“You’ll Never Improve Your Alexa Rank…”

September 14th, 2008

I’ve not posted here for ages and in theory that should decrease this site’s Alexa ranking.  Well, it has!  Strangely enough, traffic figures haven’t dipped very much so it makes me wonder how much of that it actually bot visits.

Anyway, where have I been?  Since rediscovering photography earlier this year, I’ve basically been out and doing more with my life and my wife.  When you consider the alternative of slaving away in front of the computer all day it’s not a bad thing!  That doesn’t mean that I haven’t been earning anything from my online endeavours because they were always developed with automation in mind.  So whilst, I’m not earning as much, I am still earning passively.

Okay, so I am still spending a lot of time in front of the computer, but it’s more so to do with post processing photographs I’ve been taking and so doesn’t feel like work at all.  I must admit that I have been thinking about ways to combine photography with making money online and I have been using IM techniques to promote my digital photography blog.

So, how to make money passively with photography?  Obvious methods that spring to mind are to sell the end product i.e. the photographs or to go the advertising route and sell space on ‘niche’ photography sites I could set-up, but I’m looking for other ideas.

Any thoughts on making money passively with photography?

Alexa Hates Me

January 21st, 2008

It’s strange why people place value in the website rankings from a statistical tool that inherently collects skewed data.

Alexa, a part of the mighty Amazon (the book store, not the rain forest), is well-known throughout the Web for their ranking and traffic measurement tools, but just how useful are they?

To answer that question, I suppose we need to first determine exactly what service or product it is Alexa provides.  The title of the Alexa home page tells us that they’re the Web Information Company.  Well, I’m not quite sure whether or not they could have been any more generic than that, but then they do have lots of interesting graphs and distracting button ads to avoid.

Playing around on Alexa.com gives me an indication of how popular other websites are and how mine fare against them, but the measurements only include those people who have the Alexa toolbar installed on their active web browsers.  There was talk of other Alexa gadgets installed on websites helping to boost their figures, but I can’t say conclusively whether or not they actually do.

Okay, so you and everyone else can see how popular websites are with the users of the Alexa toolbar.  Since I don’t know a single person with it installed, I can’t really say whether there’s anything other than bragging rights on offer.

Alexa hates me.  The reason why I say this is because this blog has been stuck at over 250,000 for the past few months.

Why and what can I do to increase my Alexa figures? Should I even care?  I suppose one way in which I could lose out from a lower Alexa value is when it comes to advertising.  Advertisters might use Alexa to garner some visitor counts in order to help them decide whether a website is worth the fee.

I guess as a consolation, I could look towards this Alexa alternative as it shows this blog get an increasing amount of traffic on a month-by-month basis.