Archive for June, 2008

Massive SquidTop Revamp

Posted by Zach 16 June, 2008 (0) Comment

SquidTop Revamp

I spent most of my afternoon today working with Captain Squid on SquidTop, which is a cool site where Squidoo lensmasters can make their own free blog about their lenses. Anyways, we completely revamped the site, and I must say it looks pretty awesome. It’s a really big improvement over what we had before I think.

Some stuff that SquidTop now has:

  • A completely redesigned, more eye-appealing theme
  • Site-wide search of blogs, posts, and comments
  • An anti-spam captcha system using reCAPTCHA
  • And more cool features on the way, including a friend system…

If you haven’t created a blog at SquidTop yet, you really should. Besides having a rather nice (and growing) community of Lensmasters, SquidTop is also very Google friendly. I blogged about a lens on SquidTop about a week ago and it’s already ranking high in Google, getting good traffic, and will probably very well start earning me some $ pretty soon! It does help a LOT to blog about your lenses, especially on a Google-loved site such as SquidTop.

Categories : Squidoo Tricks, Über Squidoo Stuff Tags :

Getting Around Squidoo Social Bookmarking Site Bans

Posted by Zach 15 June, 2008 (2) Comment

While browsing the SquidU forums today, I came across a post about Propeller, which is a social bookmarking site created by AOL. Not too long ago, Propeller banned Squidoo for spam reasons, which was due to people promoting their lenses the wrong way and also for getting a flood of Squidoo submissions. A lot of people probably were being honest and professional about it, it’s just that with Squidoo having over 500,000 lenses made, even a fraction of those submitted to sites like Propeller would be overwhelming.

Anyways, The Captain had a brilliant idea. Why not join SquidTop, create your a blog (free) and write up a useful and informative post about your lens and then submit that to social bookmarking sites? That way, you’ll be able to get traffic to your lens and not have to worry about the “anti-Squidoo” people who have been burned by SquidSpammers downvoting or removing your submission. And, since SquidTop blogs are in subdomain format (ie, blog.squidtop.com), the same way Blogger blogs are instead of just the Squidoo.com/lens format, it will appear a bit less overwhelming because people won’t just see the same “squidoo.com” URL over and over.

The key, though, is to be conservative about your submissions–ie, don’t overwhelm the social bookmarking sites. Also, write decent descriptions, not just one-liners, and tag and categorize your submissions properly. I’m not sure if anything is hated more by social bookmarking site users than a submission that’s in the wrong category or is tagged wrong. If you take the extra few seconds to find a proper category, write up a quick (but decent) description, and tag well, your submissions to social bookmarking sites will be enjoyed by all and will stand through the ages like a beacon of hope for your Squidoo lenses.

Categories : Squidoo Tricks, Über Squidoo Stuff Tags : , ,

Google is Weird

Posted by Zach 13 June, 2008 (3) Comment

Sometimes I just can’t understand Google. We’re kind of in a love/hate relationship. Sometimes it loves me and brings piles of traffic to my lenses, sometimes it hates me and drops my lenses completely and they are nowhere to be found.

For instance, one lens of mine was getting between 150 to 200 visitors a DAY, and was ranking on the first page for Google search results. Then suddenly it died completely for about a week. I couldn’t find it anywhere no matter how hard I tried. So, to put it mildly, I panicked just a little bit because this was one of my top performing lenses.

And suddenly, just as it died, the lens was reborn again and began receiving regular traffic again. Weird. Other lenses have gone through the same phenomenon, though on a much smaller scale because they don’t get as much traffic overall, but most of them have gone through this phase.

After doing some research, I discovered that what Google does is it places a newly-discovered site (lens) high up in the search results for a “test run”, just to see how well the site performs, how much it’s visited, etc. If the site does well, it gets rewarded by Google with a good ranking, but if not, then it basically gets shoved back to the end of the line. In my case, the lens was fairly popular and was doing well, so it got its ranking restored.

Google seems to like it when lenses get lots of backlinks, too, and I think that the “Google New Lens Effect” is lessened when new, relevant backlinks are frequently added to lenses. You can never have enough relevant backlinks to your lenses as far as Google is concerned. Google is also good friends with Father Time, and when lenses get older Google tends to treat them better. I’ve had lenses that were long dead and forgotten for a few months, but suddenly were resurrected and started getting great traffic from Google.

Time and backlinks are the salvation for new lenses I guess. Google, I love/hate you.

Categories : Squidoo Talk Tags :

30 Ways to Increase Squidoo Traffic

Posted by Zach 12 June, 2008 (5) Comment

Proper promotion is one of the keys to SquidSuccess, and here I’ve made up a list of ways to promote lenses that I have found particularly useful. Have any to add that I missed? Feel free to add them in a comment below.

1. Make something worth talking about and repeating.

2. Add unique, updated, and useful content to your lens.

3. Add new tags to your lens. You can have up to 40.

4. Submit your lens to one of the many lens groups, or create your own.

5. Join StumbleUpon and submit your lens.

6. Add your lens RSS feed to Zimbio and submit your lenses to appropriate Wikizines (Zimbio’s groups).

7. Submit your lenses to Lensroll (but only a couple a day please!)

8. Post to social bookmarking sites such as Digg and Del.icio.us–but don’t be spammy about it!

9. Comment on other people’s lenses with related, useful comments and links.

10. Comment on related blogs with a link to your related lens.

11. Start up your own blog, completely free, and promote your lenses there.

12. Build a few lenses on the same topic and cross-promote them.

13. Write good articles about your lens topic and submit them to places like ezinearticles, of course don’t forget to link to your lens.

14. Promote your lens on social networks like MySpace and Facebook.

15. Put links to one or two of your lenses in your signature at forums you hang out at.

16. Ask for feedback and help about your lens on SquidU.

17. Tell your friends about your lenses.

18. Include a link to one of your lenses in your email signature.

19. Build your lenses around specific keywords with low competition, by using tools such as Google’s Keyword Tool.

20. Start up a Monkeybrain and disagree with someone about something. Create a (fun) controversy.

21. Include interactive stuff in your lenses like polls, plexos, and guestbooks.

22. Focus on a few things about a topic in your lens; don’t try to include everything.

23. Ping your lens and notify the search engines and some directories of its creation or change.

24. Submit your lenses to Squidoo directories like Isle of Squid, Squoogle, Squidom, and LensMasterWorld.

25. Build linkbait lenses–lenses that people find useful and interesting and will likely link to, thus bringing you more traffic.

26. Improve your writing skills by taking a class at a local community college or something. It’s worth the investment.

27. Be original and creative about your lenses. Don’t copy other people’s work–they will hate you for it and so will the search engines.

28. Edit your lenses often and add more UUU (unique, updated, useful) content. Can’t emphasize this enough.

29. Fill a need. Find something people want badly and build the bridge that takes them to it.

30. Above all, don’t spam. It pays to take the time to create something of quality.

Categories : Squidoo Tips Tags :

Some Useful Reading

Posted by Zach 10 June, 2008 (0) Comment

Sorry folks, but I’m completely exhausted and my brain is too liquefied to conjure up an article tonight, so I’m going to provide you with some excellent reading–provided courtesy of Captain Squid, PotPieGirl, and Squidoo itself.

One Squidoo Lens, One month, $1,000 - If you haven’t read this blog post yet, you must. It’s the king of incredible Squidoo accomplishments, and tells how $1,000 was earned in a single month from one lens. Seriously.

Here, PotPieGirl talks about her earnings from Squidoo from July ‘07 to June ‘08. Note that the earnings she talks about were JUST from Squidoo co-pay, so pretty much money from Adsense and maybe a couple Amazon affiliate sales. Now, what she earned with that might not seem like much to a lot of people, but to me an extra $500 a year would help a lot. Plus, I consider Squidoo royalties to be just a bonus–icing on the cake. The real meat is gained by placing your own targeted affiliate product links by joining FREE affiliate programs such as LinkShare and Pepperjam. Join these programs, find products related to the content of your lens, and put ‘em up!

And, if you haven’t read Squidoo’s own free eBooks yet, you really should. They give some excellent advice for both beginning and experienced Lensmasters alike. Check them out!

Everyone’s an Expert eBook

Squidoo Traffic Secrets eBook

Categories : Squidoo Earnings, Über Squidoo Stuff Tags :