Health can be an asset, just like any bank account you may have. If you don’t take care of it, you will definitely be paying for it down the road. Hopefully some of these tips will help ease the financial burden!

Filed Under: Make Money

Holiday CHEER: Giving Feels Good!

By Frugaling Leave a Comment

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The holidays are almost here and it's a great time to think about giving to others. Maybe you're in debt like me, and think that giving is pretty difficult when every bit counts.

The holidays are almost here and it’s a great time to think about giving to others. Maybe you’re in debt like me, and think that giving is pretty difficult when every bit counts. Can’t blame you! But today I want to share an opportunity that really means a lot to me: the education of students in public school.

My good friend from college has been working in Harlem as a teacher to an underserved population. These students are in need of basic necessities and safety that we may rarely think about. Here’s a little information from Kelsey:

We are located on the fourth floor of an educational complex that has three other schools in it. We have three hallways and 450 students. Quite often we have to run around at the beginning of class to make sure there are enough chairs and desks for everyone. Some desks are falling apart and there’s always a need for more writing utensils, paper and office supplies. Most students are on discounted or free lunch but their parents allocate money to make sure they own the school uniform t-shirt and wear it while in class. We don’t have a computer lab and our traveling ones rarely possess a computer that has all its keys. It is absolutely a school in transition under a new principal with high expectations and the staff and students reflect it.

This is the next generation, and they need some help. If you have anything you can give – even just a dollar – head on over here: Supporting ELL and Closing the Achievement Gap In Harlem. Use the code: CHEER to have your donation matched, too!

Thanks for reading,

Sam

Filed Under: Make Money

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