Web cash

Author: Willow Sidhe

You can make a living writing content for the web. There are numerous sites that will pay for your articles. Many sites pay upfront and others pay based upon performance or share ad revenue.



Sites that Pay Upfront for Articles



Upfront pay sites can be the most lucrative for the beginner. Pay will vary but is generally in the range of $3.00 per article to as much as $30.00 per article. It is not unrealistic to make from $10-$15 per article. My second content writing job provided me with $15 per article and I had very little experience writing for the web.



Some sites are easy to write for such as Associated Content. This is the perfect site for the beginner. There is no application or resume required. Sign-up on the site and begin writing. You choose your own topic and write in any style you like. The only requirement is that you familiarize yourself with SEO and keyword writing. There are numerous tutorials on the subject to help you and it's not hard to understand.



They pay upfront and the amount varies from $3-$20. As a beginner, don't expect to get $20 per article. You'll also be paid $1.50 per every 1000 pageviews your articles receive. This will really start to add up over time. The income potential is great for someone with no experience writing content for the web.



After you've published several articles on Associated Content, then you can start moving on to higher paying jobs. There are a myriad of other sites that pay upfront for articles.



Sites that Revenue Share



Sites that share revenue generated by your articles aren't always as lucrative as upfront pay sites. However, there is money to be made here. I generally use these sites to publish articles that I have not sold the rights to. One such site is ehow.com. They pay a portion of the ad revenue your articles generate. You can make a lot of money here or you can make very little. The trick is to write keyword-rich articles. Once you learn the power of keywords, you can make a living writing content for the web, even on revenue sharing sites.



Keep in mind that these get paid to write sites take time to generate money. Upfront pay sites provide faster income as you are paid a flat rate as soon as your articles are submitted or approved. The income from revenue sharing sites will slowly build-up over time.

About the Author:

Visit Willow's Blog, The Freelance Home Writer, for a comprehensive listing of researched get paid to write sites, upfront pay sites, freelance writing tips, article writing help and advice, writing resume help, and more.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Get Paid to Write Content for the Web

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By admin1neu on 04 June 2009
How do bloggers make money?

the blog search engine Technorati released its 2008 State of the Blogosphere report with the slightly menacing promise to "deliver even deeper insights into the blogging mind." Bloggers create 900,000 blog posts a day worldwide, and some of them are actually making money. Blogs with 100,000 or more unique visitors a month earn an average of $75,000 annually—though that figure is skewed by the small percentage of blogs that make more than $200,000 a year. The estimates from a 2007 Business Week article are older but juicier: The LOLcat empire rakes in $5,600 per month; Overheard in New York gets $8,100 per month; and Perez Hilton, gossip king, scoops up $111,000 per month.

With this kind of cash sloshing around, one wonders: What does it take to live the dream—to write what I know, and then watch the money flow?

From the perspective of someone who doesn't blog, blogging seems attractive. Bloggers such as Jason Kottke ($5,300/month) and the Fug girls ($6,240/month) pursue what naturally interests them without many constraints on length or style. While those two are genuine stars of the blogging world, there are plenty of smaller, personal blogs that bring in decent change with the Amazon Associates program (you receive a referral fee if someone buys a book, CD, etc. via a link from your blog) and search ads from Google. (The big G analyzes your site and places relevant ads; you get paid if people click on them.) Google-ad profiteering is an entire universe in and of itself—one blogger by the name of Shoemoney became famous (well, Digg-famous) when he posted a picture of himself with a check from Google for $132,994.97 for one month of clicks.

With this kind of cash sloshing around, one wonders: What does it take to live the dream—to write what I know, and then watch the money flow?

From the perspective of someone who doesn't blog, blogging seems attractive. Bloggers such as Jason Kottke ($5,300/month) and the Fug girls ($6,240/month) pursue what naturally interests them without many constraints on length or style. While those two are genuine stars of the blogging world, there are plenty of smaller, personal blogs that bring in decent change with the Amazon Associates program (you receive a referral fee if someone buys a book, CD, etc. via a link from your blog) and search ads from Google. (The big G analyzes your site and places relevant ads; you get paid if people click on them.) Google-ad profiteering is an entire universe in and of itself—one blogger by the name of Shoemoney became famous (well, Digg-famous) when he posted a picture of himself with a check from Google for $132,994.97 for one month of clicks.
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By admin1neu on 03 June 2009
Pay Per Click (PPC) Ads

Search engines like Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo! sell traffic on a cost per click basis. Ads are ranked based on the combination of cost per click * the expected CTR.

Benefits

* You gain instant market feedback from clean traffic sources, which helps you discover which keywords convert well for and are valuable to your business.
* You can use this traffic to test and tweak your site to improve consumer response rates and your effective value per visitor.

Drawbacks

* Many new advertisers either drastically underbid and get no exposure or overbid and lose a lot of money. If you are not careful you can lose a lot of money before you start making money.
* You are forced to keep paying for every click, and once the visitor leaves they may not return.
* Since auctions are based on efficient markets in some industries it can be hard to build a sustained competitive advantage. As you and competitors get more efficient much of your profits are sent to search engines.

Contextual Ads

These ads try to understand the context of a page and create ads that match that topic. Many of these ads sold by search companies like Google (through their AdSense program) while a number of other smaller players like Chitika also sell ads

Benefits

* These ads rarely get clicked on (relative to search ads) so they often are sold below a fair market value and offer a great opportunity for spreading branding messages on the cheap.
* Some networks not only target ads by keyword, but also let you buy ads targeted to premium publisher websites for far less than you would pay if you had to buy them direct from the publisher.

Drawbacks

* Since these rarely get clicked on it can take a while to get enough feedback to have it be meaningful.
* Some ad networks, like Google, automatically opt you into getting exposure on low value high traffic sites like MySpace. Many new advertisers fail to realize how much of their budget is wasted on these non-converting high traffic sites.

Affiliate Programs

Affiliate programs allow you to buy exposure for your business, and only pay affiliates for traffic that drives conversions.

Benefits

* Since you only pay affiliates when they convert these ads can drive a lot of free brand exposure.
* Since affiliates only get paid if a customer converts most affiliates tend to aggressively integrate affiliate offers into their sites, driving a lot of traffic to your site.

Drawbacks

* If you do not have a clear affiliate policy you may find your affiliates competing directly against you and driving up your costs.
* Some affiliates are sleazy and will damage your brand if they think it will help them make a dollar. Consumers and competitors may hold your brand responsible for the actions of your affiliates.

Affiliate Banner make money with your web site









Text Link Ads

Text Link Ads are typically static text links integrated into websites.

Benefits

* Most text links are sold on a flat monthly price, so you know your costs up front.
* In addition to driving direct targeted traffic, these links can offer SEO benefits, helping to boost your organic search engine rankings. This is especially useful if you are close to the top of the organic rankings but still need a bit more of a boost.

Drawbacks
Some publishers sell too many ads and/or lack editorial integrity (selling links to off topic sites) and end up getting their ability to pass PageRank stripped.
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By admin1neu on 02 June 2009

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