User basicallymoney.com - Gatejumper most recent 30 from http://www.gatejumper.net 2010-07-30T19:08:56Z http://www.gatejumper.net/feeds/user/103 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://www.gatejumper.net/questions/18/how-long-does-it-take-for-google-to-index-a-new-site/286#286 Answer by BasicallyMoney.com for How long does it take for Google to index a new site? BasicallyMoney.com 2010-01-17T16:21:02Z 2010-01-17T16:21:02Z <p>Links, yes - important. But one thing nobody has mentioned yet: Make sure you have <strong>sufficient interesting and unique content.</strong> Even if the Google bot visits your page &ndash; whether because you submitted your URL the usual way, or your sitemap via Webmaster Tools, or because it came across a link to your site elsewhere &ndash; if it finds <em>very little of value</em> at your site it may simply choose to not include you in the index. I've read that Google likes content it hasn't seen before.</p> http://www.gatejumper.net/questions/104/have-you-found-mastermind-groups-or-accountability-meetings-to-be-useful/285#285 Answer by BasicallyMoney.com for Have you found mastermind groups or accountability meetings to be useful? BasicallyMoney.com 2010-01-17T16:11:14Z 2010-01-17T16:11:14Z <p>I get together at the pub the odd Sunday here and there, for beer &amp; brunch with between 2 to 4 other fellow alumni friends from my graduating class. The gatherings are primarily social in nature, but since we're all in the same business (IT and software) and a few of us are entrepreneurial-minded, many of these pub get-togethers are actually a place were we discuss potential ideas we've had &ndash; <strong>and we're brutally honest with one another.</strong></p> <p>Given the trust and honesty and experience present, I do think of these friends as part of my <em>mastermind group</em> &ndash; although some of them may not be familiar with the specific term. I only recently became acquainted with it after reading <em>Think &amp; Grow Rich</em> myself.</p> http://www.gatejumper.net/questions/161/how-important-it-is-to-have-some-premade-content-when-launching-a-new-blog-site/284#284 Answer by BasicallyMoney.com for How important it is to have some "premade content" when launching a new blog/site? BasicallyMoney.com 2010-01-17T15:46:03Z 2010-01-17T15:46:03Z <p>(Great question. I'll +1 you when I have the ability to vote.)</p> <p>There's another reason to accelerate your writing of, say, five or six good articles up-front: <strong>You are much more likely to be indexed by the search engines if you have more than a single page worth of interesting, unique content.</strong> Even if the Google bot visits your site after you submit your link to the index, it may still decide your site is not <em>worthy</em> of indexing. Build out good content &ndash; and get some links to your site.</p> <p>But, back to the human perspective:</p> <p>I also think it's important that your new blog doesn't look too obviously as <strong>still under construction</strong>. In other words, it's not just the content that people will be looking at to decide if your blog is worthwhile! If it looks like you put some good work into making your blog look appealing, you're also shifting odds in your favor that you'll win a subscriber. Whereas, if your design is incomplete or half-assed, five good articles might have trouble making up for the first impression on the design side.</p> http://www.gatejumper.net/questions/206/list-of-gatejumper-member-projects-and-sites/283#283 Answer by BasicallyMoney.com for List of Gatejumper member projects and sites BasicallyMoney.com 2010-01-17T15:28:46Z 2010-01-17T15:28:46Z <p>I'm also building a StackExchange community (like this), about money: <a href="http://www.basicallymoney.com" rel="nofollow">BasicallyMoney.com</a>.</p> http://www.gatejumper.net/questions/267/how-to-get-new-members-to-a-new-forum/282#282 Answer by BasicallyMoney.com for How to get new members to a new forum? BasicallyMoney.com 2010-01-17T04:24:28Z 2010-01-17T04:45:58Z <p>G'day folks. This question piqued my interest, for reasons that will be obvious.</p> <p>I'm also involved in the beta-testing of the StackExchange community Q&amp;A platform for a site that I run, and part of that beta-testing is asking questions and posting answers to kick the tires and <em>make sure things work.</em></p> <p>With no other users around <em>to begin with</em>, <strong>I most certainly</strong> created test accounts to work the system. I made some non-admin accounts to witness features in action under limited access use-cases. For instance, it was easy to forget new users can't post comments, or vote. I learned it's important to up-vote new users quickly, so they can pay it forward &ndash; otherwise it's a catch-22. I've also posted as "anonymous" to witness how unregistered users experience the site; e.g. no voting permitted, even with sufficient earned reputation.</p> <p>With those test accounts, rather than posting blah-blah "<em>testing, testing, 1.. 2.. 3..</em>" or "<em>Is this thing on?</em>" variety of questions &ndash; which I would later have to delete as administrator &ndash; I instead posted some <strong>real</strong> questions: a few FAQs which people could find useful.</p> <p><strong>Such seeded content was also key in providing the minimum threshold of unique and interesting content for Google to take my site seriously and actually <em>index</em> it. That was a critical milestone.</strong></p> <p>Now I get search traffic and Analytics keyword data <em>essential</em> for SEO. I don't see practicing SEO as being disingeneous, either &ndash; SEO in honest hands helps others locate what they <em>want</em> to find. This is one reason I continue to like posting FAQs to my site: Users with very specific and obscure questions bring <em>long-tail</em> traffic to the site (which is welcome) but not much <em>fat-head</em> traffic &ndash; and FAQs get some of that.</p> <p>A much more important part of the exercise has been the <strong>community-building.</strong> I don't have the advantage of an existing community centered around content I've developed already. So I'm using my site to get some of my existing thoughts down in plain view. Yes, I've asked questions I <em>thought</em> I knew the answer to &ndash; and then was surprised to discover I didn't, actually! The community has taught me. I don't assume I have all the answers or have considered all the angles.</p> <p>I've also discovered that many people are more comfortable starting out in the community by <em>answering</em> a question that's out there rather than coming up with a new one of their own. Some people <em>want</em> to participate, but don't have that <strong>easy in</strong>. Seeding a few questions and leaving them unanswered on the site is the <strong>easy in</strong> they are looking for. Once somebody new understands how the site works after leaving a few answers and seeing how people vote/comment on them, etc. they tend to <strong>venture further.</strong></p> <p>Furthermore, I'm running some ad campaigns &ndash; including one expensive one &ndash; and so there ought to be something to draw visitors in to actually <em>participate</em> at the site, otherwise I've wasted money on many one-time casual drive-by views. Unanswered questions work wonders in converting viewers into <em>participants</em>, and those participants like to come back to see how their answer was received by the community. And then they, too, start to vote. It's a virtuous cycle.</p> <p>Another area I think I did well with is ensuring people see my site as <strong>inclusive</strong>. With a topic like finance it's easy for discussion to get locale-specific. I'm Canadian, and wanted to build a site Canadians would feel welcome at &ndash; yet <em>I didn't want to build a site just for Canadians.</em> There's a lot of knowledge people can share about money without regard to locale. So, I created a multiple country taxonomy and icon system to show users that the site is inclusive and that questions both broad <em>and</em> locale-specific are welcome. There have been some very interesting answers with people from multiple countries exchanging perspectives. Note that establishing the country taxonomy also required seeding some questions. With StackExchange, tags cannot (yet) be created in a vacuum.</p> <p>Anyway, <strong>building a community is much harder than it looks.</strong> Quality seeded content is a great help.</p> <p>I do agree with JW on the last points &ndash; ask friends and family to help out. I have two sisters who help with some Q&amp;A, and many friends do, too. One friend liked the idea so much he volunteered to be a moderator.</p> <p>And yes, use Facebook and Twitter to your advantage. But <strong>many Facebook fans and Twitter followers just follow out of politeness and will never participate at your site unless you entice them</strong>. You'll need to be a content tease to draw them in or even beg for a visit here and there.</p> <p>JW may have realized a blog is much the same: subscribers aren't <em>necessarily</em> going to participate actively at your site just because they read your blog. But, I would still have given my left nut to have had a very popular blog to begin with. Not to mention the head start! I was the <strong>last</strong> in my topic peer group to get accepted into the beta. :-/</p> <p>Finally, I also think plain-old marketing and business knowledge helps:</p> <ul> <li>Think strategically.</li> <li>Have design appeal.</li> <li>Write good copy.</li> <li><strong>Advertise</strong>.</li> </ul> <p><hr /></p> <p>p.s. If you still haven't guessed, <a href="http://www.basicallymoney.com" rel="nofollow">I'm the competition</a> that JW is referring to.</p> <p>For what it's worth, I respect JW and I'd prefer to <strong>win him over</strong> than to <strong>win</strong>.</p>