Showing posts with label Site Page. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Site Page. Show all posts

February 13, 2014

American Freelance Article Writer For Hire

Brian Chezfat here and I'm looking for work. :)

For my normal day-to-day readers this may come as a surprise but I an opening a few new doors in my career online. I'm dipping my toes into freelance ghostwriting.

Be it content marketing, SEO articles, or basic blog posting; I'm open and willing to get your job done quickly and professionally.

Background

For people who are new to me and my activities across the web you should know that I've been at this game for a while now, since 2009 to be exact and I make the bulk of my income owning and running a collection of websites monetized by affiliate offers and contextual advertising. I specialize in producing content that draws relevant traffic to websites while also expanding the overall authority of the website for it's target market.

I am not a huge fan of the traditional sales page either. I like to saturate a market with information that users are searching for and then provide short lists of products that can be solutions to their needs or problems. I find this to be a very effective way to make a living.

Having said that writing content for my own websites can get lonely and I do look forward to working with others on joint ventures. I enjoy helping other people out with their projects and find it to be a break from the mundane aspects of my own projects.

You can read more about me on my bio page but to summarize let me say this. I am an American who speaks native English. I write in conversational tone on most websites I run; it's most natural to me and it's how I produce my best content.

Credentials

I hold a Business Degree and I obtained my MBA a few years later after working for almost 10 years in mortgage compliance for a large regional bank. I started dabbling in internet marketing near the end of my tenure at the bank and it is now my full time profession.

I know how to write content for the web and for real human readers. I can SEO a site or a piece of content so that it gets regular search traffic and although I can't ever guarantee results I have a track record of success. I was successfully attaining blog traffic in 2009 and 2010 prior to the implementation of Google Panda & Penguin and I've started successful websites in the post-penguin era that also receive lots of converting search traffic.

One of my most successful sites was created in 2013 and it benefitted greatly with the implementation of Google's Hummingbird update.

My Intentions

Until early 2014 I've never opened up my writing (or skills) for hire. Even now I do not want to become a full time ghostwriter or service provider but I do want to add it to my portfolio as an option to you. To maintain a manageable workflow and to limit orders to people who are serious about quality and results I'll be offering those services for the foreseeable future at a premium rate - something reflective of my level of expertise.

I will work with you on your writing project in all confidence and will treat the project as tactfully and skillfully as I treat my own projects.

For the time being I will be facilitating all of my writing gigs via Fiverr Gigs and Gig Extras.

You can see my gigs through the following links.

Ultra Short Blog Posts: ~100 Words ($5)
http://fiverr.com/chezfat/write-a-100-word-article-or-blog-post

If you need ultra short pieces produced that are unique, interesting, helpful, but mainly "to the point" then this is the gig for you. In fact this is the base gig for all my services. You will have to buy this gig even if you want a 1200 word article - it's the way Fiverr works. Buy the small gig and pay for the gig extras to get what you actually want.

*Introductory Special*
As an introductory offer to my services if you order this gig today I will produce any article you need in any tone you wish up to 800 words in exchange for an honest review on the Fiverr platform.

Yes, the gig states 100 words but for the time being (unless you explicitly state otherwise) I will provide you a longer article based on your topic, desired article title, or set of keywords in the vicinity of 500-800 words. Once the introductory period expires this length of article will cost substantially more. Get it while it's on sale folks!



Notes

As more gigs are setup I will update this page. Please, if you are interested at all in exploring a working relationship with me you can get in connect with me via email. All orders are placed through the Fiverr system unless the order is custom and agreed upon via email.

If you want me to add any specific types of services you can shoot those ideas to me via email and I may add them to my Fiverr portfolio of gigs offered.

Lastly, I'd like to reserve the comment form on this post for reviews or testimonials. If you have questions fire them at me via email and if need be I'll append questions that might have broad appeal to the bottom of this post along with my answers. Thanks.

My email is brian@chezfat.com and I'm looking forward to working with you on your projects.
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January 25, 2014

How To Make Money With InfoBarrel - My Index Of Infobarrel Guides


I've been a long time writer for InfoBarrel since November of 2009 - a little over 4 years as of today's writing. I know that site like that back of my hand although it isn't all that big of a part of my overall income as it used to be back in 2010.

Can you make money with InfoBarrel? Absolutely.

Is it the best place to make money writing? Depends on what your goals are and what you enjoy doing.

Never used InfoBarrel before?
Open an account here & start writing right away. (ref link)
But I suggest you read this whole post first and maybe some of my other tutorials on the site as well. It's not for everyone.

Who Would Like Writing For InfoBarrel

Do you like just writing articles about "stuff" and don't want to deal with hosting and maintaining a website?

Don't want to deal with the hassles of working on monetizing a site either? If you just want to sit down and write for an hour a day and not be troubled with anything else then yeah, IB is awesome.

For me and many others it's become a great place to spend some time for specific projects, testing, and networking so it can be a part of anyone's arsenal I think.

An Index Of Helpful InfoBarrel Posts

Over the years I've written a lot about InfoBarrel, both over on InfoBarrel's domain and here on this blog. Today I wanted to dedicate a bit of virtual real estate to simply gather all my posts on the topic together into one big place. I wanted to create a bit of an Index of all my InfoBarrel posts for reference purposes.

I've developed a ton of exposure on the site and a lot of people have expressed to me their gratitude for all the posts I've made but now that there are so many of them I'm finding it hard to direct people to the best pages... also, new writers for InfoBarrel are likely finding it hard to find any help from my past writings as it's scattered all over the place.

Below you'll find a big list of helpful posts. Some of these are geared more for the beginner on InfoBarrel while others are for the more dedicated or veteran writer. In cases where it's necessary I've tried to point out posts that are a bit dated and not necessarily accurate any more. I may take some time in the coming weeks to update some of the dated posts to make them more relevant.

In any event here they are sorted as best I can.

My InfoBarrel Experience


InfoBarrel 2 Weeks In - Originally Published December 2009
After My 1st Month On InfoBarrel - Originally published in December 2009.
After 8 Months On InfoBarrel - Originally Published in July 2010.
Chezfat Is An InfoBarrel Success Story - Originally published November 2010.
The Graceful Fall Of An InfoBarrel Success Story - Originally published January 2014.


InfoBarrel For Beginners


My InfoBarrel Review - Originally published in November 2010 and updated since.
Build Backlinks From InfoBarrel - Originally published in December 2009.
How To Choose A Keyword (In Theory) - Originally published September 2010.
How To Actually Choose A Keyword - Originally published September 2010.
Improve Your Search Engine Ranking - Originally published September 2010.
The Amazon Affiliate Program On InfoBarrel - Originally published January 2011.
Build Authority As An Author With RSS - Originally published January 2011.
Increase Income By Adding Pictures To Articles - Originally published April 2011.
Link Directly To InfoBarrel Media Pages - Originally published June 2011.
Beginner's Guide To InfoBarrel For New Writers - Originally published March 2012.


How Much Can You Make On InfoBarrel


InfoBarrel's Earnings Potential - Originally Published in August 2010
Is $1000 Monthly Income Possible? - Originally Published in August 2010

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There you have it. That's a bunch of posts.

In the future I'll update this page with links to particularly interesting forum posts I've made on IB and I will try to add new links to this list if I've missed anything.

Some of the posts listed are dated and I'll slowly start updating them so that they are current and relevant for content marketing/publishing in 2014.

If you want an easy way to start building up a library of articles then IB is a great place to get your feet wet and they pay pretty good too... you know, so long as you get eyeballs on your articles.

This is my referral link btw, if you use it I will get 2% of the ad views for your articles at no expense to you.


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January 22, 2014

Here's The Big List Of IM Blogs I'm Currently Following


List Last Updated
10/10/2014

This is one of those pages that I'm publishing that is really geared more for me than for anyone else. I wanted to list out all the blogs IM blogs I'm currently visiting, reading, following, commenting on etc.

So without further ado, here's the list. No doubt it will grow as I take the time to actually re-inventory who I'm actually reading.

Blogs I'm Actively Reading

http://lostcyclist.me/ - By Quinton Hamp, a friend I know from The Pond. He's killing it right now and a big motivator for me.

http://www.jacobking.com/ - Awesome info on this blog for the more shady side of affiliate marketing. I don't know this guy outside of reading his blog.

http://www.matthewwoodward.co.uk/ - Another awesome blogger from the darker side. He's got a very inspiring delivery of material.

http://www.my4hrworkweek.com/ - Eric Gati writes this one. It's a good blog that I've read off and on for a few years. I first met Eric over on InfoBarrel.

http://zenduck.me/ - This is the blog of Zen Duck Dave, the man behind the curtain over at The Pond. He's had a few really great IM blogs over the years and this is his latest one... although most of the action is on the forum from the same domain.

http://www.smartpassiveincome.com/ - This is the well known Pat Flynn. He's darned inspirational and a wealth of information. Amazingly I first linked to his blog here from mine back in the late summer of 2009. Crazy!

http://lissowerbutts.com/ - A former MMO blogger who now blogs about travel, kindle publishing, and formatting. She's a good friend over on The Pond too and has been around the world of IM for a while.

Old Blogs

These are basically old sites that are not updated any longer. Even still the content on them (albeit dated) is still worth a read every now and then.

http://www.makingmoneyontheinternetfree.info/ - This is the old largely defunct blog of Dave a la Zen Duck Dave, the owner of The Pond IM Forum I am a member of and recommend.

http://www.makemoneyonlinewithseo.com/ - Another old defunct blog with tons of dated nuggets burried in it. Worth a read if only for nostalgia.

Podcasts I Listen To

This site will be populated eventually but I just don't want to take the time to do it now. Check back later; I will link to this post from time to time. You're not missing anything. ;)

http://empireflippers.com/podcasts/ - Quality business guys that are really building an empire and creating an industry in small site brokerage. I listen to these guys a lot.

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I'll plan on updating these lists from time to time dropping blogs/feeds that either no longer interest me or go defunct and adding new blogs I find particularly engaging to me.

Say hi in the comments guy!
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February 26, 2010

Ultimate Guide to Making The Most Money With Online Writing

For Intermediate Writers

I’m going to try and keep this brief and thorough (yeah right). I have a way of making things get really long even though I’m trying to stay brief so bare with me. I won’t sacrifice content for brevity so you will still need a lot of time to read through this.

This guide will be directed specifically at those people who have written content online for a long time but haven’t really made a lot of money. Most of you are spinning wheels and making ends meet but your efforts can be greatly enhanced by simply doing things a little better. This guide is not for everyone and it’s not going to be at expert level. This is for the advanced writer with plenty of content but only a little experience in search engine marketing.

Lets Begin
For the sake of argument let’s pretend or assume you have a lot of articles posted online at various places. Some of those places might be blogs, others might be, article directories, some maybe revenue share content sites like eHow, InfoBarrel, Examiner, Xomba, etc. No matter where your content lays there are ways that you can make it earn more residual income. You just have to structure it properly.

Some of you who have been writing for a long time may even be experiencing declining revenue on your older articles. There is some valid arguments to be made that these declines in earnings are the fault of others but quite often it is because the articles are weak in the search engine results page (SERPs). The reason for that is because articles rank in the SERPs for two reasons: on-page SEO, and backlinks.

On-Page SEO

I won’t discuss this hardly at all. To get an article to rank in the search engines your page should be well optimized. Most people accomplish this by targeting a topic through the use of a keyword and placing that keyword in their article title. By doing this the keyword also is included in the URL. Next the article uses the same keyword in context with other topically relevant subject matter. The keyword should be used a handful of times throughout the article.

You can further increase the on-page SEO by bolding your keywords at least once somewhere in your article, captioning your pictures with the keyword, and by applying tags or categories to the article using the keyword. Depending on your writing platform some of these options aren’t possible. eHow for instance doesn’t allow bolding of anything in the article so just do what you can.

The thing is however that you can only do so much on-page SEO. You can’t keep improving it; there is a point of maximum return and no amount of time or effort will make the on-page SEO any better. That’s why you should not dwell on it. Just do what you need to do and move on to more important things.

I’ve been helping a friend on eHow with some articles on eHow in the Home & Garden category. She has a small group of 15 articles that have all been on eHow for at least a year or so. Most were very good earning articles and most have decreased in earnings by well over 50 percent (some around 80-90%) per article over the past 12 months. Having at first suspected conspiracy from eHow she allowed me to look at the articles and I discovered that none of them were being outranked by the eHow Home & Garden website fro her main keywords. I responded to her situation with this:

My suspicion is that these [15] articles were great earners for you in the past but over the last year some other articles with stronger SEO [& backlinks] knocked you down a couple spots in the SERPs. Of these top 15 H&G articles in your list I only found one of eHow's H&G site outranking you for your main keyword. That leads me to believe that they aren't funneling your traffic their way, it's just that their SEO is better on this one article or there is more backlinks to it.

On-page SEO will only let your article rank well in the SERPs if there is little competition for your keyword or topic. This is why it is not important to dwell on on-page SEO. Think of it this way, if every page on the internet that discussed “flowers” had the same on-page SEO then what would make one page rank higher in the SERPs than another? Backlinks do that.

Backlinks are far more important for search engine ranking than on-page SEO is. We’re talking on-page SEO is like 10% of the importance with backlinks being 90%. Most people who have lots of articles on the net which are getting fewer page views every month and fewer earnings every month are probably having this problem because they have great SEO and at one time they ranked well for their main keywords but they have slowly slipped in the SERPs because new articles on the same topic have been posted with similar on-page SEO but have more backlinks.

What Kind Of Backlinks?

Some of you may even think you’re sending backlinks at your articles too. You’re sending out twitter links and Facebook links and stumble-upon links and your articles get good traffic at first but there’s no money that comes from this traffic and the moment you stop sending these links even the traffic dies out.

Links that have lasting value and bring increases in revenue include only one type of link. “Dofollow” links from content pages. Whether you have a blog, article, or post on a revenue sharing site, “dofollow” links from these pages that point to other pages are where the money is and these links will keep you ranking well in the SERPs. When you have backlinks pointing at your articles you will be the strong page that knocks other pages down.

But what is a “dofollow” link and how is it different from a “nofollow” link… and where do I get them?

Dofollow Versus Nofollow
Both “dofollow” and “nofollow” links look exactly the same to readers of a website. They both do exactly the same thing as well. However, when you look at the code for the website and look at the link as it is coded some links look like this:

href="SOME RANDOM URL">THE ANCHOR TEXT

...and other links look like this:

rel="nofollow" href="SOME RANDOM URL">THE ANCHOR TEXT

Links with the "nofollow" tag as you see above are not used by Google to affect search engine results pages (SERPs). The link from above that doesn't have the "nofollow" tag attached to it is commonly referred to as a "dofollow" link. These types of links are used by Google to affect the SERPs. If your article has these you will rank better in the SERPs.

The only manual way to know what link is what is to look at the source code for the web page. You can do this by clicking "view" in your browser and then "view source code" in the drop down box. If you do this a text doc opens up with the code for the page. You just have to find the link buried in the code and see if the "nofollow" tag is added to it or not.

To save you the trouble, all links pointing to other sites from eHow articles are “nofollow” automatically. This means you many funnel traffic through an eHow link to your blog for instance but the link doesn't help your blog rank well in the SERPs.

On the other hand articles on Examiner, Your Blog, InfoBarrel, and many article directories are all “dofollow” links. These articles do two things for you. They all funnel traffic through the link to the destination but they also help the destination page fare batter in the SERPs.

Also, you should know that reciprocal links (your blog post links to an eHow article eHow and the same eHow article links back to your same blog post) function to funnel traffic back and forth but the links (generally speaking) cancel each other out for SERP ranking purposes. You don't ever want a reciprocal link unless you don’t care about either page ranking well in the search engines. Always send the link from the dofollow page and not the other way around. For this example send the link from the blog post to the eHow article because the blog post will send a dofollow link to your eHow article and not the other way around.

Additional Reasons Why A Page May Fall In The SERPs

If you have two articles with all on-page SEO being equal and one has been posted online for a year and the other you post online today it is highly likely that the newer article will start ranking better than the older article because Google has an affection for “fresh content” or new articles.

This means that if you have an article on “flowers” and it has been posted online for a year or so but it doesn’t have any “dofollow” backlinks. It will slowly fall in the SERPs for two reasons. Articles that start generating backlinks will slowly overtake it and also every other article out there with no backlinks will get a fresh content bonus and push yours down for the time span that that article gets the bonus. Without generating backlinks that bonus the other article will get slowly diminishes and you article will regain lost ground in SERPs but as long as new articles are constantly being published around the net their will always be a steady stream of articles getting a fresh content bonus keeping your article lower in the SERPs than it deserves.

You can only combat this by having the backlinks to your article. If you have backlinks to your article the new articles without any backlinks will not overtake you as easily and if they do it will be for a shorter period of time. You have to stay on top of the SERPs to earn money from your articles. Your articles only earn money from search traffic and you’ll never get enough of that traffic if you are not ranking well.

Fresh Content Bonus + eHow UK Example = Declining Earnings For Articles With No Backlinks

One of the biggest problems long time writers who have not don’t backlinking are facing right now is with the eHow UK situation. Eventually this situation will be a thing of the past but to many people they have lost a ton of their residual income because of it. This is a perfect example of the fresh content bonus and a perfect illustration as to how articles with no dofollow backlinks are in danger of falling from the SERPs.

In the second half of 2009 when eHow launched eHow UK they cloned all of their articles and put them on a new URL with a .co.uk instead of a .com. This caused a big change in the SERPs not because of manipulation on the part of eHow but because of the way Google applies their search rankings.

Because the original articles had few if any backlinks the fresh content bonus of the UK site which was heavily backlinked from the eHow.com site as well as other demand media web properties suddenly started outranking the original articles in the SERPs. Was this a shady move on the part of eHow; yeah, probably. They probably realized that the promotion of the new site coupled with the fresh content bonus Google applies would likely make many of the pages outrank to original articles. For that they have been appropriately slammed by many writers.

However, for writers who sent quality dofollow backlinks to their .com articles on eHow they didn’t see much of a blip at all in their earnings. Of all of my articles I could only find one where the UK outranked my own US article. This is because of the backlinks I sent to my US articles and no other reason.

Additionally - Early in 2009 there was also a huge influx of new content writers on the net... mostly because of the economy and so many people losing their jobs. The people who started writing before many of these new writers got a "fresh content" bonus from Google before the influx on new writers in early 2009. In early 2009 when these new writers were signing up and publishing they were now getting the fresh content bonus and were pushing down older articles with poor backlinking strategies. In fact there were more people publishing in early 2009 than in any year previously so there was more writers out there getting "fresh content" bonuses in the SERPs than in the past.

Some of those writers also promoted their articles well and probably pushed many older articles down the SERPs. Look at it this way: There's more supply of articles out there and the demand for those articles in the SERPs has not changed. This might also be a reason why in the spring of 2009 many long time writers slowly started to see a less robust surge in traffic and earnings.

The moral of this story – To stay relevant in the search engines you have to have more than just on-page SEO and fresh content; you have to have backlinks pointing at your articles. The backlinks are like a healthy backbone. You may be able to stand without them but even the slightest breeze will blow them over. If your articles have backlinks they will hold up for longer periods of time and will not waiver or falter in the SERPs as easily.

How To Structure Your Articles To Make The Most Money And Remain Relevant In The SERPs

So to bring all of this together the question I posed above must be addressed. How do you write content that will make money and organize that content on the web in a way in which you will be sending backlinks for SERP ranking?

Since many people reading this will be long time devotees of eHow I will start this section with the eHow writer in mind. eHow articles make great money because the domain eHow.com is very strong. If you post an article on eHow and an identical article just about anywhere else and do nothing to promote either the eHow article will probably be highest in the SERPs. If you have articles posted there already you should take advantage of this.

Many people advocate pulling articles from eHow and posting them elsewhere and I think that is the wrong move. As I discuss above the fresh content bonus is applied to new material but it is short lived. Once it’s no longer fresh (weeks to months) it will fall back in the SERPs and be replaced with older articles. At this point the age of the article provides a bonus with all things being equal. With identical articles (with the exception of their age), the older article will rank better on most occasions.

If you have an article on eHow that is a year old and you move it to InfoBarrel your blog or some other site it will initially rank well due to the fresh content bonus but will quickly fall back because it’s not a very old article. This is why I recommend not moving articles that have been published for a long time… especially if they have the potential to earn well or have earned well in the past. You can always make an article earn well again by simply working it back up the SERPs with a handful of backlinks.

A Hypothetical Article Structure

What To Do To Earn More Residual Income With What You Have Written Already
In the future I’m going to post a guide aimed at new writers to start earning quickly but for now this will be continually aimed more for those people who have content already posted.

• Let’s say you have 100 articles posted on eHow
• Let’s say you have an account at InfoBarrel with 50 articles posted.
• Let’s Say you have a blog with roughly 50 posts.
• Let’s say you also have an account with Examiner with 50-100 articles or so.
• Let’s say you’ve heard of GoArticles & eZine articles; you may or may not have an account and you may or may not have any more than a handful of articles on those sites.

Look at your eHow articles. Rule of thumb states that 80 percent of your earnings come from 20 percent of your articles. Make a list of the 20-25 articles that you have that earn the most on a monthly basis. Don’t look at the ones with the most earnings. Look at the most recent month ending and identify the top 20-25% of your articles that earn. Make sure none of these articles (your top 25%) link out to any of your articles anywhere on the net. Edit them if you need to remove the resource links.

Now go to your blog if you have one. If you have 50 posts there than go to each post individually and add 1-3 links back to various eHow articles that already make money. Don’t send them to all of them, only send them to the one’s that make money. This will probably result in you sending a total of ~100 dofollow backlinks from your 50 blog posts back to your 25 eHow articles. That’s about 4 backlinks per article.

Now go to your InfoBarrel articles if you have any. From each article you can send two contextual self-serving links in each article body to wherever you want. You can also send an additional link in the signature box totaling four links. If you have 50 Infobarrel articles that’s roughly 150 backlinks at your disposal. Send about 100 of them to your 50 blog posts (not your index or main page) – that’s a rate of about 2 backlinks per blog post. The remaining 50 links that you can send with your InfoBarrel articles should go to your best earning eHow articles. If you have 25 then that means each eHow article will have two backlinks from InfoBarrel.

Now go to Examiner and do the same thing as you did for InfoBarrel. Add links in the body of your content and link them to your InfoBarrel articles, your blog posts and your eHow articles. Stick to the linking guidelines and you’ll be fine. The point is the backlinks are one-way links (not reciprocal), they are dofollow links (meaning they help the destination page rank well), and they only point to articles that actually make money.

You don’t want to waste links that go to pages that don’t convert to money or residual income. It’s a waste.

Once you have done all of the link structuring then you can consider moving only the articles on eHow that don’t earn any money, especially those that don’t get views either, to the article directories: eZine Articles and GoArticles. When you do this make sure to add links into the text pointing to your money making articles. By making this move you are repurposing an article that doesn’t earn money and doesn’t give dofollow backlinks to a place where you can at least get backlinks from it. You won’t earn with them posted on the Article Directories but those articles won’t earn on money sites either. The directories are the best place for them.

Lastly remember that backlinks are the key to the whole process of making lasting residual income. Without backlinks all your articles will eventually fall in the SERPs as other articles overtake them with better SEO and backlinks. Send 80% of your time creating backlinks to articles that make you money and you will do fine.

Additional Places to Get Dofollow Backlinks

I posted not long ago on the eHow forums places to get dofollow backlinks if you want to continue writing for just the backlinks which is a good idea if you already have a lot of content published.

Good starting places for "dofollow" backlinks: I'd say, GoArticles, ArticleBlast, Ezine Articles, InfoBarrel, Squidoo, Examiner, SelfGrowth, Buzzle (this site takes longer to contribute to however the links are strong), Post Your own Articles, Article Dashboard, Blogger Blogs, Wordpress Blogs, and any other platform of blogs you can find. If you start a blog you can always use the same resources to link to it. This serves the purpose of getting it indexed and if the links are anchored with keywords it also serves the purpose of starting the blog off with a growing bit of keyword authority.

Do you need that many places to backlink your eHow articles... probably not. Most people make decent money with little or no backlinks. The problem is that when articles have little or no backlinks they can fall in the SERPs to easily. I think many people are experiencing this. To make the most money and have the most stability in the SERPs you have to have backlinks, as many as possible. Remember, you can always start a new blog just for the purpose of adding backlinks to a different site.

Anyway I hope this helps some of the many people out there who feel they have hit a wall in their quest to build residual income. Just start working at the backlinks and the earnings will rebound in time. That’s important to remember too. You can’t expect a rebound overnight. It takes a lot of time for the backlinks to take hold and influence your SERP ranking. Do not get discouraged if you spend an entire weekend or even month building these links only to find no benefit the following week in your earnings. You more than likely won't notice a change in your ranking or SERP placement until at least a month or three. It takes Google a while to notice the links, index them, and then apply them to the SERPs. It will happen though. See my SERP Rank Update post on my blog were I discuss this happening to my main blog.

Good luck and keep in mind I will continually refine this post to make it more clear and relevant. You can always find this post in my upper link bar. I hope it helps. Refer people here who need this help and please repay me for maintaining this guide by sending some anchored links to this site and my post pages. Please do add your thoughts in the comments. Thanks.
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December 18, 2009

Increase eHow Earnings Dramatically

eHow Earnings | The eHow Journey
I started this blog back in August of 2009 to chronicle my eHow journey. In fact at the time this blog was called the eHow Journey as its main purpose was to track my eHow earnings and promote my eHow articles while simultaneously keeping track of what methods I was using to increase my eHow earnings month after month.

It didn’t take me long to realize however that increasing eHow earnings was not the only goal I should be having. So in September I rebranded this blog to it’s current name, Earn Residual Income Online, because that really is the goal I had in the first place. I wanted to start building residual income online and in August eHow was my main focus.

Since then I have written a number of eHow articles and my eHow earnings have increased every month since the beginning. Ad my eHow earnings have increased month-over-month I also have experienced increasing page views on my articles as well as a greater efficiency in monetizing the visitors that come to view my articles on eHow. I’ve laid out a number of reasons for this here on the blog in my archives but many of the specifics I have left out purposefully.

An eHow Earnings Slump?
I’ve now been a member and pleased contributor of eHow for roughly four months and I routinely make over $10 per 1000 visitors to my articles. Even as I write this the eHow forums are flooded with people saying that earnings now are lower than they have been in the past. There is some speculation as to why this is. It’s possible eHow earnings are down due to the new formation of eHow UK which is basically a clone of eHow US. Being a clone it is feasible that the site is leeching traffic to our paying articles in the US to non-paying articles in the UK.

Another reason cited for lower eHow earnings across the board is the effects of the recession and advertisers spending. This is unlikely I think due to the profits Google is showing. They don’t seem to be slowing and the bulk of their revenue comes from advertising. Another idea is that people simply click fewer ads during the holiday season. This may be but I haven’t been around long enough to witness eHow earnings fluctuations with the seasons. What I do know however is that I have been able to increase earning this month without contributing huge swaths of new articles to my library because I’ve been doing article marketing on what I already have published.

Increase eHow Earnings eBook
My eHow earnings have been rising this month because I am working to place my articles higher in the search engine results pages by using various article marketing techniques. Many of these techniques I talked about already on this blog and many I have not. Despite this however I have been working on an eBook covering the intricacies of eHow earnings with two fellow eHow writers and we have set out a goal to offer a book that really crunches the numbers behind eHow by showing what eHow earnings are all about.

The three of us are all very different writers and we all write about very different topics and thus we have the ability to fully encapsulate the nuances of the eHow earnings journey that all writers go down. In the coming weeks I’m going to preview some more of the goals that we have for this eBook and begin the preparation stages for the books release.

What Makes This eHow eBook Different?
I am fully aware that there are a number of quality eHow eBooks written by some prolific eHow writers some of which who have been on the site for at least a couple of years. I also understand that they have vast credibility in the field of “How To eHow” but in our eHow earnings eBook we intend not to best our fellow writers in their eBook offerings but to offer something different. We want to really delve into actual articles that make actual money and discuss the details of what makes those articles tick versus others that might not.

I want to increase my eHow earnings and I’m sure you want to increase yours as well. To do this we need to understand what eHow articles make money and why they do so. Instead of throwing a ton of articles against the wall and seeing what sticks let’s learn how to get articles to stick against the wall and then lets make it happen. I have a number of goals in my residual income journey and this will be a large one. I intend on increasing my eHow earnings and I hope you will try to do the same.

I realize there’s not much substance to this post but I felt it was necessary to lay the groundwork and state my purpose with eHow and my eHow earnings. I hope you’ll stick around to follow this journey and listen to my banter as we enter a new year and a new decade. Let’s make 2010 a profitable year full of residual income and ever increasing eHow earnings.
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October 13, 2009

Want To Earn Residual Income Online? Yeah, Me Too!

earn residual income online

What Is Residual Income

I’ve done a lot of learning recently about earning residual income online. In fact, that is the topic of this blog and my overarching goal but it occurred to me (as it may have to many of you) that earning residual income is different from earning passive income in that residual income is income based off of a sale or business activity that is paid out over and over indefinitely. Passive income is essentially the same thing except the term implies that the person (myself) is no longer active in generating new business activity and is thus experiencing passive income, income that is generated despite having no current activity in business.

Of course I thought about naming this blog earn passive income online but that seems to contradict my business activity in that I am actively seeking new business and attempting to grow my income stream. I am seeking residual income while I experience passive income which I’ve already created. Does that make sense?

The purpose of this blog among other things is to chronicle my learning in this area of generating residual income from all available sources. In addition to highlighting what I have learned on earning residual income I will teach you to do exactly what I am doing so that you can have the same opportunities to succeed that I did without having to read so much and work so hard.

It’s important to note that I am not an expert in earning residual income; I am merely a well educated beginner. I have read more information on online residual income than you could believe. That’s why it’s high time I develop a rich resume on the topic of generating residual income online and back up what I’ve learned with real results. I kind of feel like I am like a college graduate stepping out into the job market for the first time. I’ve learned so much and now I’m ready to start working.

Residual Income - Where to start?

There’s so many options. There’s your standard investments: stock, bonds, real estate, etc. Income derived from these investments are definitely residual income in nature but they require up front capital and carry some risk as easily noted by the economic recession of the past two years. Virtually all markets are down over the last two years ending by a considerable sum. Real Estate markets are even worse too because investors here are typically highly leveraged at an average rate of between 3:1 and 20:1, meaning investors in real estate can gain or lose $3-20 per every dollar they invested depending on their leverage rate. For me this is something I’m interested in but only when I can afford the risk.

I am still a young man and I have a young wife and we both have considerable student debt. Sure there are no kids but you never know when they’ll come around. Risk is something I need to avoid at this time and that leaves me to find residual income investment sources that carry no risk… or I should say no financial risk. Internet marketing and informational products are the logical product to generate this residual income while time becomes my main investment vehicle rather than cash. By turning to internet marketing I can safely assume no financial risk and invest only my time and energy into building a catalog of residual income bearing projects that will provide passive income over the long haul.

My Residual Income Journey as it Now Stands

Currently I invest a significant amount of my energy to a number of online ventures where I only risk the loss of my time. To date I have been active in this pursuit for approximately five months and I have already begun building a solid base for long term residual income. In fact I have started tracking this base and sharing basic numbers with you my reader on my earnings and goals page. As the days go by I will be posting specific information on what I’m doing to build more residual income and I will share how you can do the same. I will do specific case studies on tactics and I will link to or show actual examples of residual income pieces as applicable. I will provide to you all the information you need to learn from my efforts and duplicate my successes.

Am I successful now? I think so, considering the duration of my residual income resume and I feel that my success is growing every day. If you want to be a part of this growth process I’d encourage you to stop by this site, Chezfat.com whenever you have the chance and join me on this quest for ever increasing residual income.
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October 8, 2009

Privacy Policy

As required to comply with the powers that be I present my privacy policy. This policy will be linked to from the blog footer on every page of this blog. Please feel free to use this page to help you sleep at night if it helps. Thank you.

Privacy Policy
This website/blog uses third-party advertising companies to serve ads when visiting this site. These third parties may collect and use information (but not your name, address, email address, or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and to know your choices about not having this information used by these companies, you can visit Google's Advertising and Privacy page.

If you wish to opt out of Advertising companies tracking and tailoring advertisements to your surfing patterns you may do so at Network Advertising Initiative.

Google uses the Doubleclick DART cookie to serve ads across it's Adsense network and you can get further information regarding the DART cookie at Doubleclick as well as opt out options at Google's Privacy Center.

Privacy
I respect your privacy and I am committed to safeguarding your privacy while online at this site www.chezfat.blogspot.com. The following discloses how I gather and disseminate information for this Blog.

RSS Feeds and Email Updates
If a user wishes to subscribe to my RSS Feeds or Email Updates (powered by Feedburner), I ask for contact information such as name and email address. Users may opt-out of these communications at any time. Your personal information will never be sold or given to a third party. (You will never be spammed by me - ever!)

Log Files and Stats
Like most blogging platforms I use log files, in this case Statcounter as well as Google Analytics. These store information such as internet protocol (IP) addresses, browser type, internet service provider (ISP), referring, exit and visited pages, platform used, date/time stamp, track user’s movement in the whole, and gather broad demographic information for aggregate use. IP addresses etc. are not linked to personally identifiable information.

Cookies
A cookie is a piece of data stored on the user’s computer tied to information about the user. This blog doesn't use cookies. However, some of my business partners use cookies on this site (for example - advertisers). I can't access or control these cookies once the advertisers have set them.

Links
This Blog contains links to other sites. Please be aware that I am not responsible for the privacy practices of these other sites. I suggest my users to be aware of this when they leave this blog and to read the privacy statements of each and every site that collects personally identifiable information. This privacy statement applies solely to information collected by this Blog.

Advertisers
I use outside ad companies to display ads on this blog. These ads may contain cookies and are collected by the advertising companies and I do not have access to this information. I work with the following advertising companies: Google Adsense. Please check the advertisers websites for their respective privacy policies.

Contact Information
If you have any questions or concerns please contact me through the comments of this blog.

This privacy policy updated October 8, 2009.
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August 27, 2009

Residual Income and Goals Index

Last Update: 4/5/2010

Unlike some other residual income writers out there I have no intention on stating my actual earnings information in my monthly earnings updates or anywhere else on this blog. This means that you probably won't ever see me say anything like "I made X amount of money in a certain time frame". 

I do feel that keeping a running tab on some of the stats from my residual income sources is necessary and will benefit the reader of this blog... at least it will make it more interesting so I will summarize all my earnings into a metric: Earnings per 1000 page views.  This will allow me to normalize all my earnings reports from all the various income streams and identify how each stream performs and how that income stream changes as time passes.

Additionally I'm going to always share with you my basic residual income goals and share with you my progress.  Included in this will be my overarching goal of duplicating my day job income.  I won't share with you how much I make but I will share the relationship between the two in percentage terms.

In my opinion my thoughts about my online income and it's progress is necessary and desirable for myself and for my readers. This page will be updated routinely with information related to my residual income goals and accomplishments on eHow, InfoBarrel, my blogs, as well as my general residual income online earnings from other sources.

Check back in for regular updates or just subscribe to the blog feed. Good luck to me in the future!  You can see period specific reports below or just note my progress graph here on this page.

Monthly Residual Earnings Reports
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009

Short-Term Goals
100 published eHow articles | Progress: 82 Articles (4/5/10) - Will not happen as eHow has terminated the WCP for eHow.
Make payout by 9/30/09 | Progress: Accomplished (10/8/09)

Mid-term Goals
1,000 published Xomblurb | Progress: 279 Xomblurbs (4/5/10)
Build Backlinks to Moneymakers on Blog and eHow | WIP
Increase Earnings per 1000 PV on Longevity Blog | WIP

Long-Term Goals
Duplicate my day-job income | Progress: 4.83 Percent Accomplished (4/5/10)

That's it for now. I've got a ways to go but it all starts with article creation and publication.
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About the Author

Hi there - My name is Brian but you can call me Chezfat. :)

I write for eHow, InfoBarrel, Xomba, a multitude of article submission sites, as well as a good handful of personal blogs. My main blogs are How To Live A Longer Life and this blog you are reading Chezfat.com.

I have a day job but hope to one day work from home. My goals in life are to go into personal finance and freelance work. I do not want to be swamped so building up a streak of residual income is a must for my life. To build up my residual income, eHow, InfoBarrel, Xomba, niche blogging, and article marketing will be a major part of the plan. Eventually I will be introducing a significant chunk of my time to dividend investing and money management as proper long-term investing is the foundation for long-term passive income.

I have many interests and will share some of those with you in time I'm sure. To start off with I'm a big fan of medicine, health, and fitness. I'm a junkie for anything business, economics, and finance related as I fully intend on going into personal finance work when I get fully chartered as a CFA. I LOVE fine wine and gourmet cuisine; and I enjoy golfing and bowling especially.

Anyway, that's a bit about me. I hope you enjoy this blog and more importantly I hope you find some value in it. This site will chronicle a lot of my efforts to build different residual income streams and i will also serve as a launching pad for some of my projects. At the same time I hope to be able to teach others to do what I'm doing as we all have to learn somewhere.

Not all posts on this site will be blogging and article driven but in the early days I suspect this will be the bulk of my efforts. As money starts rolling in I'm sure I will begin discussing capital reinvestment and dividend investing. Those topics however will likely not come up for some time.

Lastly, if you are social and into these kinds of things, hit me up on Google+ as well as all the other networks on my sidebar.
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About This Site

Page Last Updated: 10/10/2014

This site is all about the journey of writing online for both residual income and passive income.I started my career in this line of work in May of 2009 knowing nothing and reading and learning a ton.  I started first with a blog on human longevity (which I still maintain).  It was my first baby and I did a lot of things wrong from the get go. 

Once I started to learn what I was doing I began to write for eHow and started Chezfat.com.  This was my first foray into true content publication and monitization.  This blog was originally going to chronicle my journey on eHow but it quickly was rebranded to chronicle my overall internet empire.

My Early Days - 2009 & 2010

I wrote my first eHow article on the 17th of August 2009 and began my first major blogging project on May 11, 2009. This blog was formed in late August 2009 under the title "The eHow Journey" which I renamed the first week of October 2009 to it's current name and URL.And in November 2009 I joined InfoBarrel where I quickly started making the bulk of my online income in those early years - you can see my InfoBarrel profile here.

Since that time I have joined a few other revenue sharing websites. The names of them have chnaged a lot over the years as most of them have come and gone - many no longer exist today. Few have had any lasting value for the duration of my time online.

By March of 2010 I was making some progress in my residual income goals but it wasn't until then when I became a paying member of The Keyword Academy when my income started taking off.  I knew a lot of what I was doing by then but the tools provided through membership were and still are invaluable to my revenue growth.

In 2010 I also stared a few additional blogs, including a site on diabetic shoes which I discussed at length her on the blog way back in the day. Over the subsequent years I've since built lots and lots of sites in many different niches and I don't plan on stopping anytime soon.

Animal Attacks

2012 was a wake up call to me as it was to many people online when the animal attacks started. I lost a good chunk of my income in many different places around the web but I wasn't devastated at like like many people were.

I took this as an opportunity to continue what I was doing but in a more strategic manner. It took some time to recover but by late 2013 I was making more than ever before using tactics that weren't so blatantly bad. Quality in my stuff improved and I stopped a lot of spammy link building. This stuff still works folks.

The Future - 2014 & Beyond 

In the future I hope to continue building even bigger, better, and more profitable websites and it would pretty amazing to be able to replace my wife's regular income with with my online empire - I'm certainly making good progress this year! :D This site will continue chronicle that process a little at a time and I will do my best to teach you how to do the same whenever I'm feeling generous. :)

I hope you find value in what I have to say. Please feel free to contact me anytime. I moderate comments once in a blue moon so the best way to get a hold of me is through email which is found on my contact page. Even better though would be to join the forum and get involved. I always show up there and can always be reached in threads and PMs.
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