Make Money from Your Blog by Monetizing Your Archived Posts: A Mini-Guide

make-money-from-your-blog.jpgI wrote about not monetizing a blog too early in a previous post and also listed several benefits of avoiding monetization until your website receives consistent daily visitor traffic and a strong reader base.

Some of the advantages mentioned includes greater emphasis on content and increased potential for social media marketing.

I’ve decided to follow up with my original post and offer one very useful monetization tip which will allow you to subtly display targeted ads while maintaining the emphasis on content and traffic building.

Monetize Your Archived Posts: An Introduction

So you’ve build up a decent readership and have started getting regular traffic from search engines. You want to make some extra money from your blog but am afraid that you’ll alienate your regular readers by suddenly putting up advertisements on your erstwhile ad-free blog.

The solution is simple: Begin your monetization plan by only putting up ads on older blog posts that are in your archives.

This is a perfect setup because monetization on a per-post basis does not affect the general experience of your regular readers, who would have already read all the recent material on your blog.

Benefits of Post-Level Monetization on Archived Posts

After a blog post has moved off the frontpage, it falls into the categories and archives section of the blog.

Most of the time, these posts are only read by the most adventurous reader and are mostly seen by referral and search visitors who arrive directly at the post itself and not at the actual blog homepage.

In light of this, the advantages of monetizing your archived posts is two-fold:

  • Targeted and Relevant Advertising. Post-level monetization allows you to put up very targeted ads according to the content in each post. For example, I have a post about Wordpress Adsense Templates and I can easily monetize that by putting up an affiliate ad for Adsense Ebooks or Google Adsense’s referral program.

  • Avoid Ad-Clutter. When you’re initially monetizing your blog, it is very important to avoid excessive ad clutter because they can irritate your readers. Post-level ads on archived posts are largely invisible to most regular readers and allows you to avoid putting up site-wide advertisements on your homepage or sidebars.

Five Guidelines on Monetizing Your Archived Posts

Determining which posts to monetize is really a personal preference so I’m going to just offer several guidelines which might be helpful:

  1. Blog posts currently on your homepage should not be monetized. They are still easily accessible by visitors and ads should not be placed on them yet.

  2. Set a timeframe. I personally would only monetize any posts that are more than a month old. Then again, the age of your blog might vary so you’ll have to adjust the timeframe to suit the size of your archives.

  3. Find your popular posts. Take a look at your stats package to find out which blog posts consistently receives the most search and referral traffic. Make a list of these blog posts and see which one fulfills the previously set timeframe. These are the ones that you will want to monetize first because they provide the highest returns on investment.

  4. Choose a monetization method. There are several ways to monetize your archived posts. This include putting up affiliate links, contextual ads like Adsense or even link selling through ad networks or direct advertising options. If you are on Wordpress, I highly recommend using the Adsense-Deluxe plugin as it will speed up the ad insertion process.

  5. Optimize your ads. This involves making sure that your advertisements are highly relevant to your blog or post topic because they’ll receive much better click through rates. Ensure that they are displayed prominently while not adversely affecting your actual content.

Monetizing Dosh Dosh’s Post Archives

As you will know, I’ve avoided monetizing Dosh Dosh for quite a while because I wanted to fully concentrate on building regular traffic and a strong reader base. Monetization was not a priority for me at all and it still isn’t.

Dosh Dosh has been experiencing continuous upward growth in terms of daily traffic and readership over the months and this is something that is personally rather satisfying.

I’ve decided to take my own advice and will be monetizing the older posts in Dosh Dosh’s archives. These posts will include 100% relevant affiliate links, direct link sales or contextual ads networks such as Google Adsense.

There won’t be any ugly inline pop-up ads from Kontera or Intellitxt and all of the new ads will be placed at the end of each post or textually within content (with disclosure) because I have absolutely no intention of harming the clarity and readability of any content on this blog.

If you’re looking to monetize your blog but don’t know how or where to start, take my advice and try using post-level ads on your old archives and popular posts. You might be surprised with the results.

25 Comments - Share Your Thoughts
  • That’s an absolutely brilliant strategy for getting the ad ball rolling!

  • Great article. I will be waiting for more, Thanks

  • Hi,
    That is a great advice. I have not thought that earlier but when I saw your post, I thought that I have to consider monetizing my old posts.

  • Fantastic article. Included it in my recommemded weekly links.

  • Great idea, what about your popular posts? Whats going to happen to those?

  • Maki on May 17th, 2007

    Matt,

    As I’ve mentioned in the post, I’ll be going through them and will probably include some form of monetization on them soon.

  • Awsome mini tutorial true and agreeable.

    TTYL !

  • PS I stumbled this post !

  • Hi Maki,

    I’m amazed by you not having Monetized your site yet – the amount of money you could have gained by now would have been enough for most of us to retire on :-)

    About only Monetizing the old posts – on blogs hosted by blogger.com – to my knowledge, that is not possible as blogger does not treat pages in the normal way that personal domains do – to blogger all posts are continuation of each other and the software only gives the option of setting how many posts one wants to appear on the front view – I mean it’s not possible to make a separate file for each individual post.

    You can have a look at my site to see what I mean:

    http://cfd-traders.blogspot.com

  • Maki on May 18th, 2007

    Hi Rod,

    I’m not sure if there is actually a way to insert contextual ads manually into Blogspot blogs but I do agree it might be more difficult for blogs without their own domain. I would suggest monetizing your older posts through affiliate programs.

    For example, if you were writing a posts about web directories, you could use some directory programs which pay to refer a paid submission. Or you could sell T shirts on a blog post about fashion etc. The goal is to find relevant affiliate programs and using personal recommendations to promote them in older posts.

    Hope this helps in some way. :)

  • Thats a good idea Dosh. But how do you disable ads which or on home page or new. We need to have some kind of programitc syntax for that. Any clues?

  • Maki on May 18th, 2007

    Ashish,

    To disable ads on homepage or new posts is simple: Just remove any ad codes on the homepage or within the new posts. You don’t need any special programming to do that. Inserting ads in older posts just requires one to visit the specific posts in question to put up some ads or affiliate links.

  • Excellent idea…there is one another advantage to monetizing archives…from my experience, the ads displayed on older pages are more related to the content on the pages than are ads on newer pages…this could be simply because a search engine has “understood” a page better over time…so this could be another vote for monetization of archived and older pages

  • Hi Maki,

    I see what you mean now – I was sort of thinking about Google ads in my previous post – but what you say makes sense now – what doesn’t make sense still is ……….. “why are you prepared to lose SO MUCH money by not putting ads on your HIGHLY RATED site”? :-)

  • Emad Hassan kenona on May 18th, 2007

    Dosh is good idea ,but we need more explaintation of very thing

  • Wow what a wonderful idea. I’m getting ready to start using the ads on my websites.

  • I’ve just started a blog over at PromotedProfits, and had no idea where to start as far as monetization, as well as other topics you covered in much detail.

    Great blog, content is stellar. Will be stopping back by regularly. Thanks, Bryan

  • Maki on May 20th, 2007

    Bryan,

    Glad you found the content useful. Good luck with your blog!

  • Emad Hassan kenona on May 20th, 2007

    The blogd are good idea to spread the culture

  • Interesting Maki!!

    i have a Ton of old Posts which i’m sure no one has ever seen!!

    never really knew i had ANY readers til MyBlogLog!!

    ;) )

    thx fer the headsup on this & all yer great Posts!!!

  • Hi Maki,
    I have recently downloaded the adsense templates by Gobala Krishnan. Do you know these? I found them to be of high quality and will use them on my new site. Not the one which is linked here by the way.
    Would be interested to hear your input on this.
    Monika

  • I have recently discovered Dosh Dosh and I am impressed with how you validate your own advice to others by being your own best example. Congratulations on your traffic and attention gained through ethical means. Placing relevant ads in archived pages but not the home page is a great strategy, and one that I’m impelementing as well, for the same benefits you describe. I have only one Google product referral ad and one affliate ad link on my home page, that’s it. The rest is all content.

    I wish you continued success!

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