RSS
ClickBank1
ClickBank1

About Merc

Merc has been a member since March 31st 2009, and has created 193 posts from scratch.

Merc's Bio

Merc's Websites

This Author's Website is

Merc's Recent Articles

Increase Your Alexa Rankings For Less than $100/month

Why increase Alexa rankings? Well, this is if you want to maximize your private ads potential. I have a surefire way of increasing your Alexa rankings and yes I am outsourcing it. I have somebody who does it for me at a ridiculously low cost. The less than $100 a month offer is not just for one site. Interested? Send me a note and we can talk about it some more==> mercblog@gmail.com

Earnings Update May 2011

I can’t remember the last time I updated this blog on my online earnings so here goes.

Adsense – My adsense earnings has been at the highest level for the month of May breaking all previous records– not that the threshold before was that high. This month’s high earnings is brought about by an event that I optimized which brought me in around 200K pageviews in two days. Yep servers were crashing everywhere. lol. You don’t get 25K visitors in an hour and not have consequences. But since I anticipated the onslaught, I have redirected my site to a blogger account so I still was able to take advantage of the huge amount of traffic.

So here’s a tip that some of new newbies at guerilla SEO may not have explored yet. When you’re expecting huge amounts of traffic in any given time, have a blogger account ready and do a 301 redirect. Yes, there’s a plugin for that. Blogger is owned by google so their servers are able to take the kind of server stress that I experienced. Otherwise, your hosting provider will temporarily ban your account.

Adbeans – Adbeans is a dud. After all the email exchanges I had with their representatives on those permalinks and widgets, they couldn’t back it up so yes, I’ve removed them from my blogging network. Twas fun while it lasted folks but yeah, if you want to retain subscribers you gotta deliver. I did earn a little bit from their site before so I guess I’m grateful for that. But it’s time to move on.

Infolinks – What can I say about infolinks? Well it’s no adsense. I’m getting more clicks per day on infolinks than adsense but I’m receiving a fraction of adsense earnings. So it’s not really an adsense alternative, more like a supplement.

Smowtion – Now this is a more compelling argument. Their creatives are really great so I’m seeing some decent conversion from this ad network. This one beats infolinks hands down. I’m excited to see if they’re going to venture into text links. I’d switch to them in a heartbeat.

Kontera – Well just like infolinks. Nothing much there.

Private ad sales – some guy wanted to put in poker links in some of my sites. Poker = gambling. Usually those who have approached me before were willing to pay top dollar (minimum of $300/link) for these gambling type links but I guess those guys aren’t around anymore. I was offered less than $200 for a one year link. Too little money, not worth the risk. So I passed.

Socrates Theme – this is not working for me AT ALL. If you want a great theme for SEO, go with Thesis. At least that one lives up to its promises.

Converting PerfectMoney To Paypal

A couple of months ago, I had one advertiser insist that I get paid in Perfect Money instead of my usual Paypal. I couldn’t really get out of the transaction we had because for one, the amount I was getting was pretty good (at least for me) and I wanted to have a repeat business with this customer. I checked out Perfect Money and it seemed like a perfectly legitimate going concern. The client and I concluded our business, and I got the amount I was promised in my Perfect Money account.

After admiring the amount in my Perfect Money account, I tried looking for ways on how to move the amount to my Paypal account. I looked everywhere and all I see are Russian websites that I had difficulty understanding and there were even a slew of those sites that even at first sight made me want to run away. Too many horror stories I guess. A couple of months have passed and my money was still sitting inside Perfect Money. I thought about doing a bank withdrawal but I was not so sure if I should really upload any personal documentation, so I didn’t.

Another month elapsed and I thought about braving those foreign sounding websites having half-convinced myself that it’s money that I could never touch, only look at. So again I did a lot of research and looked for any website that would convert my Perfect Money dollars to Paypal dollars. Then I got to this link:

magnetic-money.org/en/perfect-money-usd-to-paypal-usd.html

It actually recommended the websites who charges the least commission for converting your Perfect Money dollars to Paypal. I chose n-change.net. I wasn’t really sure if it’s a scam site, but since I’m at my wits’ end on how to get my money out of Perfect Money, I’ll try anything even if it’s a website that I’m not very comfortable with. However, I didn’t transfer my entire money. I thought that if the site turns out to be a scammer, at least I was only scammed a portion of my money. The commission they charged was 8% per transaction with a minimum charge of $4. It was pretty steep but again, I was prepared to bite the bullet.

I had to do a lot of google translate so I can understand the messages I’ve been receiving. After my transaction was said to be successful, I monitored my Paypal account to check if the money would arrive. I checked almost every hour. After a day has passed without any movement from my Paypal account, I was convinced that I’ve been had. I didn’t feel very bad because I was half-expecting it.

However, the following night after I did the N-Change transaction, I got an email from Wow Mine saying that my transaction has been completed and the money is now in my Paypal account. I was skeptical at first but when I double-checked my Paypal account, the promised money was actually there! I was so relieved that right after I got my money, I transferred all my Perfect Money balance to Paypal using N-Change. Now all my money is safely tucked away in Paypal and I couldn’t be happier.

So to folks out there who were in the same predicament as me three months ago, if you have some money in Perfect Money, and you want to move it to Paypal, use N-Change.net. It’s not a scammer site, I’ve used it already in two occasions and everything went like clockwork. This should be a reason to celebrate. Spread the word about N-Change.net!

Click Fraud

If you’re using AdWords or AdSense you must have heard about an emerging practice in the underworld of computing called “click fraud”. But what exactly is click fraud and how is it accomplished?

Well AdSense uses a payment mechanism that awards a certain amount of money to a publisher (someone who holds an AdSense banner on their page) every time a person clicks on the said banner. So click fraud is the attempt to have people clicking the ads just so that they can earn a greater income.

There are people setting up sites for the sole purpose of fraudulently generating revenue through Google’s AdSense program. These users achieve an incredible number of clicks through many methods, some complex and sophisticated and some rudimentary and simple.

One of the most complex is through the use of so called “hitbots”. These are automated programs who emulate clicking the links in AdSense banners (there are some that actually click the banners as well).

Google’s AdSense protection scheme is by no means perfect and nearly anyone can find the details of surmounting the protection mechanism, ironically just by doing a Google search.

Another, more rudimentary method is to hire a lot of people in a poor country to click the links on your site. This means these people will actually sit all day and just click links so you can earn a fortune. They come from very poor countries like India, and they’re prepared to do so for just $0.50 an hour.

Of course, there’s a problem with this mechanism. Once Google receives a large number of clicks from a single address, the address and the site that had the AdSense banner will be banned, and the illicit behavior might even get the fraudster sued.

To prevent this from happening, many people use a large number of proxy servers for the purpose of clicking. These are basically trojans, located on computers throughout the world (though mostly in the US). What’s even more daunting is that these clicks will appear to originate from an actual computer so such scams are really hard to detect.

And don’t think this happens only in isolated instances. There is a great deal of illegal activity in this domain.

In fact there’s so much that if search engine companies don’t increase their security with such programs as AdSense, such criminal behavior could become more become even more damaging.

Google has a very strict policy regarding click fraud, and it has sued those employing such techniques in the past. But while the search engine giant tries its best to minimize the risk of click fraud there’s certainly room for a lot of improvement.

It is estimated that more then 20% of the clicks that follow an AdSense link are just done in order to get money from the person paying for the ad. Some people believe the number of fraudulent clicks to be even twice as large.

There are a great deal more schemes involving click fraud, such as groups of AdSense publishers clicking each other’s links (which is referred to as “clicking rings”, or spamming people so that they click such links.

Despite Google still holding click fraud on a leash, the phenomenon is certainly raising concerns for the advertisers on AdWords, but despite this advertising with Google’s AdSense still remains more profitable for the advertiser, as opposed to traditional untargeted advertising schemes.

There are some means of protection against such schemes and all advertisers should be savvy enough to employ them. Many advertisers choose to avoid the content network all together for fear of click fraud.

Google Adsense: Why it is Important to Get Approved for the Program and the Advantages of Not Getting Your Own Blog Site

Why Do I Have to Get Approved for the Google Adsense Program

It’s not really about you. Google has standards to which they adhere and there are certain sites that they don’t want their advertiser’s ads on. Check the Program Policies for an exhaustive list of what kind of content sites are not acceptable. For the most part, they do not allow ads to be placed on any site that has excessive profanity. This is probably the hardest one to decipher as the word excessive could mean one thing to a publisher and another thing altogether to the Google Adsense program. To be on the safe side, if you notice more than a couple instances of profanity on a site you are considering using for the Google Adsense program, you might want to consider another site.

Sites that contain ads for beer, liquor or tobacco products are not allowed to participate in the Google Adsense program.

Sites that promote hate or racist attitudes are not allowed to participate in the Google Adsense program.

If the site you are considering promotes gambling, drugs, even prescription drugs then it is not suitable for the Google Adsense program.

A good guideline to go by might be if a site is family oriented. That may not cover everything but it’s a starting place. Again, check the Program Policies for more information.

Why Your Should Not Pay for Your Own Blog Site

If you already have a website that showcases your wares or you’ve been thinking about getting one, that’s great. Since you’re working on building a business anyway, you can only profit more by implementing Google Adsense on your site. As long as it conforms to Google Adsense Program Policies of course.

If, however, blogging is your interest, I say stick with the most popular blogging site you know. Or even two or three of them. Why? Traffic. Lots of it. Blogging on an already populated site versus dreaming up your own blog site is like the difference between 5:00 traffic in New York City and an old dusty country road. Not only do the owners of writingup.com, bloggerparty.com and others like it bring in the traffic, they even help you make money when you bring in more traffic.

Remember what they say in real estate: location, location, location.