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Archive for May, 2008

Weekly Stats (May 10th, 2008)

Posted by Mark Cuda on Saturday, May 10th, 2008 | 8 Comments »

Hey guys, I’m just going to do some updates today. We’ll have some more content tomorrow. :)

First off, we are very new, so our stats are not too great yet. But let’s see what we got. :) I’ll be doing this every Saturday, so we can see the progress of this blog. :)

Stats - As of May 10th, 2008

  • Technorati: 790,971 (Link)
  • Alexa - 635,288 (Link)
  • Posts - 24
  • Comments - 164
  • Average Comments Per Post - 6.83

As you can see, we’re growing very nicely. From next week on, we’ll show the previous weeks in parentheses so we can show the progress. :)

I think that this blog is shaping up to be something great, and I’m going to be trying my best to provide some great content for you. We’ve got a lot of great things coming up soon, so stick around. :)

Also, the Mini Contest is coming to a close on May 14th, or this upcoming Wednesday, so stay tuned into MonkeyBlogger.com for that.

One more thing, I am going to be making t-shirts! These will be high quality with mascots on them. I’ll be giving them out free to start, so I think you guys are gonna like that too. :D

Well, that’s it, tomorrow we’ll have some better content, so be ready for that.

A Foolish Website Review

Posted by Mark Cuda on Friday, May 9th, 2008 | 7 Comments »
This is a paid review, but is by no means is my opinion altered by the fact that I was paid to write it.

Boy, did I come across a foolish website. :P

It even knows it’s foolish, it goes by the name of The Net Fool.

But in all seriousness, Jim asked me to review his Make Money Online blog, The Net Fool.

Now, I can hear you all screaming, “There’s too many stupid “MMO” blogs out there, and we sure as heck don’t need another one!”, but bear with me. This one actually doesn’t suck.

Jim has essentially created a blog that focuses mostly on making money but at the same time, it’s not the same rehashed content, with articles like, “Use Proxies to Make Money!” or “Flipping Websites” or even “Make money doing absolutely nothing”, (I hate those ones :P ).

He uses a lot of methods to make money, and he talks about them at his blog.

These can include GPT websites, or Get Paid To websites. What’s great about this is that he doesn’t just have scattered posts about it. He has a whole page for GPT Reviews, and another for Trusted GPT websites.

He also talks a lot about the stock market, and he seems to really know what he’s talking about. This is cool because I can’t think of any other real good MMO blogs that talk about this. That in itself makes him stand out.

Another great thing about his blog is that he has managed to create a unique look and feel to it. He used the John Cow theme, but modified it much. It has a different color scheme, much more toned down and not as bright. He also invested in custom header graphics with a great mascot, which I presume is of him. :D

Personally, (And I’ll be talking about this much more) I feel that custom mascots and themes and whatnot really brand a blog, and set it apart from the other 10,000 Make Money Online blogs from the get go. This is something I feel he has really achieved.

One more great thing about his blog is the unique writing style and unique layout of his posts. I personally love images, and I’ve been using them more in my posts, and this is a skill Jim has mastered. He always seems to have some great clip art that fits his posts perfectly, and that keeps me entertained while reading his content. Also, when is comes to his writing style, he’s casually, but not too casual, he doesn’t use slang or anything of that sort, and I really like that.

Now, although he’s got a great blog, and I could go on about the Pros, I do want to give some suggestions to him, that I think will help him even more.

One thing I think he could do better for this blog is clean up the navigation. If it were me, I’d put all the GPT stuff on one page, it would organize it better. I would also not have the archives page on the navigation, but have it be accessed via the sidebar. I think it would help clean up the navigation, and produce a better user experience.

Those are really the only things I can find that I’m not totally cool with on his blog, but overall, I think it’s a great one, and you should totally check it out.

Also right now, he has a great contest going on with over $4,500 in prizes called The Net Fool’s Outrageous Blog Contest! Prizes vary from Web Hosting to Wordpress themes and even cold hard cash! It’s a great one, and you should definitely check it out. :)

Well, that’s pretty much it for my review of this blog. I think it’s a great one, and is growing steadily, and I think it will soon become a foolish household name. :)

The Freelancer’s Guide: Part Five

Posted by Mark Cuda on Thursday, May 8th, 2008 | 6 Comments »
*NOTE* I fully apologize for this not being posted yesterday, I had something very important that I needed to do right when I was finishing up this post, and I couldn’t get it out. My sincere apologies. *NOTE*

Well, the time has come.

Yes you are reading the fifth and final part of the series “The Freelancer’s Guide”, it’s been over a week and a half since the first part launched, and it’s proved to be a success on the blog. :)

In the first four parts, there were 30 comments! That’s great for a new blog, and it came to 7.5 comments per post. That’s more than some much larger blogs get! I’m really happy about that, as like I’ve mentioned, I really want to build a strong community here. Let’s just see if we can hit say, 15 comments on this one post. ;) That would be nice. :)

Anyways, let’s get onto the post. :)

Today in this part we’re going to talk about “How to create a work flow when you are working with multiple jobs”.

This is something that a lot of freelancers struggle with, including myself! Due to the very nature of freelancing, you sometimes don’t have any work one day, and the next day, a ton of jobs that need to be done the same week! This can be very stressful for any freelancer, including myself. But there are a few ways you can create a work flow when you have multiple jobs that will not only keep your work organized, but at the same time lighten your workload essentially.

  1. Use a time management program, such as Fruitful Time
  2. Set assigned times to work on each project, not just work on one until it’s done.
  3. Set times to take off from work
  4. Set reasonable deadlines, and meet them. No need to finish before, but finish on time.

Let’s go into detail with each of these tactics.

Use a Time Management Program

When your working with multiple jobs, it can be tough to keep track of every one, and it’s deadline. Not to mention other things you need to take time for; eating, sleeping, showering (hopefully ;) ) running errands, and this and be something that messes up your schedule and can cause you to lose focus on what you need to do, and you may even totally forget about jobs. That would be horrible. These time management programs, such as Fruitful Time.

Assigned Work Times for Each Project

Something a lot of freelancers do, which is not a very good idea, is take one project, and force themselves to work on it until it’s done. There are two major problems with this.

  1. When you work too long or too much on one project, you can lose focus and desire to get it done, and you lose your creativity when you have to work on the same thing for days, or weeks even.
  2. When you work so long on one thing, you can in many cases start to forget about your next job! It won’t be fresh in your mind, and thus you won’t do as well on it, almost guaranteed.

If you set aside different times to work on different projects, you really keep the creative juice flowing, an you won’t ever lose your train of though on any of your jobs as long as they are all fresh in your mind. This is something I didn’t start doing until fairly recently, and it’s help me out very much. I see my jobs getting done faster, and of better quality,

Take Time off!

I know a lot of bloggers and freelancers alike don’t ever do this, or don’t want to do this. But in my opinion, it’s absolutely essential. When your a freelancer, your job is sitting in front of a computer, 24/7. Searching for jobs, landing jobs, working on them, communicating with other freelancers. It’s a hard job. Why? Not because of physical reasons, but because your cooped up all day in an office, looking at a computer screen!

It’s been proven that taking time off, maybe just taking a walk, or sleeping in a day, or even going on a vacation to the beach can really help you mentally and physically, as a freelancer or any other job really.

When you take time off, you relax, you recuperate, and it’s just a good experience. In some cases, you can even use nature or something outside to further help you in your work! Whether it be the way you see some trees in the wind that helps you on a web design project, or two birds in a bird bath that helps you visualize a logo your working on, all these things can be of great benefit. That and there’s no better medicine than taking a walk I think. ;)

Setting Reasonable Deadlines

Now, I’m the kind of person that always wants things done, and done now. But when it comes to freelancing, you should never have that pompous attitude.

When your working on a job, or even two or three, you need to have deadlines. You want things done by a certain time, and clients need things done. The problem is that a lot of freelancers just work, work, work until everything is done. Now this is very ambitious, but your deadlines need to be reasonable. You need to budget your time correctly to get things done on time, and with the highest of quality. But there’s no reason for it to be done three days before it needs to be. ;)

See, what I mean here is that if you rush a project, or set unreasonable deadlines, like saying you have to finish a whole web development job in one day, that’s just crazy, and even if you do finish it by that time, the quality will not be anywhere near as good as it should be, or as good as you know you can make it.

I personally set deadlines maybe one to two days further in time than I know I will probably have it done. Why? So that I can make sure everything is perfect, and if time and unforeseen occurrences befall me, I’ll be ready, and I’ll have that extra day as a cushion to fall back on. :)

Well, I know it’s sad to say, but this will conclude the series, “The Freelancer’s Guide”

I think it’s been a pretty good one, and I hope it helps a lot of you in your online ventures. Let’s just go ahead and recap what we’ve gone over, shall we?

The Freelancer’s Guide

Well, I guess that’s it. :) I really, honestly, do hope that you all learned something in this series, and I hope it benefits you greatly in your online ventures. :)

MonkeyBlogger’s First Interview!

Posted by Mark Cuda on Tuesday, May 6th, 2008 | 18 Comments »

You guys are in for a treat today. :)

I’ve been able to get Michael Dunlop from Retireat21 to agree to let me interview him! This is great because as a 19 year old internet entrepreneur, Michael is setting the stage for all of us young bloggers, freelancers, and webmasters. So enough of my gibberish, let’s take a look at the interview we were able to get. :)

Hey Michael, it’s great too have you with us at MonkeyBlogger.com, it’s great to be able to interview you. So tell me a bit about yourself. How old are you? When did you get your first computer, and when did you start getting into the online business?

My name is Michael Dunlop and I am 19 Years Old. It all started when I wasinterview about 11 years old and was playing a computer game called Runescape, I played it on and off for a few years. When I was 14 it some how destroyed my parents computer and they banned me from every playing it on there PC. So I decided to go ahead and buy a computer, with the help of my parents. I then moved on to a computer game called Counter Strike and I met some people on there who where starting webdesign so I decided to download Dreamweaver and get in on the craze. I am now the only one left doing websites and making real money online.

When did you start your first website, and what was it called?

My first website was called Just-Shout.com and was a graphics design forum. Soon after launching it we received a lot of sign ups and visitors. I then quickly moved everything to a new domain called ShoutGfx.com which received over 2000 sign ups in 6 months with around 100,000 forum posts. My competitors started to hack my site because of the quick growth and after a few hackings I decided to move onto my new project Webdesigndev.com

How did it feel to be the owner of a website?

I had freedom! Money buys freedom, you can do what you want, when you want. I enjoyed it, it wasn’t like a job, it was about having fun!

What were some of the challenges you faced when you first started up your sites?

Main challenges I faced was Money, Skills and Maturity which I spoke about on my blog, 10 Reasons why being a young entrepreneur sucks! (http://www.retireat21.com/blog/10-reasons-why-being-a-young-entrepreneur-sucks/ )

What recommendations do you have for “newbies” when starting up a website or online business?

Do it today, so many times people say they will start tomorrow and never do!

Do you have any tips regarding marketing a blog, for instance?

- Be unique, we don’t need another “How to make money with Adsense Blog”. I took the Make Money Online niche which was really busy but then I niche it further by making it just for young people.

- If you are going to pay to market your website, I recommend buying paid reviews, you get life time links and triple the traffic that a 125 x 125 in my experience.

What’s your favourite website on the net?

I have a lot of favourite websites, mainly http://problogger.net and http://zenhabits.com and http://dumblittleman.com

Do you believe that everyone can run a business online?

I don’t see why not, so many people (http://www.retireat21.com/blog/top-young-bloggers-under-21/ ) are young and making so much money online so why can’t you!

Lastly, what do you think of MonkeyBlogger.com? Any potential in your eyes?

Sure there is, you need to include more images into your blog posts to make them look more interesting. I like the design and content, keep it up!

Well Michael, it was great to have you, I hope we’ve helped some of my readers to learn a bit about online “biz”, and I hope you are very successful with Retire@21 and all of your other online ventures.

Well, that’s the interview, I hope you all enjoyed it and take away something of value from it :)

The Freelancer’s Guide: Part Four

Posted by Mark Cuda on Monday, May 5th, 2008 | 8 Comments »

Hey guys, and welcome to Part four of this series!

I’m really happy with the feedback and response I’ve gotten so far with this series. The first three parts have generated 22 comments! That’s pretty darn good for a new blog. :) (In my opinion at least)

So without further adieu, let’s introduce Part Four.

In this part of the series “The Freelancer’s Guide”, we are going to discuss How To Deal With Clients, basically just some tips to deal with clients.

This is extremely important when freelancing. One thing I should mention though, is don’t be too nice. Now, I’m not a mean person by any means, but hear me out.

In some cases, when you are too nice, and too giving with a client, they may try and walk all over you. They might try and get you to work cheaper than you can, and don’t let this happen. If you decide you can’t work for less than a certain price, than stick to it!

With that said, on with part four.

When dealing with clients, once you already have the job, (Part two ;) ) you need to deal with your clients in a respectful manner.

Slang

This is so unprofessional in my opinion. When your speaking with a client, be it over the phone, through email, or on instant messenger, you should never use words like “yo” or “dogg” or “omg”, “lol” or whatnot. Speak with good English, and have good grammar, as well as put stress on your spelling. ;)

Attitude

When dealing with a client, you need to have a good attitude about the job you are doing. Don’t be a “You get what you get” freelancer, and work with the client to achieve the best results.

If your a jerk, and don’t reply to emails, don’t work with the client, you’ll do two things.

  1. You won’t satisfy exactly what they need/want.
  2. You will most likely never work with them again.

These are just a few things that you need to remember when working with a client. It’s important because not only does decide whether you will ever work with a client again, it will also trash your reputation, and that will only hurt you.

Well, that’s pretty much it for this part, it’s a short one, but it’s full of some great information that as a freelancer you need to use. Stick around for the last (but not least) part in this series, where we’ll cover How to Create a Workflow when you have multiple clients. :)