Archives For Inquisitr

The Inquisitr November

December 2, 2008 — 5 Comments

Pageviews: 1,085,598 (per Google Analytics)

Traffic profile: highest post accounted for only 5.8% of traffic. Top 5 posts accounted for less than 20% of traffic.

Finances: profitable (that is, more income than the cost of paying writers excluding me)

Cash Flow: same as last month, tight. Net 60 on ads, so we won’t be making any significant changes until February 09.

Technorati Rank:764

CPM: steady, although can vary in a wide range day to day.

Short term risks: it’s silly season for web traffic, so we’ll either go up in December/ January, or down. Working naturally towards the former.

Note: lots more people read the Month 6 report than normal. My thx for dropping by. I have never, nor do I intend to give a long report every month, but instead at milestones, so I’ll likely do a long report at 9mths and 12mths. Also I’ve switched to month reporting not anniversary reporting, at least for now.

Syndication Offer

November 24, 2008 — 4 Comments

The Huffington Post has an interesting way of syndicating some content. The short version is they run the first three or four paragraphs of a post on their site, then end it with “read more here xyz.” I’m not sure if it’s under legal agreement or not, and as a rule I don’t like running that much text from another site on The Inquisitr.

However, if you’re a tech site and you would be cool with us doing something along those lines, email me duncan at nichenet.com.au . We wouldn’t run everything, but on occasion we’d like to run the intro to a post similar to what The Huffington Post does. I can’t promise millions of page views, but we’re pretty close now to some high numbers so you might get some half reasonable traffic from the post + link.

The Inquisitr at 6 months

November 6, 2008 — 29 Comments

November 5 marks the The Inquisitr’s 6 month anniversary, the first major milestone we set for the site when launching it back in May. The good news per the screenshot above: it’s not up for sale, least yet 🙂

Traffic

October 2008 was a good month for The Inquisitr, and a new record for us of 454,000 page views, up from the 420,000 we did in August, and the 250,000 in September.

The better result compared to August is the reliance on a single post. In August, the leading post accounted for 48% of page views for the month, vs the leading post in October accounting for only 25% of page views. That single post happened early in the month, and had no effect on the second half of the month, which I’m pleased to report did (from October 15-31) 215,000 page views. Over the same period from the 15th, our distribution of daily traffic varied between 8,400 page views and 17,200 page views, with only 3 days dropping below 10,000 page views a day; although we had no “huge” posts during this period, the regular flow of higher traffic across the board bides well for the site in November.

For the first four days of November, The Inquisitr did 104,000 page views. I’d expect the figure to drop before it increases as our election coverage helped during this period, although notably the two largest posts for the month to date (30% of this figure) were not election related.

Relaunch/ Engagement

October was notable for a new look for a site announced October 13, which neatly fits in with our increase in regular traffic in the second half of the month. The new site highlights our content and content outside the site through a partnership with ReadBurner, and has so far been meeting and exceeding our expectations. Traffic to the front page is up, although still only makes up less then 10% of traffic to the site.

The new look also gave a new emphasis to engagement, through the inclusion of visual links to content on each post, and through highlighting popular posts and latest comments. I haven’t tallied the comment figures, but I’d say roughly the average number of daily comments would have gone close to doubling during this period, and page views per visitor are up.

Finances

6 months in and the site has yet to make a profit, however October was our best result since launching. We also would have been profitable had we had not added Steven Hodson to staff. It’s too early to call November, but I’m confident that if we can maintain base numbers along what we did for the second half of October, we will be profitable for the first time this month. I would note though that my definition of profitable does not include my own writing; I’ve never pulled a cent from the site in 6 months, so the aim this month is for me to be able to pull a monthly writing fee from the site along the lines of the rest of the team.

The economic crisis

The news for online advertising isn’t great at the moment, and we will not be immune to it. Our current advertising provider has failed to deliver expected rates to date, and if they had the site would be highly profitable at this time. However, our advertising provider is delivering rates higher then what we were getting previously, and as such our overall situation continues to improve.

The best immunity we can have to the economic crisis is to continue growing our readership, and this will continue to be our focus. Our ad rates are already low, and projections are based on these figures, so as long as they don’t completely collapse, the outlook is positive.

Cashflow

Cashflow does remain an issue for the site. We’re now on 60 days net payment for advertising, so our improving returns don’t flow through for 2 months after each month. The site has burned through money, although conservatively compared to what others may have spent, the site has no external investors and is funded exclusively through my savings. Additional funds are available should we run short of money, and through into January finances will become very tight. The site is financed through to the end of January presuming no income during this time, so although I won’t be having a huge Christmas spend this year, we should make it. A Sitepoint auction while unlikely, isn’t off the table yet.

Technorati Rank

October was notable as the first month The Inquisitr broke into the Top 1000 on Technorati…twice. We did it early in the month then Techonrati did something strange with their index as we broke through 800, and overnight we ended up at 1200 again. As of today, we are back in the Top 1000, and this was a major 6 month target for us. We’re now in the open slather part of Technorati Rank, as we start losing the count of incoming links from when we launched, so we may go backwards before we improve again. Given the 2nd month was low for us, I’d expect the rank to improve in December. Our next goal will be Technorati Top 500, maybe by January or February.

Notably The Inquisitr was completely banned from Techmeme is October. We thank Gave Rivera for doing so, as our traffic has increased significantly from this time, as it did when we were weighed off the front page at the beginning of our 3rd month. It’s just a shame Rivera can’t ban us some more, his petty little power plays have always resulted in good karma for us.

Writing team

The strength of this site continues to be our writing team of who continue to improve with time. Our ability to focus our writing better shows in the monthly numbers. Steve Hodson was our first new hire, brought in to write tech and opinion posts. He has delivered strongly and has driven engagement on the site.

Per our financial situation our ability increase pay rates or bring in new staff is limited by cashflow, so we won’t be considering any major changes until the new year. I’m still getting around 5 people a week contact me about writing jobs, and there’s been a few people I would have loved to have hired but had to pass on. Maybe next year, but our current writing team is my primary focus in the short term.

Content

A few people have complained about our content in October. The emphasis on our new slogan “the better mix” has seen a change in what we produce, but notably we are not doing less tech (the numbers remain steady), we are simply moving into different areas. October was notable for its inclusion of new categories, including Movies, TV, Media Industry and Funny Pics. Our traffic would support the notion that the broader mix is working, but that will be best assessed over time. We continue to maintain specific pages for each category, and recognize that not everyone will like everything we have up. We also maintain feeds for each category as well (see following)

Feeds

Feeds continue to be a weak point for the site, however the outlook continues to improve. Depending on the day I check FeedBurner (which seems to dance up and down on a daily basis) we how have around 5,000 subscribers across 5 feeds. The main feed is up only a few hundred subscribers, but the sub feeds have boomed as we’ve produced more content outside of tech. Entertainment is up 500%, Media has between 130-150 subscribers for a feed that is brand new, Odd and Funny up 400%, tech up 50%.

Notably the increases in subscribers has followed on from a new emphasis on the site (big RSS buttons basically) and the inclusion of browser auto discovery.

Ultimately we want to continue to grow these numbers, and the trend is good after a long period of stagnant or small growth.

Conclusion

I say this every month but it still holds true: we’re not quite there yet, but the outlook is rosy. The notion that it takes 6-9 months to establish a blog would appear to be holding true: we continue to improve in content, engagement and page views. We may go backwards this month, and historically every second month we do less than the month before, but the start to the month is strong.

The Inquisitr is still a crazy idea. Everything I’ve ever learned, or taught about blogging has said that you target your vertical space and if we had, the outcome may have been better again. But when I started this site, I wanted to write about stuff I enjoyed and liked with nothing more than the thought that my personal interests may be liked by others. Sometimes risks pay off, and we’re getting very close to that point.

Most of all though, we’re having fun. October was great partially because the finances have improved, but most of all our increased mix has allowed me to break out of the myopia of tech coverage into things I’m interested in as well, such as the media industry and even movies. Having to sit through movie trailers is really hard work…. 😉

We’ll be back next month hopefully with more good news. My thanks as always to the many people who believed in the site, its team and me personally along the way. We couldn’t have done it without you.

Update: just a note on the figures, all figures are per Google Analytics. If I were to use Awstats I’d be reporting 1 million pages this month 🙂

A better mix of categories

October 28, 2008 — 4 Comments

It’s been two weeks since we launched the new design on The Inquisitr, and it’s been meeting our expectations and more. Like any blog I’ve ever owned or run, design is fluid, and there’s always room for improvement; we’ve already made some tweaks and small changes, none worth announcing, and there will be more in the future, as there always has been.

I did want to make a housekeeping announcement about categories though. It’s minor, but it will save me having to mention it in the 6 month review post coming up next week 🙂

In line with the better mix theme we’re reviewing categories and have made some changes. Categories have always been there for us, but under the new design they work a lot better for us, and allow us to do new things. We’ll also have some future changes as well (still working on them, so nothing I can announce…they may not be announced either, small stuff). Some of these changes happened today, some over the last two weeks.

We now have a dedicated media industry category. This covers media naturally. We’ve always covered the death of heritage media, but the stories didn’t always sit well under tech, even if it is the switch to the internet that is killing newspapers for example. This won’t be a huge category for us, but we’ve been doing about 5-6 posts a week in it, and it’s allowing us to do media specific stories. Media Industry also has its own feed, which already has 27 subscribers without once having been mentioned (except the sidebar) or promoted I’m glad to report.

Entertainment is the new catchall for the previous category of Pop, and the 2 week old Movies category. Movies was a break out from pop in itself, where we believed that movie news (such as trailers primarily) didn’t sit well with celebrity gossip. The old pop is now celebrity news, and can be accessed under the Entertainment option on the site, along with Movies and future entertainment related categories.

We’ve also added Funny Pics, which is currently available on the nav bar, but may end up as a sub-category of the current odd+funny category. We’ve usually done stories as opposed to pics in this stream, but more and more pics were creeping in and they didn’t sit as well next to stories, hence they have their own category now.

In terms of actual content, there isn’t really that much that has changed. We’re still writing mostly the same things, just categorizing them a little differently, although naturally there’s been an increase in movies + media.

The Inquisitr at 4 months

September 9, 2008 — 11 Comments

September 5 marked the 4 month mark for The Inquisitr, and although I’m a little late with this post, some updated figures and observations.

We closed August with 420,000 page views, and this is before I noticed that Google Analytics was under-counting, likely due to page load times. Based on the top leaderboard spot, the figure was around the 460,000 mark.

It was a very good month, and I doubt very much if we’ll repeat it, but certainly I’m hopeful of a result above the 200,000 mark for September, hopefully more again. 1 week in and we’re just shy of 70,000 page views, so we’re off to a solid start, even if it’s not spectacular.

RSS subscriptions remain an issue, an under performing aspect of the site. Around the 3000 mark across the four feeds (I didn’t total them for the post), but off from a peak in early August, but slowly climbing again.

Technorati rank has been tough. The indexing went down for our two biggest days in August, so we missed what should have been a huge boost, and we malingered just shy of the top 2000 mark for nearly a week. Since then its started to move again, but as I suspected, the closer we got to the top 1000, the slower the rank improves as you need more and more links to climb the ladder. 1692nd as I write this, with just short of 2 months to get to the top 1000 based on knowing that the stats Technorati use are 6mths worth of links…basically, as we add incoming links, we can only go up until 6 months, when it will level out somewhat.

On the advertising front, we’ve signed a 6 month agreement with an ad supplier with the ad units to start in the next day or two. More details once the ads are up. Unfortunately it’s US inventory only, but if they deliver the rates they’re talking about, The Inquisitr should break even, and maybe even turn a small profit for the first time, not allowing for me to get paid out of that 🙂

Overall: at the 3 month mark I was starting to stress a bit, not because the site wasn’t performing well, but because it wasn’t performing well enough to cover costs. Ask me in a month and I’ll tell you if those fears were unfounded, but JR + Meieli have rallied around the site, and collectively we’re getting more things right now than before. It’s getting close…..

Update: I should have added, if only Awstats figures were actual page views, because we broke 1 million page views according to Awstats in August…I know, I wish 🙂

Awesome Sauce

August 15, 2008 — 7 Comments

When The Inquisitr hit the 3 month mark I knew we had to lift our game to survive. The site has always done well, and our Technorati stats are proof positive of that, but when you have a writing staff of 2.5 on top of myself, the economics become more interesting. I had originally set out to pay the sites writers on a combination of set rate and traffic performance, but the indicators I’d planned on using didn’t pan out. Hence I ended up paying them a set rate every month. The second month I must admit to flinching, but I knew they were doing a good job, even if the revenue wasn’t keeping up. The 3rd month was up, but not enough.

The good news is a couple of weeks into the 3rd month that our traffic is through the roof. We’d had 2 solid weeks leading to the last couple of days, a couple of 5 figure days in terms of traffic, but the better news was even the quiet days were twice the size they were even a month back. Then there was bigfoot. I’m still waiting on the final stats for the second day of Bigfoot traffic, but it’s likely 2 days of 100k+. I’m also still waiting on the latest RSS sub rates as I post this, but we put on a solid 500+ additional subscribers on the main feed the first day of the surge, and hopefully something close the second day.

TechWinter wrote a post August 8 (currently throwing errors, but link here) suggesting that the traffic was in some sort of terminal decline, but he used Compete, and it’s a seriously flawed way of tracking any site, let alone ours. That the site opened on a bang I’ve written about before, mostly due to a Digg day 3. The following 4 weeks were down, because unfortunately Digg traffic doesn’t convert into long term readers. Since that time though we’ve been on a steady climb north, and there has never been a climb down from about the 3-4 week mark in.

Will the site make it? Still can’t tell. The bar is set high for The Inquisitr, mostly due to the investment in a writing staff. Standalone without any paid staff it would certainly put some food on my table now, but on the same token could I have grown it that far without the support of our writing team? I would be lying to say we’re out of the woods yet, but the trends are positive and if it does fail, we’ll go down fighting. Alone, considering Technorati rank, traffic and even revenue, it’s a minimum $20-30k sale on Sitepoint, but possibly pushing $50k or higher. There’s great value there, and hopefully it will start paying for itself soon.

Numbers + URLS

June 16, 2008 — 4 Comments

So the good new is that The Inquisitr got accepted into Google News, least the tech stream did anyway. This is going to be a healthy boost in site traffic, although until we start appearing I don’t know by how much yet. I could be hundreds of page views a day, it could be thousands or even more. Its been years since I had a site in Google News, but I do recall The Blog Herald getting reasonable sort of traffic from it.

Now the bad news: I had to change the URL structure to be accepted. Google News will only index pages where those pages have a min 3 number unique identifier. The Inquisitr didn’t, with me having taken the SEO and simple URL route of inquisitr.com/postname. So I had to change the permalink structure of every post (it’s now inquisitr.com/postnumber/postname), easy, but that means a redirect of the old posts…easy, but because the posts didn’t have anything between the URL and name originally the site is now trying to redirect everything with that structure, including archive pages and static pages. The plugin I used for the redirect has an exception box, but how do you define the exception when there is no unique identifier in the first place other than the name of the page itself (and I tried that…didn’t work, it looks for a broader field). So for now the pages for QMeme, About and Content are now redirecting to posts with the same content until I can find a way of excepting these pages from the catchall 302 redirect. Did I mention that it caused me one hour of sheer panic as well? 🙂

Update: before I even hit publish my Google News vanity search email pops up with a hit

goognews
Uploaded with plasq‘s Skitch!

Today marks 1 month since The Inquisitr launched. I was going to write something over on the site about the 1 month mark but the last time I wrote a post about the site people used OutBrain to rate it poorly, besides, I don’t do self indulgent well anyway…well my personal blog aside 🙂

Having said that being transparent to a point is an important part of blogging/ publishing 2.0 so here’s some numbers from 6pm AEST June 6. Some constantly fluctuate so hence the proviso in terms of when the figures apply to

Page views

Awstats 5 May- 4:15 5 June: 415080
Google Analytics 9 May – 5 June: 136,768 (note missing the opening big 4 days)

Subscribers
Feedburner: 2155 across 4 feeds.

Technorati
Authority: 339
Rank: 12505

Techmeme
Leaderboard 51st
Bloggerboard (30 day rolling) 51st, (7 day rolling) 32nd
Writers: me (30 day rolling) 29th (includes two TC posts), (7 day rolling) 10th

Webstats
Alexa one week: 36,041 3months: 349,347
Compete: 129,714 “people” for May
Quantcast: predicts a monthly unique of 82,426

Services running on the site
Disqus
ValueClickMedia
BuySellAds.com
Adsense (one unit only…and not for long)
Lijit
FriendFeed (via WordPress plugin)

Services tried but down
Pubmatic
Outbrain (subject to review)

Sponsor(s)
The Metaverse Journal

Widgets Running
Display: Techmeme, BlogCatalog
Available for users: iGoogle | Netvibes | Opera | webpage/ blog

There’s probably other things as well I’ll think of later. My thanks to those who have supported myself and the team along the way. After a low second week the site is starting to trend upwards, not huge overnight growth but sustainable, solid growth. More next time.

I’ll save all the formal stuff for a post at The Inquisitr later this week, but I’m sitting here on a Monday, nearly a week into the process, and thought I’d share some thoughts and numbers.

– I’d forgotten the joy (or pain) of running my own large WP blog. I’ve managed to break the template a number of times, including Sunday night where I thought it would be smart to auto-update the plugins. Big mistake

– Feedburner is still like a Rollercoaster years after launching. I can’t give an accurate subscriber number because it’s up and down, but it’s roughly 1200 subscribers on average one week in (highest count has been 1500+). Not huge, but more than the 300 or 400 I thought the site would get. BTW: why isn’t Feedburner using Google logins yet? have they forgotten about the service?

– All the missing bits are now fixed: about page with full bios, contact page complete with form (3 form plugins later), Twitter account here which auto updates via plugin, but painfully posts on pre-posts.

– The site is averaging around 18,000 page views a day as of yesterday (but including the entire month including pre-launch). The biggest day was Thursday (US time) where a post hit the front page of Digg. If the average holds (it wont) about 750k page views month. I’m betting on 500k, but hope it’s higher. When planning this I thought 100-200k, so I’m more than happy (its nearly hit 200k now)

– Started running some basic affiliate ads to demo the 125×125 spots. I’m not going to actively try to sell them until there’s a month worth of traffic to use, but if anyone is interested and would like to buy one now, I’m certainly open to offers.

– The writing team is working really well, I woke up Saturday to find I didn’t have a post on the front page. It was magical knowing that there was a pile of content up and I wasn’t pressured to add to it. Spent 2 hours playing with my son: it’s been a long time since I’ve felt able to do that without stressing about getting content up. I still worked both days of the weekend, but it was more leasurly and fun…well the Sunday night breaking the template and coding part aside 🙂

– slowly working my way through some value adds and partnerships. Couple of small announcements hopefully in the next few week.

– Haven’t had one headline on Techmeme yet, only the odd link in. Reddit and Digg headlines therefore have become easier to obtain. Bizarre.