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	<title>Comments on: Want to Win 1,700 Visitors? Review Vista Rewired</title>
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		<title>By: Daniel</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-4315182</link>
		<dc:creator>Daniel</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2008 23:33:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-4315182</guid>
		<description>Hi! Firstly, I want to say that your website looks great. It’s informative, easy to read, and easy on the eyes. I can see that you really know your stuff and love what you do, which is probably the most important part. However, there are some things that you can improve, which I know you are aware of, and here are my suggestions:

~MONETIZATION
Other Opportunities
-PPC networks such as Google Adsense (which I see you have), Chitika, and Yahoo Publisher Network 
-CPM networks (which is based upon cost per 1,000 impressions) such as Casale Media, Burst Media, and Value Click
-Selling your own advertising space 
-affiliate marketing like Commission Junction and ClickBank
-monetization widgets like WidgetBucks and ScratchBack
-sponsored reviews (where you get paid to write reviews about products and websites) at networks such as PayPerPost, Sponsored Reviews, and ReviewMe
-RSS feed ads through Feedburner, BidVertiser, and Pheedo
-offer Job Boards through JobThread and Web Scribe Job Board
-simply place a “Donate” button
-sell and ebook
-offer consulting and related services
-mentoring programs

~DESIGN
I like your design! It’s very clean and easy to read. Maybe try a right hand sidebar, but it’s not necessary. 

~PROMOTION
-submit your blog to blog directories and RSS feed directories
-post press releases to online resources
-guest post to other blogs in your niche, offering helpful information
-as Darren says, NETWORK, which means connecting to other bloggers by emailing, answering questions, offering advice, and being very generous
-Advertising on sites like StumbleUpon, AdWords, and Facebook
-be active, helpful, and personable on Social Networking sites like Facebook and Myspace as well as on Social Bookmarking sites like Digg and StumbleUpon AND FORUMS
-encourage your readers to subscribe by RSS
-Answer your email and comment questions (readers love when you show them a little love too)
-make business cards!
-add your url in your email/forum signatures
-Social messaging on sites like Twitter
-link to other bloggers
-offer contests and prizes
-don’t forget making videos like on YouTube or offering free viral reports when someone joins your newsletter!


~SEO
I’m not really a big expert on this area, but I would suggest (if you aren’t already doing so) pinging your site to services like Technorati and Pingomatic. Also continue to update your site regularly so search engines will more often send their crawlers!

~CONTENT
Your content is very informative and well written. This is just a personal opinion, but maybe add a picture of yourselves in the About page? This would definitely give the reader a more personal view about you guys, and not such a technical feel. Also, you could add the description: “Vista Rewired was designed to help Vista users…the de facto site for Vista information” on the homepage to solve the problem others mentioned about what your site really is about. This way, people know from the get go what your site has to offer. Also, try new and unique post titles that really grab the reader! Maybe create a FAQs section?

~To increase the number of returning readers, just continue to provide quality content and stay positive. It takes time, but don’t be discouraged. Besides quality content, make your readers aware that you are widely know in other places as well, whether it be forums, related blogs, blog directories, linking up with other blogging projects, etc.

I really hope your blog the best, I’m sure it will! Really, there isn’t anything that much to improve, just a few little things. I can see already that your blog will become very big in the near future, so keep your confidence!

Wishing all the best,
Dan</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi! Firstly, I want to say that your website looks great. It’s informative, easy to read, and easy on the eyes. I can see that you really know your stuff and love what you do, which is probably the most important part. However, there are some things that you can improve, which I know you are aware of, and here are my suggestions:</p>
<p>~MONETIZATION<br />
Other Opportunities<br />
-PPC networks such as Google Adsense (which I see you have), Chitika, and Yahoo Publisher Network<br />
-CPM networks (which is based upon cost per 1,000 impressions) such as Casale Media, Burst Media, and Value Click<br />
-Selling your own advertising space<br />
-affiliate marketing like Commission Junction and ClickBank<br />
-monetization widgets like WidgetBucks and ScratchBack<br />
-sponsored reviews (where you get paid to write reviews about products and websites) at networks such as PayPerPost, Sponsored Reviews, and ReviewMe<br />
-RSS feed ads through Feedburner, BidVertiser, and Pheedo<br />
-offer Job Boards through JobThread and Web Scribe Job Board<br />
-simply place a “Donate” button<br />
-sell and ebook<br />
-offer consulting and related services<br />
-mentoring programs</p>
<p>~DESIGN<br />
I like your design! It’s very clean and easy to read. Maybe try a right hand sidebar, but it’s not necessary. </p>
<p>~PROMOTION<br />
-submit your blog to blog directories and RSS feed directories<br />
-post press releases to online resources<br />
-guest post to other blogs in your niche, offering helpful information<br />
-as Darren says, NETWORK, which means connecting to other bloggers by emailing, answering questions, offering advice, and being very generous<br />
-Advertising on sites like StumbleUpon, AdWords, and Facebook<br />
-be active, helpful, and personable on Social Networking sites like Facebook and Myspace as well as on Social Bookmarking sites like Digg and StumbleUpon AND FORUMS<br />
-encourage your readers to subscribe by RSS<br />
-Answer your email and comment questions (readers love when you show them a little love too)<br />
-make business cards!<br />
-add your url in your email/forum signatures<br />
-Social messaging on sites like Twitter<br />
-link to other bloggers<br />
-offer contests and prizes<br />
-don’t forget making videos like on YouTube or offering free viral reports when someone joins your newsletter!</p>
<p>~SEO<br />
I’m not really a big expert on this area, but I would suggest (if you aren’t already doing so) pinging your site to services like Technorati and Pingomatic. Also continue to update your site regularly so search engines will more often send their crawlers!</p>
<p>~CONTENT<br />
Your content is very informative and well written. This is just a personal opinion, but maybe add a picture of yourselves in the About page? This would definitely give the reader a more personal view about you guys, and not such a technical feel. Also, you could add the description: “Vista Rewired was designed to help Vista users…the de facto site for Vista information” on the homepage to solve the problem others mentioned about what your site really is about. This way, people know from the get go what your site has to offer. Also, try new and unique post titles that really grab the reader! Maybe create a FAQs section?</p>
<p>~To increase the number of returning readers, just continue to provide quality content and stay positive. It takes time, but don’t be discouraged. Besides quality content, make your readers aware that you are widely know in other places as well, whether it be forums, related blogs, blog directories, linking up with other blogging projects, etc.</p>
<p>I really hope your blog the best, I’m sure it will! Really, there isn’t anything that much to improve, just a few little things. I can see already that your blog will become very big in the near future, so keep your confidence!</p>
<p>Wishing all the best,<br />
Dan</p>
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		<title>By: University Scholar</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2987234</link>
		<dc:creator>University Scholar</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 16:55:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2987234</guid>
		<description>The overall appearance is good.

My Issues:

You need a border around your comment system or a greater contrasting background color.

The ads in the comments simply annoyed me.

When I first glance at a post.  I don&#039;t know where to go.  I feel lost and confused.  Perhaps floating the ads in the right may help, even if it downgrades monetization.  Floating the ads to  the right may help the ads in the comment section.  But I would change those ads to a horizontal box or ad links.

Get rid of the traffic rank.  It really doesn&#039;t matter to a reader.  All most readers care is that your site was the first on the SERP.

Get rid of the advertise tab.  Most people looking to advertise on a site know to look at the footer.

I think someone mentioned changing your search to a google search.  I would most definitely do it.

I keep looking at posts and I feel like my eyes can&#039;t stay focused on reading.  I don&#039;t know of a suggestion to fix it.  Perhaps have your left column a different color.  Do something like they have here on ProBlogger.

When using Vista Screen shots, keep the background of your desktop a solid color.  The extravagant background is distracting.  As a reader I just want to see what to click on, not how pretty vista really is.

Ask a question..... Good Idea!  Maybe make the question box a bit bigger.

You need to make your site look different from other vista sites.  It has a very similar style to the Vista Home Page.  You need to make it different so people remember they are not at a Microsoft site but someone who is going to really help them.    How can you do that?  Logo.  Your site is called VistaRewired.  Relate your logo to the idea of rewiring.  Then when people remember the logo, they will have a better chance of remembering the site name.

I am not a professional at all.  But this is what I came up with.  Sorry if I repeated things.  There was a lot of comments and not enough time to read them all.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The overall appearance is good.</p>
<p>My Issues:</p>
<p>You need a border around your comment system or a greater contrasting background color.</p>
<p>The ads in the comments simply annoyed me.</p>
<p>When I first glance at a post.  I don&#8217;t know where to go.  I feel lost and confused.  Perhaps floating the ads in the right may help, even if it downgrades monetization.  Floating the ads to  the right may help the ads in the comment section.  But I would change those ads to a horizontal box or ad links.</p>
<p>Get rid of the traffic rank.  It really doesn&#8217;t matter to a reader.  All most readers care is that your site was the first on the SERP.</p>
<p>Get rid of the advertise tab.  Most people looking to advertise on a site know to look at the footer.</p>
<p>I think someone mentioned changing your search to a google search.  I would most definitely do it.</p>
<p>I keep looking at posts and I feel like my eyes can&#8217;t stay focused on reading.  I don&#8217;t know of a suggestion to fix it.  Perhaps have your left column a different color.  Do something like they have here on ProBlogger.</p>
<p>When using Vista Screen shots, keep the background of your desktop a solid color.  The extravagant background is distracting.  As a reader I just want to see what to click on, not how pretty vista really is.</p>
<p>Ask a question&#8230;.. Good Idea!  Maybe make the question box a bit bigger.</p>
<p>You need to make your site look different from other vista sites.  It has a very similar style to the Vista Home Page.  You need to make it different so people remember they are not at a Microsoft site but someone who is going to really help them.    How can you do that?  Logo.  Your site is called VistaRewired.  Relate your logo to the idea of rewiring.  Then when people remember the logo, they will have a better chance of remembering the site name.</p>
<p>I am not a professional at all.  But this is what I came up with.  Sorry if I repeated things.  There was a lot of comments and not enough time to read them all.</p>
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		<title>By: Lyz</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2987017</link>
		<dc:creator>Lyz</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 15:15:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2987017</guid>
		<description>One question that I had while reading this blog was who is your audience? Is it tech-savvy vista owners--IT professionals, etc. Or is it your average Joe using Vista at home?

Also, Vista has been getting a lot of bad press lately. I think a good way to make your site relevant to the tech audience would be to &quot;talk-back&quot; to these articles. Write posts that address the issues that have been featured in news articles.

Finally, what about a message forum? The sites that answer all my Microsoft questions usually have message forums and I find the answers there. Indexing those pages so they show up in search engine queries and the queries within the site, would further optimize your site. But I definitely think you should consider a message forum.

Those are my thoughts.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One question that I had while reading this blog was who is your audience? Is it tech-savvy vista owners&#8211;IT professionals, etc. Or is it your average Joe using Vista at home?</p>
<p>Also, Vista has been getting a lot of bad press lately. I think a good way to make your site relevant to the tech audience would be to &#8220;talk-back&#8221; to these articles. Write posts that address the issues that have been featured in news articles.</p>
<p>Finally, what about a message forum? The sites that answer all my Microsoft questions usually have message forums and I find the answers there. Indexing those pages so they show up in search engine queries and the queries within the site, would further optimize your site. But I definitely think you should consider a message forum.</p>
<p>Those are my thoughts.</p>
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		<title>By: Guardian Angel</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2985466</link>
		<dc:creator>Guardian Angel</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2008 01:43:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2985466</guid>
		<description>Hi Albert,

I think I can still call myself a newbie in bloggging because it has been only 5 months since I started blogging. But I think I can share some of my ideas. I have read all of the reviews above and I suggest you try them all and choose what will fit you.

I find your blog interesting since I heard many are quite dismayed about Vista&#039;s performance. In fact, I am reading your posts one by one.

But just to add some things to improve your blog.

Talk to your readers as if you are a teacher and we are your students. Try to use some layman&#039;s terms. If you have some technical words that you need to explain further, have a separate page about it.

I noticed you do not have widgets for Mybloglog, Blog Catalog or the now-famous Entrecard. If you are not a member of any of those or the like, I suggest you join some.

I am not sure but I did not find your Archive search. I think your readers will be interested to know how long you have been blogging.

I strongly suggest you get yourself a widget from Creative Commons to protect your contents.

I think you are only using Digg. Aren&#039;t you a member of SU and the like? You can add a ADD THIS button to minimize space.

Posting your picture on your blog will make you more credible somehow. A good example is Darren himself.

I think you can also invite your readers to be a subscriber by posting a simple sentence at the end of each post. It helped me, so I suppose it can also help you. In addition, it is better if you add a subscriber counter. It will attract subscriber to-be.

Are submitting your articles to top article directories like Ezine Articles and Article Marketer? Your posts are informative so I think it is a good idea. However, I suggest that you re-write them before doing so.
 
About guest posting, your comment at Darren&#039;s post is just below my comment and I made several posts about it. In case, you did not noticed, I placed a link there but here it is again.

http://wherebloggersandhumansmeet.blogspot.com/2008/02/how-to-convince-blog-owners-that-you.html

Good luck to your blog. Thanks!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Albert,</p>
<p>I think I can still call myself a newbie in bloggging because it has been only 5 months since I started blogging. But I think I can share some of my ideas. I have read all of the reviews above and I suggest you try them all and choose what will fit you.</p>
<p>I find your blog interesting since I heard many are quite dismayed about Vista&#8217;s performance. In fact, I am reading your posts one by one.</p>
<p>But just to add some things to improve your blog.</p>
<p>Talk to your readers as if you are a teacher and we are your students. Try to use some layman&#8217;s terms. If you have some technical words that you need to explain further, have a separate page about it.</p>
<p>I noticed you do not have widgets for Mybloglog, Blog Catalog or the now-famous Entrecard. If you are not a member of any of those or the like, I suggest you join some.</p>
<p>I am not sure but I did not find your Archive search. I think your readers will be interested to know how long you have been blogging.</p>
<p>I strongly suggest you get yourself a widget from Creative Commons to protect your contents.</p>
<p>I think you are only using Digg. Aren&#8217;t you a member of SU and the like? You can add a ADD THIS button to minimize space.</p>
<p>Posting your picture on your blog will make you more credible somehow. A good example is Darren himself.</p>
<p>I think you can also invite your readers to be a subscriber by posting a simple sentence at the end of each post. It helped me, so I suppose it can also help you. In addition, it is better if you add a subscriber counter. It will attract subscriber to-be.</p>
<p>Are submitting your articles to top article directories like Ezine Articles and Article Marketer? Your posts are informative so I think it is a good idea. However, I suggest that you re-write them before doing so.</p>
<p>About guest posting, your comment at Darren&#8217;s post is just below my comment and I made several posts about it. In case, you did not noticed, I placed a link there but here it is again.</p>
<p><a href="http://wherebloggersandhumansmeet.blogspot.com/2008/02/how-to-convince-blog-owners-that-you.html" rel="nofollow">http://wherebloggersandhumansmeet.blogspot.com/2008/02/how-to-convince-blog-owners-that-you.html</a></p>
<p>Good luck to your blog. Thanks!</p>
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		<title>By: Matt B</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2984779</link>
		<dc:creator>Matt B</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 22:07:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2984779</guid>
		<description>The site looks nice enough although it could be &quot;crisper&quot; especially where the article tails into the article foot stuff. Frankly that&#039;s a bit messy.

What is missing: more explanation.  Let me give an example.  The story about the SP1 leak was interesting but the sources could have been clearer and the big golden egg - what it fixes - was missing entirely.  Even a link or three would have been good.

Solve the clarity and crispness issue along with the depth of information and your return rate should be higher.  

Frankly given the size of images you might as well go for a handful of points size increase in the preview of the article.  Each of which should appear visually self contained.  As has been said already there is too much visual bleed of one element into another.

Consider also center aligning images in the articles or placing them in a formatted div with a paragraph of smaller bold text captioning the image.  Along with that is the suggestion of sub headings that don&#039;t look like bold text.  You main sub-title bar (date, filed under) looks really nice so try to capture some of that into a heading format.  Perhaps a faded version behind the heading.  

Sadly this sub bar is so good that the title above it looks naked.  A version of the bar that resizes with the title would work.

Personally I think &quot;filed under&quot; sounds crap so I always try to come up with my own phrase such as &quot;read more on...&quot;

I would also look for a graphical element that could be used in different ways (such as cliche wires or a site mascot).  Try to capture some more of the vista theme if you can as this will show your love of vista or drop it completely and go for something else.

Nobodies like me can get away with those Alexa boxes but I would think twice about it staying where it is.

On money making I would review software that works well with vista and this would allow affiliate (even amazon) products to be promoted among the side bar real estate.  Ideally fill that bar after the site content is done with links to reviews and product profiles.

On that subject amazon should allow you to be able to &quot;sell&quot; vista.  For a Vista site all things vista related should be available.

As for stickiness I would commission a set of vista themes based on the new site theme you are going to be making.  So then people can mod vista to look like you.

Consider making a Google Custom Search Engine and make sure you bond it with your AdSense.  Then make the search exclusive to yourself and any key partners the site might have.  Make a VISTA SIDE BAR WIDGET which should be a piece of pie for your tech guy.  Use the custom search search box that Google gives you and make sure is it on the site as well as in the search widget.

While you are at it create a sub-domain themed and linked back to the blog like vista-faq.vistarewired.com and SEO it just enough to get it crawled properly.  Add that as a site on the custom search engine.  Fill it it pithy 250 words or less question and answer stuff.

This will add value to the widget and give you more selling power.  Be sure that the FAQ has all the basic &quot;OMG did you even read the help text&quot; stuff as well as the more interesting stuff.  Keep to a good tree structure and make sure the FAQ has very few ads.  It&#039;s a funnel to push people back to the blog after you have exposed them to ads in the first place.

Repeat this with a sub-domain of product reviews for every book and product you can find.  One page each.  Clear links and a few &quot;back home&quot;.

Because you have all these sub-domains springing up as separate sites on the custom search you can make it even better for the users.  You can add key words that refine the search.  Make one for each sub domain &quot;FAQ&quot;, &quot;Software&quot;, &quot;Books&quot; and so on.  This will help people get to what they need fast.

Push that widget as hard as you can.  Drop Google ads at the post footer to make room for a clear promo space for it.

Every time it is installed you have a captive audience that will come back time and again.  Make sure you get it listed on the vista home page with Microsoft.

On the subject of FAQs make sure there is a box that you push quite hard (but not as hard as the search and the side bar widget) that allows users to pose questions.  If you can then allow readers to offer answers with the best three kept as the final answer &quot;Vista Answers&quot; is then another sub domain of search and a great unique feature.

So that&#039;s income, stickiness and pro-look sorted. Not to mention the SEO kickback from the basic content for the search engine (might as well use it).

At this stage your site should be starting to promote itself.  Obviously the first with the news and best in depth editorial and explanation of the news for the niche is vital but now you want something viral.

Vista is visual so go visual.  You have those themes for vista (right?) shoot a series of videos showing how to do something cool with vista.  Like my not too intuitive tip.

When you unlock the tool bar you can resize stuff but that kills a lot of otherwise handy space.  Resize the space for the quick launch bar (after removing things that you don&#039;t use very often like outlook or calculator).  Now close it back up until the second icon has just vanished.  Lock the tool bar and the space created will &quot;unhide&quot; the quick launch icons.

Now if all that has worked as well as you hoped and the viral are pulling them in.  It&#039;s time for the funny section.  Geeks get frustrated with windows and so offering a place where they can make jokes about it and see the best ones published (cartoons too if you can arrange them) will act as a stress reliever and a viral.

By now you should have a popular site and with all those people downloading the vista help sidebar gadget lots of traffic and Google money too.

Now for the killer stroke.  A classifieds for vista trouble shooters and hardware guys to advertise in.  &quot;Need help - want to hire someone to sort it out in Boston, France or ...&quot; then they need your site.  A feedback system or other basic vetting system would be good but like amazon make sure you set it up so that the money goes through you and you get your 5%.  

It&#039;s a lot of work but this is what the entire project is now about.  Because you are the central authority you are the market place where people bid to fix other people&#039;s problems, sell computers and related services and make you a tidy profit.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The site looks nice enough although it could be &#8220;crisper&#8221; especially where the article tails into the article foot stuff. Frankly that&#8217;s a bit messy.</p>
<p>What is missing: more explanation.  Let me give an example.  The story about the SP1 leak was interesting but the sources could have been clearer and the big golden egg &#8211; what it fixes &#8211; was missing entirely.  Even a link or three would have been good.</p>
<p>Solve the clarity and crispness issue along with the depth of information and your return rate should be higher.  </p>
<p>Frankly given the size of images you might as well go for a handful of points size increase in the preview of the article.  Each of which should appear visually self contained.  As has been said already there is too much visual bleed of one element into another.</p>
<p>Consider also center aligning images in the articles or placing them in a formatted div with a paragraph of smaller bold text captioning the image.  Along with that is the suggestion of sub headings that don&#8217;t look like bold text.  You main sub-title bar (date, filed under) looks really nice so try to capture some of that into a heading format.  Perhaps a faded version behind the heading.  </p>
<p>Sadly this sub bar is so good that the title above it looks naked.  A version of the bar that resizes with the title would work.</p>
<p>Personally I think &#8220;filed under&#8221; sounds crap so I always try to come up with my own phrase such as &#8220;read more on&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>I would also look for a graphical element that could be used in different ways (such as cliche wires or a site mascot).  Try to capture some more of the vista theme if you can as this will show your love of vista or drop it completely and go for something else.</p>
<p>Nobodies like me can get away with those Alexa boxes but I would think twice about it staying where it is.</p>
<p>On money making I would review software that works well with vista and this would allow affiliate (even amazon) products to be promoted among the side bar real estate.  Ideally fill that bar after the site content is done with links to reviews and product profiles.</p>
<p>On that subject amazon should allow you to be able to &#8220;sell&#8221; vista.  For a Vista site all things vista related should be available.</p>
<p>As for stickiness I would commission a set of vista themes based on the new site theme you are going to be making.  So then people can mod vista to look like you.</p>
<p>Consider making a Google Custom Search Engine and make sure you bond it with your AdSense.  Then make the search exclusive to yourself and any key partners the site might have.  Make a VISTA SIDE BAR WIDGET which should be a piece of pie for your tech guy.  Use the custom search search box that Google gives you and make sure is it on the site as well as in the search widget.</p>
<p>While you are at it create a sub-domain themed and linked back to the blog like vista-faq.vistarewired.com and SEO it just enough to get it crawled properly.  Add that as a site on the custom search engine.  Fill it it pithy 250 words or less question and answer stuff.</p>
<p>This will add value to the widget and give you more selling power.  Be sure that the FAQ has all the basic &#8220;OMG did you even read the help text&#8221; stuff as well as the more interesting stuff.  Keep to a good tree structure and make sure the FAQ has very few ads.  It&#8217;s a funnel to push people back to the blog after you have exposed them to ads in the first place.</p>
<p>Repeat this with a sub-domain of product reviews for every book and product you can find.  One page each.  Clear links and a few &#8220;back home&#8221;.</p>
<p>Because you have all these sub-domains springing up as separate sites on the custom search you can make it even better for the users.  You can add key words that refine the search.  Make one for each sub domain &#8220;FAQ&#8221;, &#8220;Software&#8221;, &#8220;Books&#8221; and so on.  This will help people get to what they need fast.</p>
<p>Push that widget as hard as you can.  Drop Google ads at the post footer to make room for a clear promo space for it.</p>
<p>Every time it is installed you have a captive audience that will come back time and again.  Make sure you get it listed on the vista home page with Microsoft.</p>
<p>On the subject of FAQs make sure there is a box that you push quite hard (but not as hard as the search and the side bar widget) that allows users to pose questions.  If you can then allow readers to offer answers with the best three kept as the final answer &#8220;Vista Answers&#8221; is then another sub domain of search and a great unique feature.</p>
<p>So that&#8217;s income, stickiness and pro-look sorted. Not to mention the SEO kickback from the basic content for the search engine (might as well use it).</p>
<p>At this stage your site should be starting to promote itself.  Obviously the first with the news and best in depth editorial and explanation of the news for the niche is vital but now you want something viral.</p>
<p>Vista is visual so go visual.  You have those themes for vista (right?) shoot a series of videos showing how to do something cool with vista.  Like my not too intuitive tip.</p>
<p>When you unlock the tool bar you can resize stuff but that kills a lot of otherwise handy space.  Resize the space for the quick launch bar (after removing things that you don&#8217;t use very often like outlook or calculator).  Now close it back up until the second icon has just vanished.  Lock the tool bar and the space created will &#8220;unhide&#8221; the quick launch icons.</p>
<p>Now if all that has worked as well as you hoped and the viral are pulling them in.  It&#8217;s time for the funny section.  Geeks get frustrated with windows and so offering a place where they can make jokes about it and see the best ones published (cartoons too if you can arrange them) will act as a stress reliever and a viral.</p>
<p>By now you should have a popular site and with all those people downloading the vista help sidebar gadget lots of traffic and Google money too.</p>
<p>Now for the killer stroke.  A classifieds for vista trouble shooters and hardware guys to advertise in.  &#8220;Need help &#8211; want to hire someone to sort it out in Boston, France or &#8230;&#8221; then they need your site.  A feedback system or other basic vetting system would be good but like amazon make sure you set it up so that the money goes through you and you get your 5%.  </p>
<p>It&#8217;s a lot of work but this is what the entire project is now about.  Because you are the central authority you are the market place where people bid to fix other people&#8217;s problems, sell computers and related services and make you a tidy profit.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Troy</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2984666</link>
		<dc:creator>Troy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 21:26:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2984666</guid>
		<description>I agree with what people are saying about keeping your focus. However, if you find a great piece of software that is unique to Vista, that would be a great thing to blog about. Remember though, you&#039;re probably targeting newbies who don&#039;t necessarily use Firefox, and spending too much time on these kinds of things might cause them to stop returning.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I agree with what people are saying about keeping your focus. However, if you find a great piece of software that is unique to Vista, that would be a great thing to blog about. Remember though, you&#8217;re probably targeting newbies who don&#8217;t necessarily use Firefox, and spending too much time on these kinds of things might cause them to stop returning.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: TzuVelli</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2984338</link>
		<dc:creator>TzuVelli</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 19:53:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2984338</guid>
		<description>Albert,

I think as long as you keep with in the confines of Vista when you write about Firefox, Office, or whatever, you should be fine. But, start talking about Linux, FreeBSD, MacOSX.....And you may start to loose your core audience.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Albert,</p>
<p>I think as long as you keep with in the confines of Vista when you write about Firefox, Office, or whatever, you should be fine. But, start talking about Linux, FreeBSD, MacOSX&#8230;..And you may start to loose your core audience.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Joe</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2984071</link>
		<dc:creator>Joe</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 18:31:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2984071</guid>
		<description>I believe the less focused your blog is, the harder time you&#039;ll have getting and keeping subscribers. If I&#039;m interested in Vista, I may get annoyed being notified about Firefox issues. One way to get around that is to have dedicated feeds for only certain categories, but in my opinion you might as well then just have different sites altogether. If the point of the site is to be the authority on Vista, it won&#039;t be very convincing if you spend time on non-Vista items.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I believe the less focused your blog is, the harder time you&#8217;ll have getting and keeping subscribers. If I&#8217;m interested in Vista, I may get annoyed being notified about Firefox issues. One way to get around that is to have dedicated feeds for only certain categories, but in my opinion you might as well then just have different sites altogether. If the point of the site is to be the authority on Vista, it won&#8217;t be very convincing if you spend time on non-Vista items.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Albert</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2984054</link>
		<dc:creator>Albert</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 18:27:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2984054</guid>
		<description>Thanks for the comments guys, I really appreciate it. One thing I forgot to ask is if you guys think it would be a good idea for me to continue blogging about Vista, but expand into other areas of interest: Possibly firefox, and other neat computer tweaks.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks for the comments guys, I really appreciate it. One thing I forgot to ask is if you guys think it would be a good idea for me to continue blogging about Vista, but expand into other areas of interest: Possibly firefox, and other neat computer tweaks.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Jacob Share</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2983097</link>
		<dc:creator>Jacob Share</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 12:50:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2983097</guid>
		<description>Here&#039;s a terrific article that every blogger should read:

http://www.pureblogging.com/2008/03/10/99-ways-to-improve-your-blog/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s a terrific article that every blogger should read:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pureblogging.com/2008/03/10/99-ways-to-improve-your-blog/" rel="nofollow">http://www.pureblogging.com/2008/03/10/99-ways-to-improve-your-blog/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Guruvardhan</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2982672</link>
		<dc:creator>Guruvardhan</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 10:46:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2982672</guid>
		<description>Hi there!

I think that one should think about giving quality content to their  members and the monetization part will automatically pitch in.... but nonetheless, a smart layout and good content will do everything to make your visitors to visit it regularly...and you can bet on it!

www.80feetroad.blogspot.com
cheers!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi there!</p>
<p>I think that one should think about giving quality content to their  members and the monetization part will automatically pitch in&#8230;. but nonetheless, a smart layout and good content will do everything to make your visitors to visit it regularly&#8230;and you can bet on it!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.80feetroad.blogspot.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.80feetroad.blogspot.com</a><br />
cheers!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: John Kolbert</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2981313</link>
		<dc:creator>John Kolbert</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 04:30:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2981313</guid>
		<description>How about a favicon and a title?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>How about a favicon and a title?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Tray Gamble</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2981294</link>
		<dc:creator>Tray Gamble</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 04:25:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2981294</guid>
		<description>Stepping out of my &quot;comfort zone&quot; to take a go at this. I&#039;m here to learn too. To give my best first impressions, I have delayed looking at other posts until after I &quot;jump off the edge&quot; and submit my own.  I hope my comments add value as intended.

Max Blog Monetization - Opportunities for additional revenue streams 
• Move “Advertising” section off middle of “About” page onto 
  its own eye appealing page
• Kontera or content type ads on all pages
• Joint ventures
• Add a few small affiliate banners in sponsored links area
• Offer Vista consulting services
• Add fee-based Webinars and Teleseminars
• Offering related affiliate products as non-intrusive product 
   review recommendations
• Create your own informational products to sell
• Offer a comprehensive Teleseminar,  JV partnering with a 
  higher skilled industry expert if required and pre-sell 
  attendance to your visitors and subscribers
• Add an “Advertise with us” type text link or button for your 
  site on your sidebar 
• Offer one of your free tutorials or reports to a 
  complimentary website owner for distribution to their mailing
  list. This increases goodwill for their list because it’s 
  something of value for free, it increases your site traffic and
  eventually your bottom line as well.
• Build a solid industry directory by letting people list free. As
  companies notice the amount of traffic you can send them, 
  they will happily pay to be featured advertisers. 
  
What’s Missing
• One thing missing is a highly visible opt-in form on the 
  pages and incentive to entice email sign ups, especially in 
  the top fold. This incentive could offer a viral report 
  branded with affiliate links on “Top 10 things every Vista 
  owner must know and do or your operating system will 
  crash.” A valuable free e-book, tutorial or download can 
  also be offered
• Testimonials
• Audio and video (tutorials, interviews, site greeting etc) to 
  capture even more attention and traffic
• 404 page that re-directs visitors back to your site rather 
  than leading them away
• I received this Error 404 - Not Found; If this is the first time 
  you have seen the new template, please press Shift + 
  Refresh to avoid encountering this 404 page again. I did as
  instructed but the 404 error page still returned
• Resources section 
• Post archives
• Category page consistency
• Google Adsense consistency, and continuity 
• Tell a friend scripts
• Tag use consistency under posts

Increasing Return Visitor Rate – This site already has over 150K page views with 90K unique monthly visitors, plus they also have the no. 1 spot on Google for “vistarewired and vista rewired,”so obviously it’s already doing a lot of things really well. 

• Other considerations to increase the return rate of visitors 
  is by perhaps offering a series of articles on a hot topic 
  among Vista users.
• Consider adding the following types of social bookmarking 
  icons to your pages: 
  &quot;Bookmark This Site&quot;, Technorati, Stumbleupon, Digg etc.
• Provide an expert “Tip of the Day” or “Ask Vista Experts” 
  area
• Offer a contest/prize for the best reader tip of the week
• Interview industry experts you promote in advance to your 
  readers
• Resources section
• Offering a newsletter can bring people back to your site by 
  reminding them of all the updates, strategies etc. they are 
  missing on your site
• Calendar of events relative to your visitors and your 
  industry
• Review products, events, movers and shakers in your 
  industry
• Offer webinars or visiting expert teleseminars
• Add a forum for your visitors
• Identify where your visitors exit; fix any broken pages, 
  update content, try something new etc.
• Test to see how statistics are affected when you make 
  changes
• Consider adding a favicon to make your bookmarks stand 
  out

Design 
• The site content appears the same in various browsers 
  (Netscape, Firefox, and Internet Explorer) which is good
• Capitalize on areas your visitors spend more time viewing 
  or consider use of site heat maps to see areas your visitors
  look first or click first the most
• Adding posts with more exciting/alive titles will add more of 
  the “make me want to read it” appeal
• Cleaner sidebar navigation might result moving the 
 “Categories” section higher up with shorter, more exciting 
  titles in the “Featured, Popular, and Most Recent” sections 
  increasing visual appeal. Consider drop down category 
  options also.
• Add “Tutorials” or other popular site area link to your page 
  header tabs; header tab background color is strong. This 
  might work better if a softer and closer related color to the 
  background behind “Vista Rewired” is used.
• Include larger linked RSS button and identification text for 
  non-internet savvy users
• Include visible sign up to feed via email link or button
• The visual flow of the site seems interrupted by columns 
   that are too wide and the placement is inconsistent with 
  ads running right into the edge of posts 
• Graphics could be reduced in size and used in a more post
  flattering manner Screenshots use would enhance front 
  page posts considerably 
• The Google ads are very distracting because they “feel” 
  like separate page elements and bleed over into the posts, 
  rather than blending into the surrounding site environment. 
  For example, “Create a hardware community…,” has the 
  rest of the article split, aligned to the left and placed 
  beneath a Google ad
• The comments section is way too distracting and all the 
  page elements appear to blend together with “content 
  crashes” due to unclear content demarcation indicators
• Some pages have Google ads running into the comments 
  section, with dark brown or black backgrounds, blue, tan 
  and purple words that are not too appealing, at least not to 
  me. Another such ad shows up mixing into the comment 
  reply space. Smaller, well placed and more neutral colored 
  ads I feel would be more effective

Content 
• The site has lots of relevant content to increase page rank.
  Consider also creating content based on what Vista users 
  want by researching highly searched keywords and using 
  them as a guide for article topics or post content
• Add article directory content if you are stumped for ideas
• Re-visit your old posts which have gotten good feedback 
  and see if you can make them bigger, better or if changes 
  in the industry have affected post relevancy
• Poll your site visitors to see what they like and would like to 
  see more of, then give it to them
• Automatically updating content or newsfeeds keeps content
  fresh while freeing up time for other expansions etc.
• Allowing others to reproduce certain articles with your 
  resource box intact makes them viral

Promotion 
• Offer a contest/prize for the best reader tip of the week etc
• Branded t-shirt, ink pen or mouse pad giveaways or 
  contests
• Press releases of new products in your industry 
• Create a video tutorial and add to YouTube
• Review products, events, movers and shakers in your 
  industry
• Article submissions to related sites or directories
• Guest post on related sites
• Answer questions in forums with site in signature line
• Get listed on several of the internet radio shows 
• Submit articles to Yahoo! Groups etc.

SEO 
• Using keyword themed titles and content to increase the 
  quality of visitors coming to your site
• Determine if your site is optimized for the viewers and 
  platforms your visitors are using the most</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stepping out of my &#8220;comfort zone&#8221; to take a go at this. I&#8217;m here to learn too. To give my best first impressions, I have delayed looking at other posts until after I &#8220;jump off the edge&#8221; and submit my own.  I hope my comments add value as intended.</p>
<p>Max Blog Monetization &#8211; Opportunities for additional revenue streams<br />
• Move “Advertising” section off middle of “About” page onto<br />
  its own eye appealing page<br />
• Kontera or content type ads on all pages<br />
• Joint ventures<br />
• Add a few small affiliate banners in sponsored links area<br />
• Offer Vista consulting services<br />
• Add fee-based Webinars and Teleseminars<br />
• Offering related affiliate products as non-intrusive product<br />
   review recommendations<br />
• Create your own informational products to sell<br />
• Offer a comprehensive Teleseminar,  JV partnering with a<br />
  higher skilled industry expert if required and pre-sell<br />
  attendance to your visitors and subscribers<br />
• Add an “Advertise with us” type text link or button for your<br />
  site on your sidebar<br />
• Offer one of your free tutorials or reports to a<br />
  complimentary website owner for distribution to their mailing<br />
  list. This increases goodwill for their list because it’s<br />
  something of value for free, it increases your site traffic and<br />
  eventually your bottom line as well.<br />
• Build a solid industry directory by letting people list free. As<br />
  companies notice the amount of traffic you can send them,<br />
  they will happily pay to be featured advertisers. </p>
<p>What’s Missing<br />
• One thing missing is a highly visible opt-in form on the<br />
  pages and incentive to entice email sign ups, especially in<br />
  the top fold. This incentive could offer a viral report<br />
  branded with affiliate links on “Top 10 things every Vista<br />
  owner must know and do or your operating system will<br />
  crash.” A valuable free e-book, tutorial or download can<br />
  also be offered<br />
• Testimonials<br />
• Audio and video (tutorials, interviews, site greeting etc) to<br />
  capture even more attention and traffic<br />
• 404 page that re-directs visitors back to your site rather<br />
  than leading them away<br />
• I received this Error 404 &#8211; Not Found; If this is the first time<br />
  you have seen the new template, please press Shift +<br />
  Refresh to avoid encountering this 404 page again. I did as<br />
  instructed but the 404 error page still returned<br />
• Resources section<br />
• Post archives<br />
• Category page consistency<br />
• Google Adsense consistency, and continuity<br />
• Tell a friend scripts<br />
• Tag use consistency under posts</p>
<p>Increasing Return Visitor Rate – This site already has over 150K page views with 90K unique monthly visitors, plus they also have the no. 1 spot on Google for “vistarewired and vista rewired,”so obviously it’s already doing a lot of things really well. </p>
<p>• Other considerations to increase the return rate of visitors<br />
  is by perhaps offering a series of articles on a hot topic<br />
  among Vista users.<br />
• Consider adding the following types of social bookmarking<br />
  icons to your pages:<br />
  &#8220;Bookmark This Site&#8221;, Technorati, Stumbleupon, Digg etc.<br />
• Provide an expert “Tip of the Day” or “Ask Vista Experts”<br />
  area<br />
• Offer a contest/prize for the best reader tip of the week<br />
• Interview industry experts you promote in advance to your<br />
  readers<br />
• Resources section<br />
• Offering a newsletter can bring people back to your site by<br />
  reminding them of all the updates, strategies etc. they are<br />
  missing on your site<br />
• Calendar of events relative to your visitors and your<br />
  industry<br />
• Review products, events, movers and shakers in your<br />
  industry<br />
• Offer webinars or visiting expert teleseminars<br />
• Add a forum for your visitors<br />
• Identify where your visitors exit; fix any broken pages,<br />
  update content, try something new etc.<br />
• Test to see how statistics are affected when you make<br />
  changes<br />
• Consider adding a favicon to make your bookmarks stand<br />
  out</p>
<p>Design<br />
• The site content appears the same in various browsers<br />
  (Netscape, Firefox, and Internet Explorer) which is good<br />
• Capitalize on areas your visitors spend more time viewing<br />
  or consider use of site heat maps to see areas your visitors<br />
  look first or click first the most<br />
• Adding posts with more exciting/alive titles will add more of<br />
  the “make me want to read it” appeal<br />
• Cleaner sidebar navigation might result moving the<br />
 “Categories” section higher up with shorter, more exciting<br />
  titles in the “Featured, Popular, and Most Recent” sections<br />
  increasing visual appeal. Consider drop down category<br />
  options also.<br />
• Add “Tutorials” or other popular site area link to your page<br />
  header tabs; header tab background color is strong. This<br />
  might work better if a softer and closer related color to the<br />
  background behind “Vista Rewired” is used.<br />
• Include larger linked RSS button and identification text for<br />
  non-internet savvy users<br />
• Include visible sign up to feed via email link or button<br />
• The visual flow of the site seems interrupted by columns<br />
   that are too wide and the placement is inconsistent with<br />
  ads running right into the edge of posts<br />
• Graphics could be reduced in size and used in a more post<br />
  flattering manner Screenshots use would enhance front<br />
  page posts considerably<br />
• The Google ads are very distracting because they “feel”<br />
  like separate page elements and bleed over into the posts,<br />
  rather than blending into the surrounding site environment.<br />
  For example, “Create a hardware community…,” has the<br />
  rest of the article split, aligned to the left and placed<br />
  beneath a Google ad<br />
• The comments section is way too distracting and all the<br />
  page elements appear to blend together with “content<br />
  crashes” due to unclear content demarcation indicators<br />
• Some pages have Google ads running into the comments<br />
  section, with dark brown or black backgrounds, blue, tan<br />
  and purple words that are not too appealing, at least not to<br />
  me. Another such ad shows up mixing into the comment<br />
  reply space. Smaller, well placed and more neutral colored<br />
  ads I feel would be more effective</p>
<p>Content<br />
• The site has lots of relevant content to increase page rank.<br />
  Consider also creating content based on what Vista users<br />
  want by researching highly searched keywords and using<br />
  them as a guide for article topics or post content<br />
• Add article directory content if you are stumped for ideas<br />
• Re-visit your old posts which have gotten good feedback<br />
  and see if you can make them bigger, better or if changes<br />
  in the industry have affected post relevancy<br />
• Poll your site visitors to see what they like and would like to<br />
  see more of, then give it to them<br />
• Automatically updating content or newsfeeds keeps content<br />
  fresh while freeing up time for other expansions etc.<br />
• Allowing others to reproduce certain articles with your<br />
  resource box intact makes them viral</p>
<p>Promotion<br />
• Offer a contest/prize for the best reader tip of the week etc<br />
• Branded t-shirt, ink pen or mouse pad giveaways or<br />
  contests<br />
• Press releases of new products in your industry<br />
• Create a video tutorial and add to YouTube<br />
• Review products, events, movers and shakers in your<br />
  industry<br />
• Article submissions to related sites or directories<br />
• Guest post on related sites<br />
• Answer questions in forums with site in signature line<br />
• Get listed on several of the internet radio shows<br />
• Submit articles to Yahoo! Groups etc.</p>
<p>SEO<br />
• Using keyword themed titles and content to increase the<br />
  quality of visitors coming to your site<br />
• Determine if your site is optimized for the viewers and<br />
  platforms your visitors are using the most</p>
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		<title>By: Chris</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2981290</link>
		<dc:creator>Chris</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 04:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2981290</guid>
		<description>The site looks nice, but I&#039;m going to differ on the advice to move the 336 x 280 adsense block to the left.

The adsense 336 x 280 ad might be better placed on the right side so that readers read right into it, rather than having it on the left where it looks like a separate column that can be ignored.  It&#039;s easier to mentally skip the ad block because it looks like the middle column in a three column layout.  The text the reader is looking for is on the right, so it is natural to move right to that &quot;column.&quot;

Another reader suggested moving the 336 x 280 ad from the inline position to one in between the post title and the text.  This might be the most pleasing place to put the advertisement because a reader would naturally read from the top to the bottom and would very likely to read the ads.

You might also want to experiment with blending the 336x280 ad into the text -- place it right about the text and set all text and links to be black -- the same color as your text -- and the background white with no border.  Try a test with this as well to see if it makes a differences in your results.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The site looks nice, but I&#8217;m going to differ on the advice to move the 336 x 280 adsense block to the left.</p>
<p>The adsense 336 x 280 ad might be better placed on the right side so that readers read right into it, rather than having it on the left where it looks like a separate column that can be ignored.  It&#8217;s easier to mentally skip the ad block because it looks like the middle column in a three column layout.  The text the reader is looking for is on the right, so it is natural to move right to that &#8220;column.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another reader suggested moving the 336 x 280 ad from the inline position to one in between the post title and the text.  This might be the most pleasing place to put the advertisement because a reader would naturally read from the top to the bottom and would very likely to read the ads.</p>
<p>You might also want to experiment with blending the 336&#215;280 ad into the text &#8212; place it right about the text and set all text and links to be black &#8212; the same color as your text &#8212; and the background white with no border.  Try a test with this as well to see if it makes a differences in your results.</p>
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		<title>By: Troy</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2980802</link>
		<dc:creator>Troy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 01:35:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2980802</guid>
		<description>Albert - Don&#039;t know if you&#039;re reading this far down, but in my opinion total sidebar width should be around 250px max for 125x125 image spots. Yours is plenty large enough for that, and more might look spammy because of the adsense ads you already place in the content.

 A good advertise here page is key, with an image highlighting where people can place their ads. You might also have to wait until you get more visitors and authority on Technorati. In the meantime, blend your Adsense ad links to be the same color as your post titles, and for heavens sake use a smaller ad block in posts. Notice how that ad is so large it breaks up the whole Problogger review announcement? That looks bad, and will deter many a visitor from reading on.

You may also want to check out AdBrite, which lets you sell ads more or less directly, but with a middleman to make things easier and present the ads professionally. I have not had huge success with this approach, but since your page rank is higher than mine you may get into Text Link Ads, which is nicer. This calculator allows you to see an estimate of what you might get paid:
http://www.linkworth.com/tools/linkquote.php

Like everything else, your ads will need special promotion of their own if they will sell. Blogging is an exhausting business :).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Albert &#8211; Don&#8217;t know if you&#8217;re reading this far down, but in my opinion total sidebar width should be around 250px max for 125&#215;125 image spots. Yours is plenty large enough for that, and more might look spammy because of the adsense ads you already place in the content.</p>
<p> A good advertise here page is key, with an image highlighting where people can place their ads. You might also have to wait until you get more visitors and authority on Technorati. In the meantime, blend your Adsense ad links to be the same color as your post titles, and for heavens sake use a smaller ad block in posts. Notice how that ad is so large it breaks up the whole Problogger review announcement? That looks bad, and will deter many a visitor from reading on.</p>
<p>You may also want to check out AdBrite, which lets you sell ads more or less directly, but with a middleman to make things easier and present the ads professionally. I have not had huge success with this approach, but since your page rank is higher than mine you may get into Text Link Ads, which is nicer. This calculator allows you to see an estimate of what you might get paid:<br />
<a href="http://www.linkworth.com/tools/linkquote.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.linkworth.com/tools/linkquote.php</a></p>
<p>Like everything else, your ads will need special promotion of their own if they will sell. Blogging is an exhausting business :).</p>
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		<title>By: Nancy</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2980238</link>
		<dc:creator>Nancy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 23:28:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2980238</guid>
		<description>Monetization:
I&#039;m always turned off when I see Google AdSense in the center top column of a site. I rarely search a site or revisit it when I see that kind of advertising, particularly when it is so prominently part of the post. It cheapens the content.

Design:
One of the most important things to me on an information-based site is ease of finding information. It&#039;s nice that you have a search button but I didn&#039;t notice it at first because of all the post links in the left hand column. I clicked on the &quot;Articles&quot; tab. Not clear how an alphabetical listing by title is helpful. If I want to know about Google Calendar display I&#039;m going to look under &quot;g&quot; not &quot;d&quot;.

The blog feels too technical given your target audience of &quot;all Vista users&quot;. At first glance, I would assume it&#039;s for IT people. I would add graphics and pictures to make the site more approachable.

How about a &quot;Top Ten Vista Tips&quot; to help drive more people to your site?

It&#039;s clear you&#039;ve put a lot of thought into this. Good luck.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Monetization:<br />
I&#8217;m always turned off when I see Google AdSense in the center top column of a site. I rarely search a site or revisit it when I see that kind of advertising, particularly when it is so prominently part of the post. It cheapens the content.</p>
<p>Design:<br />
One of the most important things to me on an information-based site is ease of finding information. It&#8217;s nice that you have a search button but I didn&#8217;t notice it at first because of all the post links in the left hand column. I clicked on the &#8220;Articles&#8221; tab. Not clear how an alphabetical listing by title is helpful. If I want to know about Google Calendar display I&#8217;m going to look under &#8220;g&#8221; not &#8220;d&#8221;.</p>
<p>The blog feels too technical given your target audience of &#8220;all Vista users&#8221;. At first glance, I would assume it&#8217;s for IT people. I would add graphics and pictures to make the site more approachable.</p>
<p>How about a &#8220;Top Ten Vista Tips&#8221; to help drive more people to your site?</p>
<p>It&#8217;s clear you&#8217;ve put a lot of thought into this. Good luck.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Nathania Johnson</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2979388</link>
		<dc:creator>Nathania Johnson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 21:09:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2979388</guid>
		<description>Design 

I like the theme, but the site looks a bit spammy, in my opinion. The Google Adsense box is big, and I personally am not a big fan of the double underline advertising. BUT if it’s performing well, don’t touch it. Testing would be a good way to see what works the best for your site. Any advertising testing should be done AFTER all other changes are put into place (content, seo, etc.). 

Content 

- 25+ things Vista can do that Mac can’t (expect hate mail from the cult of Apple)
- 37 Vista Features That You’re Not Using But Should
- Is Vista Better Than Mac for Moms? (go for the mommy bloggers!)
- 101 Reasons You Should Switch to Vista

Promotion

I would create a blogroll immediately! Also, participate in the conversation happening around PCs and Microsoft. Link out to blogs in order to get attention to others in the blogosphere. If you’re not commenting on other blogs or otherwise networking with other bloggers in your niche, you should be. You could also use the “track” feature on Twitter to find people talking about Vista.

SEO 

Definitely add keywords to the Title tags of your pages, including your home page! And create unique meta description and keyword tags for pages. Use the All in One SEO Pack plugin for this. Another necessary plugin is the permalink redirect plugin for Wordpress. Without it, WP creates 2 pages for every post – one with and one without a forward slash. Finally, try to obtain inbound links from more sources. Doing the above promotional tasks will help accomplish that, but submit to blog carnivals and ask to be included in link roundups on other blogs. 

Monetization

Sign up for affiliate programs that are related to your blog. You want ads for computers that run Vista as well as Microsoft related products like the Zune or the Xbox 360. Also, consider adding consulting and coaching services as well as premium content, such as an e-book or e-learning classes. 

What’s Missing?

I think what’s missing are buyers tips. When I purchased my laptop, I learned that I needed 2GB of memory in order for Vista to run well. Most of your blog posts are about patches and fixes. I think you should write more “positive” posts about features, benefits and how Vista helps people.
 
Returning Visitors

Having a low number of returning visitors is a great thing IF you’re increasing your total visitors over time. The idea is to gain steadily – and that should always result in a high number of new visitors. 

Good luck, Albert! You&#039;re already doing a fantastic job providing a wealth of information that is extremely useful to a large (potential) audience!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Design </p>
<p>I like the theme, but the site looks a bit spammy, in my opinion. The Google Adsense box is big, and I personally am not a big fan of the double underline advertising. BUT if it’s performing well, don’t touch it. Testing would be a good way to see what works the best for your site. Any advertising testing should be done AFTER all other changes are put into place (content, seo, etc.). </p>
<p>Content </p>
<p>- 25+ things Vista can do that Mac can’t (expect hate mail from the cult of Apple)<br />
- 37 Vista Features That You’re Not Using But Should<br />
- Is Vista Better Than Mac for Moms? (go for the mommy bloggers!)<br />
- 101 Reasons You Should Switch to Vista</p>
<p>Promotion</p>
<p>I would create a blogroll immediately! Also, participate in the conversation happening around PCs and Microsoft. Link out to blogs in order to get attention to others in the blogosphere. If you’re not commenting on other blogs or otherwise networking with other bloggers in your niche, you should be. You could also use the “track” feature on Twitter to find people talking about Vista.</p>
<p>SEO </p>
<p>Definitely add keywords to the Title tags of your pages, including your home page! And create unique meta description and keyword tags for pages. Use the All in One SEO Pack plugin for this. Another necessary plugin is the permalink redirect plugin for Wordpress. Without it, WP creates 2 pages for every post – one with and one without a forward slash. Finally, try to obtain inbound links from more sources. Doing the above promotional tasks will help accomplish that, but submit to blog carnivals and ask to be included in link roundups on other blogs. </p>
<p>Monetization</p>
<p>Sign up for affiliate programs that are related to your blog. You want ads for computers that run Vista as well as Microsoft related products like the Zune or the Xbox 360. Also, consider adding consulting and coaching services as well as premium content, such as an e-book or e-learning classes. </p>
<p>What’s Missing?</p>
<p>I think what’s missing are buyers tips. When I purchased my laptop, I learned that I needed 2GB of memory in order for Vista to run well. Most of your blog posts are about patches and fixes. I think you should write more “positive” posts about features, benefits and how Vista helps people.</p>
<p>Returning Visitors</p>
<p>Having a low number of returning visitors is a great thing IF you’re increasing your total visitors over time. The idea is to gain steadily – and that should always result in a high number of new visitors. </p>
<p>Good luck, Albert! You&#8217;re already doing a fantastic job providing a wealth of information that is extremely useful to a large (potential) audience!</p>
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		<title>By: TzuVelli</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2977978</link>
		<dc:creator>TzuVelli</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 18:10:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2977978</guid>
		<description>First, let me say well done on the design. It is simple yet accessible. The coloring and graphics have that great Web 2.0 look; which is what Vista is all about. At first glance VistaRewired.com is reminiscent of TheElderGeek.com and TweakXP.com. Back in the day both sites were power houses in the tweak Windows XP niche. I think VistaRewired.com has the same potential. Markets for Windows OS tweak sites have a known period of longevity about 5-10 years. This period of longevity closely corelates to a Windows OS life expectancy. The point is that you have a wonderful opportunity to create a site that has a long term experation date.

Before you do anything else, trademark your site name. Use TweakXP.com as a template to accomplish this. Use this site Uspto.gov – click on trademarks – click on search TM database – click on free form search (advanced) search for TweakXp.  He successfully trademarked his site name, and was later able to leverage it into a book deal. You have a great site name protect it!!!!!

Technically your site is sound. There is one glaring exception, the about page returns a 404 page not found error. So, I guess the first thing I would suggest is for you to fix the About page. I tried the shift + refresh to no avail. I shouldn’t have to do this anyway.

1. How can I max monetization on my blog without filling it up with too many ads?

Unfortunately, with solution based sites you are caught in a catch 22 situation. To monetize with Adsense or other click based advertisement you have to guide your reader to the add to make money. More often than not this means not fully answering questions so that readers seek information from the advertisement. Doing this can hurt your reputation and authority. Moreover, technically oriented people are the worst when it come to ad blindness. Depending on what your traffic is like you could find an ad network that can broker higher end ads from the likes of HP or Dell etc…You will have to look at what the different ad networks have to offer. 

To fully maximize the sites monetization potential you should leverage affiliate marketing and technology based sales. Look at different ad networks like Chitika that offer technology based ads for computers etc.... Check out different affiliate programs for software/service solutions that may help your readership. Online companies like TigerDirect have affiliate programs. 

One of the best ways for you to monetize a tech tip site is to provide a news letter. Fred Langa of the Langa List fame, (langa.com –has been sold but archives are still there) for years ran a Newsletter where all he did was answer questions from his readers. He had two versions. One version was free but it had advertisements and had fewer articles. One version was paid, no adds and a few extra articles. The paid version cost $12 a year and was published two times a month. That puts the issue cost at 50 cents a copy. Very affordable by just about anyone. Here is the math: $12 x 5000 subscribers = $60,000 a year, $12 x 10,000 readers $120,000 per year for the paid version not including the ad revenue of the free version. The content was literally only solution answers to reader emails. So, essentially, your readers are creating your content for you. Now you do have 

to have a following to get this to work. But, it is a great goal to shoot for. Even if you only had 1000 paid subscribers you are still doing better than 99% of bloggers. Start with the free version and once you have a following, then move to the paid version.

Here is a long term monetization solution. Once you have built up enough content you can sell CDs of all the Tips, Tricks, and Hacks that are on the blog. The site TheEldergeek.com did this. He updated the CDs on a regular basis and resold them. Techs may not click on ads but they like having their knowledgebase close at hand.

Another long term money generator would be to create a piece of software that houses the top 100 or 150 system and registry tweaks and will automate their implementation. These are big time savers for people and administrators and were very popular for XP. This will take some investment on your part but their can be a really good payoff in the long run. Consider that by the EOL of Vista there will be “at least” several hundred million users. If you sell the software to less than 1/10% of potential Vista users at $10

250,000,000 x .001 x 10.00 = $2.5 Million Dollars

Let’s say you sold the widget to only 1/10 of 1/10% of potential vista usersor about   25,000 users, that’s still $250,000.

You could do it with only time invested. Here’s how; find a DotNET programmer to partner with. The programmer programs the widget and you market it. Cuts profits but at $2.5M whose complaining.

How do you get at all those people? That is what affiliates and affiliate networks are for.

Maybe sell it at $20 with a 50% affiliate payout.

Either way, riding the coattails of Microsoft can be very profitable. 

2. If you can, please tell me one thing my site is missing. (I don’t know if this question can be worded better.)

A working About page.  Also, this may not be a great design move but I would move your index from within the “Articles” page to across the top of the content area of the blog; similar to theeldergeek.com. You are creating a resource on your blog. Most of your readers are coming there to get a resolution to a question. The faster they can get the resolution the happier they will be. I would replace the “Sitemap” that you are currently using with a more user friendly style. You current sitemap is an XML sitemap for search engines. Link to the XML version in your footer and the reader friendly one in the header.  You need to have a very clear disclaimer. You are providing system tweaks and hacks, your readers need to know that you do your best to verify and test each tip trick and tweak but your readers implement them at their own risk. 

3. The very nature of your site is that of problem resolution. Many readers will come to your site to resolve a current problem.  You will want to retain traffic received from search engines (those looking for problem resolution only). To do this just have good content with tweaks and hacks people are looking for. Most of this traffic will not stay. That is just the nature of that type of traffic. Who you want to retain are power users, novice to mid level admins and non-admin aficionados. Obviously you need to figure out how to capture these visitors in a community. Interacting via comments is one way. But, what these people are used to are forums. Once you have a strong monthly rate of visitors start a forum connected to your blog. These are the people that will evangelize your widget, CD etc… and make it a success. If you adopt the widget idea these the admins, power users etc will be the first adopters and it will blossom from there. 


Design:

The design is really good. You have hit all the important points; RSS button positioning, Menu items, etc. as I mentioned before the only thing I would change is to place the index bare currently  in the “Article” section at the top of the content area on the front page and post pages. To do this you will want to move the next and previous article buttons to just above the comment area. One thing about your text in the content areas, it is a bit small. Try increasing the content font by 1 px and max 2 px. Or, you may need to make the content font color darker Your goal here is to get the text to pop off the white background. Similar to the way the bold text currently does.

I am a bit of a symmetrical person when it comes to design. What really pops out for me is that the content area seems to start well above the left side bar. This is more pronounced on the Home page than on the post pages. Obviously, this is an optical illusion caused by the white space around the large RSS button. You may want to consider creating a subscription box similar to the one on Problogger. This way you can reduce the white space making things look uneven but still place the subscription buttons in the most visible spot.

Otherwise you have a really good design.


Content:
For content ideas, there are treasure troves of ideas on the internet. Go to the old XP tweak sites and see what most people were requesting. Theeldergeek.com and tweakxp.com are two good places to start. Although Vista is a newer OS, user questions never change. You can create content based on old questions reformulated and solved but for Vista instead of XP. Second, registry hacks are always big traffic winners. Spend some time putting together a library of Vista centric system and registry hacks.

Most nontech XP power users will soon be moving to Vista. The admin and management functions of XP are still in Vista. The difference is they are not as easy to find as in XP. This could be a great opportunity to create screen casts or videos geared toward power users converting from XP to Vista. Although Vista has been out for a while many people have not adopted it. This is potentially a content creation gold mine. Anything that can help power users, admins, and novices get up to speed on Vista fast is fair game for creating content. (all this can be repackaged in CDs and sold as a yearly subscription. (look at theeldergeek.com for an example of how this was successfully implemented.)

Promotion: This type of blog is best promoted through forums; Google groups, Windows XP Expert Zone Chat forum (the Vista Version if there is one), vistaheads.com/forums/ etc..There are more technically oriented social media sites like SlashDot. Creating viral content as a promotional effort would be something like, “50 Sytem Hacks To Tame The Beast In Vista”, or “25 Registry Hacks No Vista Administrator Should Be Without”

The difficulty with promoting a tech blog is that much of the standard promotion tactics are not as fruitful as you would like. For instance, commenting on other Vista or tech leaning blogs will gain you exposure and some traffic. But, these guys are the choir. They are important., but you want the parishners, the flock, at least in the beginning. The parishners are the ones that will click on ads, signup for news letters. The parishners are the ones that will buy an ebook…etc…The most fruitful way to promote a blog focusing on one OS like Vista is through search engines. And that leads us to SEO.

SEO:  I hate SEO. What is right or wrong changes on a day to day basis. The best SEO advice, beyond basic on page SEO which you can learn about anywhere, is to get the SEO for FireFox extension for firefox. Go to your top 20 competitors and from their page right click and choose “SEO for FireFox” and then “Look UP This Page” when the calculation is done double click on each entry. You will learn all you need to know about your competitors back links. Deconstruct those back links and start building your own back links from the same or similar sites.

Some basic SEO: This is all from the “Restore Deleted or Old Files” Article

Title: Restore deleted or old files &#124; vistarewired.com
A more search engine friendly title would have been “Microsoft Vista: How To Restore a Deleted file or File Version” It hits all your key words and search users understand exactly what it is.

Meta Description: “Your resource for Windows Vista Tweaks, Tips, Tricks and tutorials.   Restore deleted or old files”

I am not sure what your goal is with this description but as a search user I would not be compelled to click on the SERP entry. A better description would have been.

“How to restore recover a deleted file or file version in Windows Vista.”

Meta Keywords: The meta tag is pretty much ignored: But… here is what you have

Windows Vista Tweaks, Tips, Tricks and tutorials,  Restore deleted or old files

If I were to use keywords I would instead use: Windows Vista, file, restoration, recovery, version, delete

I am assuming since all the meta fields were used that you are using a plugin like headspace or the All-In-One-SEO plug-in. If you are not I would highly recommend either.

Last thing on SEO: There is a relationship between the “Title” – “Post Title” and “Post-Slug”. Each gives you an opportunity to add keywords. For instance;

Title: How To Recover Files and File Versions in Windows Vista

Post Title: How To Restore A Deleted File or File Version in Windows Vista

Post Slug: vista-file-recovery-and-restoration 

In your footer you should no follow everything except the link back to your front page. The anchor text on that should be keyworded.

Monetization: Please see my comments under; “How can I max monetization on my blog without filling it up with too many ads?”  Your goal with monetizing a site like this is that your income is sustained by ads and affiliate programs while you build authority and then move to sellable items such as content CDs, Newsletters, and ultimately a time saving, headache reducing widget that no vista user should be without.

I really hope this helps. Good luck. You have the beginnings of a veritable cash cow. Nurture it right and you will do really well.

Beau Hooks
TzuVelli.com</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First, let me say well done on the design. It is simple yet accessible. The coloring and graphics have that great Web 2.0 look; which is what Vista is all about. At first glance VistaRewired.com is reminiscent of TheElderGeek.com and TweakXP.com. Back in the day both sites were power houses in the tweak Windows XP niche. I think VistaRewired.com has the same potential. Markets for Windows OS tweak sites have a known period of longevity about 5-10 years. This period of longevity closely corelates to a Windows OS life expectancy. The point is that you have a wonderful opportunity to create a site that has a long term experation date.</p>
<p>Before you do anything else, trademark your site name. Use TweakXP.com as a template to accomplish this. Use this site Uspto.gov – click on trademarks – click on search TM database – click on free form search (advanced) search for TweakXp.  He successfully trademarked his site name, and was later able to leverage it into a book deal. You have a great site name protect it!!!!!</p>
<p>Technically your site is sound. There is one glaring exception, the about page returns a 404 page not found error. So, I guess the first thing I would suggest is for you to fix the About page. I tried the shift + refresh to no avail. I shouldn’t have to do this anyway.</p>
<p>1. How can I max monetization on my blog without filling it up with too many ads?</p>
<p>Unfortunately, with solution based sites you are caught in a catch 22 situation. To monetize with Adsense or other click based advertisement you have to guide your reader to the add to make money. More often than not this means not fully answering questions so that readers seek information from the advertisement. Doing this can hurt your reputation and authority. Moreover, technically oriented people are the worst when it come to ad blindness. Depending on what your traffic is like you could find an ad network that can broker higher end ads from the likes of HP or Dell etc…You will have to look at what the different ad networks have to offer. </p>
<p>To fully maximize the sites monetization potential you should leverage affiliate marketing and technology based sales. Look at different ad networks like Chitika that offer technology based ads for computers etc&#8230;. Check out different affiliate programs for software/service solutions that may help your readership. Online companies like TigerDirect have affiliate programs. </p>
<p>One of the best ways for you to monetize a tech tip site is to provide a news letter. Fred Langa of the Langa List fame, (langa.com –has been sold but archives are still there) for years ran a Newsletter where all he did was answer questions from his readers. He had two versions. One version was free but it had advertisements and had fewer articles. One version was paid, no adds and a few extra articles. The paid version cost $12 a year and was published two times a month. That puts the issue cost at 50 cents a copy. Very affordable by just about anyone. Here is the math: $12 x 5000 subscribers = $60,000 a year, $12 x 10,000 readers $120,000 per year for the paid version not including the ad revenue of the free version. The content was literally only solution answers to reader emails. So, essentially, your readers are creating your content for you. Now you do have </p>
<p>to have a following to get this to work. But, it is a great goal to shoot for. Even if you only had 1000 paid subscribers you are still doing better than 99% of bloggers. Start with the free version and once you have a following, then move to the paid version.</p>
<p>Here is a long term monetization solution. Once you have built up enough content you can sell CDs of all the Tips, Tricks, and Hacks that are on the blog. The site TheEldergeek.com did this. He updated the CDs on a regular basis and resold them. Techs may not click on ads but they like having their knowledgebase close at hand.</p>
<p>Another long term money generator would be to create a piece of software that houses the top 100 or 150 system and registry tweaks and will automate their implementation. These are big time savers for people and administrators and were very popular for XP. This will take some investment on your part but their can be a really good payoff in the long run. Consider that by the EOL of Vista there will be “at least” several hundred million users. If you sell the software to less than 1/10% of potential Vista users at $10</p>
<p>250,000,000 x .001 x 10.00 = $2.5 Million Dollars</p>
<p>Let’s say you sold the widget to only 1/10 of 1/10% of potential vista usersor about   25,000 users, that’s still $250,000.</p>
<p>You could do it with only time invested. Here’s how; find a DotNET programmer to partner with. The programmer programs the widget and you market it. Cuts profits but at $2.5M whose complaining.</p>
<p>How do you get at all those people? That is what affiliates and affiliate networks are for.</p>
<p>Maybe sell it at $20 with a 50% affiliate payout.</p>
<p>Either way, riding the coattails of Microsoft can be very profitable. </p>
<p>2. If you can, please tell me one thing my site is missing. (I don’t know if this question can be worded better.)</p>
<p>A working About page.  Also, this may not be a great design move but I would move your index from within the “Articles” page to across the top of the content area of the blog; similar to theeldergeek.com. You are creating a resource on your blog. Most of your readers are coming there to get a resolution to a question. The faster they can get the resolution the happier they will be. I would replace the “Sitemap” that you are currently using with a more user friendly style. You current sitemap is an XML sitemap for search engines. Link to the XML version in your footer and the reader friendly one in the header.  You need to have a very clear disclaimer. You are providing system tweaks and hacks, your readers need to know that you do your best to verify and test each tip trick and tweak but your readers implement them at their own risk. </p>
<p>3. The very nature of your site is that of problem resolution. Many readers will come to your site to resolve a current problem.  You will want to retain traffic received from search engines (those looking for problem resolution only). To do this just have good content with tweaks and hacks people are looking for. Most of this traffic will not stay. That is just the nature of that type of traffic. Who you want to retain are power users, novice to mid level admins and non-admin aficionados. Obviously you need to figure out how to capture these visitors in a community. Interacting via comments is one way. But, what these people are used to are forums. Once you have a strong monthly rate of visitors start a forum connected to your blog. These are the people that will evangelize your widget, CD etc… and make it a success. If you adopt the widget idea these the admins, power users etc will be the first adopters and it will blossom from there. </p>
<p>Design:</p>
<p>The design is really good. You have hit all the important points; RSS button positioning, Menu items, etc. as I mentioned before the only thing I would change is to place the index bare currently  in the “Article” section at the top of the content area on the front page and post pages. To do this you will want to move the next and previous article buttons to just above the comment area. One thing about your text in the content areas, it is a bit small. Try increasing the content font by 1 px and max 2 px. Or, you may need to make the content font color darker Your goal here is to get the text to pop off the white background. Similar to the way the bold text currently does.</p>
<p>I am a bit of a symmetrical person when it comes to design. What really pops out for me is that the content area seems to start well above the left side bar. This is more pronounced on the Home page than on the post pages. Obviously, this is an optical illusion caused by the white space around the large RSS button. You may want to consider creating a subscription box similar to the one on Problogger. This way you can reduce the white space making things look uneven but still place the subscription buttons in the most visible spot.</p>
<p>Otherwise you have a really good design.</p>
<p>Content:<br />
For content ideas, there are treasure troves of ideas on the internet. Go to the old XP tweak sites and see what most people were requesting. Theeldergeek.com and tweakxp.com are two good places to start. Although Vista is a newer OS, user questions never change. You can create content based on old questions reformulated and solved but for Vista instead of XP. Second, registry hacks are always big traffic winners. Spend some time putting together a library of Vista centric system and registry hacks.</p>
<p>Most nontech XP power users will soon be moving to Vista. The admin and management functions of XP are still in Vista. The difference is they are not as easy to find as in XP. This could be a great opportunity to create screen casts or videos geared toward power users converting from XP to Vista. Although Vista has been out for a while many people have not adopted it. This is potentially a content creation gold mine. Anything that can help power users, admins, and novices get up to speed on Vista fast is fair game for creating content. (all this can be repackaged in CDs and sold as a yearly subscription. (look at theeldergeek.com for an example of how this was successfully implemented.)</p>
<p>Promotion: This type of blog is best promoted through forums; Google groups, Windows XP Expert Zone Chat forum (the Vista Version if there is one), vistaheads.com/forums/ etc..There are more technically oriented social media sites like SlashDot. Creating viral content as a promotional effort would be something like, “50 Sytem Hacks To Tame The Beast In Vista”, or “25 Registry Hacks No Vista Administrator Should Be Without”</p>
<p>The difficulty with promoting a tech blog is that much of the standard promotion tactics are not as fruitful as you would like. For instance, commenting on other Vista or tech leaning blogs will gain you exposure and some traffic. But, these guys are the choir. They are important., but you want the parishners, the flock, at least in the beginning. The parishners are the ones that will click on ads, signup for news letters. The parishners are the ones that will buy an ebook…etc…The most fruitful way to promote a blog focusing on one OS like Vista is through search engines. And that leads us to SEO.</p>
<p>SEO:  I hate SEO. What is right or wrong changes on a day to day basis. The best SEO advice, beyond basic on page SEO which you can learn about anywhere, is to get the SEO for FireFox extension for firefox. Go to your top 20 competitors and from their page right click and choose “SEO for FireFox” and then “Look UP This Page” when the calculation is done double click on each entry. You will learn all you need to know about your competitors back links. Deconstruct those back links and start building your own back links from the same or similar sites.</p>
<p>Some basic SEO: This is all from the “Restore Deleted or Old Files” Article</p>
<p>Title: Restore deleted or old files | vistarewired.com<br />
A more search engine friendly title would have been “Microsoft Vista: How To Restore a Deleted file or File Version” It hits all your key words and search users understand exactly what it is.</p>
<p>Meta Description: “Your resource for Windows Vista Tweaks, Tips, Tricks and tutorials.   Restore deleted or old files”</p>
<p>I am not sure what your goal is with this description but as a search user I would not be compelled to click on the SERP entry. A better description would have been.</p>
<p>“How to restore recover a deleted file or file version in Windows Vista.”</p>
<p>Meta Keywords: The meta tag is pretty much ignored: But… here is what you have</p>
<p>Windows Vista Tweaks, Tips, Tricks and tutorials,  Restore deleted or old files</p>
<p>If I were to use keywords I would instead use: Windows Vista, file, restoration, recovery, version, delete</p>
<p>I am assuming since all the meta fields were used that you are using a plugin like headspace or the All-In-One-SEO plug-in. If you are not I would highly recommend either.</p>
<p>Last thing on SEO: There is a relationship between the “Title” – “Post Title” and “Post-Slug”. Each gives you an opportunity to add keywords. For instance;</p>
<p>Title: How To Recover Files and File Versions in Windows Vista</p>
<p>Post Title: How To Restore A Deleted File or File Version in Windows Vista</p>
<p>Post Slug: vista-file-recovery-and-restoration </p>
<p>In your footer you should no follow everything except the link back to your front page. The anchor text on that should be keyworded.</p>
<p>Monetization: Please see my comments under; “How can I max monetization on my blog without filling it up with too many ads?”  Your goal with monetizing a site like this is that your income is sustained by ads and affiliate programs while you build authority and then move to sellable items such as content CDs, Newsletters, and ultimately a time saving, headache reducing widget that no vista user should be without.</p>
<p>I really hope this helps. Good luck. You have the beginnings of a veritable cash cow. Nurture it right and you will do really well.</p>
<p>Beau Hooks<br />
TzuVelli.com</p>
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		<title>By: Brent</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2977468</link>
		<dc:creator>Brent</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 16:30:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2977468</guid>
		<description>Now that you&#039;ve moved the Adsense ad to the left side of the article, add some padding to the right side of the ad.

Like I said before, change the colors of the ad links to the same color as the links in your articles.  The default colors clash with your site and make the ad stand out too much.  It looks desperate for someone to click it.  If it looks desperate they won&#039;t click as much.  When you blend the colors it makes the ad seem more trustworthy.

Add another square ad at the bottom of the articles.  Place ads at stopping points.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Now that you&#8217;ve moved the Adsense ad to the left side of the article, add some padding to the right side of the ad.</p>
<p>Like I said before, change the colors of the ad links to the same color as the links in your articles.  The default colors clash with your site and make the ad stand out too much.  It looks desperate for someone to click it.  If it looks desperate they won&#8217;t click as much.  When you blend the colors it makes the ad seem more trustworthy.</p>
<p>Add another square ad at the bottom of the articles.  Place ads at stopping points.</p>
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		<title>By: Susan Payton, The Marketing Eggspert</title>
		<link>http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/comment-page-1/#comment-2976646</link>
		<dc:creator>Susan Payton, The Marketing Eggspert</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 13:46:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.problogger.net/archives/2008/03/11/want-to-win-1700-visitors-review-vista-rewired/#comment-2976646</guid>
		<description>1. Monetization. There are tons of affiliate opportunities where you can review Vista-related programs within a post.

2. You&#039;re missing attractive images. To keep the attention of your reader, find stock photos to illustrate your blog posts.

3. Get returning visitors by RSS and by creating content they want. If they just have one issue and need a quick fix, you give it to them and they&#039;re gone. Maybe at the end of one post link to a related post or mention a date where you&#039;ll cover the topic more in the future.

Design
The design is good, but I don&#039;t like how the gray bars on the side (recent posts, etc) match up with the blue ones on the right (separating out each post).  When your posts are short, it creates a distraction by having so many blue bars separating them out.

Also there&#039;s a lot of wasted white space at the bottom left that you could fill with graphic ads.

Content
The tips are useful, but again, unless someone needs to know it all, what use is it for repeat visitors? Also I know this info is for anyone using Vista, I get the feeling (maybe the design) that it&#039;s more for technical people. Maybe images would help that.

Promotion
Try Entrecards for free blog advertising. Leave link in comments.

SEO
It&#039;s fine.

Monetization
See above. Add affiliates and graphic ads. Maybe spread your AdSense elsewhere throughout the article, as 4 up top is overwhelming.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>1. Monetization. There are tons of affiliate opportunities where you can review Vista-related programs within a post.</p>
<p>2. You&#8217;re missing attractive images. To keep the attention of your reader, find stock photos to illustrate your blog posts.</p>
<p>3. Get returning visitors by RSS and by creating content they want. If they just have one issue and need a quick fix, you give it to them and they&#8217;re gone. Maybe at the end of one post link to a related post or mention a date where you&#8217;ll cover the topic more in the future.</p>
<p>Design<br />
The design is good, but I don&#8217;t like how the gray bars on the side (recent posts, etc) match up with the blue ones on the right (separating out each post).  When your posts are short, it creates a distraction by having so many blue bars separating them out.</p>
<p>Also there&#8217;s a lot of wasted white space at the bottom left that you could fill with graphic ads.</p>
<p>Content<br />
The tips are useful, but again, unless someone needs to know it all, what use is it for repeat visitors? Also I know this info is for anyone using Vista, I get the feeling (maybe the design) that it&#8217;s more for technical people. Maybe images would help that.</p>
<p>Promotion<br />
Try Entrecards for free blog advertising. Leave link in comments.</p>
<p>SEO<br />
It&#8217;s fine.</p>
<p>Monetization<br />
See above. Add affiliates and graphic ads. Maybe spread your AdSense elsewhere throughout the article, as 4 up top is overwhelming.</p>
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