March In Review: Generating 10,000 Pageviews In The First Month

Introduction

I officially launched this blog on March 9th, which gave it 22 days to show some results for the month. Overall it did fairly well for the amount of time I have to spend on it. This blog is not my very top priority as I have other businesses that I run, which do require a lot of my time. I’ll take you through the various parts of the blog to show how they did. You can learn from some of the things that I did, and compare to see how the results actually looked. We’ll start off with traffic:

Traffic

March generated 6,323 unique visitors, 10,1272 pageviews, averaging 1.61 pageviews per visitor.

Traffic stats for March 2007

One of the most important statistics you can look at is your new visitor vs. returning visitor report. This will show you if you are able to retain your readers or not. The only thing you need to make sure to account for is spikes in traffic on days where something may have been linked on a bunch of other sites. More than likely most of that traffic is new, and will bring down the monthly average. A good thing to do is look at a few days where your traffic is pretty stable. Your returning visitor rate should be more accurate in terms of average traffic flow.

Monetization

My purpose of this blog is not to subsidize any sort of income really, but anything extra is always nice. At this time, I’m more worried about generating traffic then actually making money. With traffic comes money, so worry about the first before worrying about the latter. During March I was running just Google AdSense. I did a few things to better optimize the ads, and still plan on doing some more obvious things in the near future. March brought in $5.28 on 15,360 impressions for just a $0.34 eCPM. There is much room for improvement on this, so it will be interesting to watch and see as this hopefully grows.

I have also added Kontera in-text links for April, so I’ll be looking forward to seeing how that does at the end of the month.

RSS Subscribers

My RSS subscriber count is averaging close to 50 by the end of the month. That’s not bad considering it was 0 less than a month ago. A huge help was the site of the month article John Chow had written about. Since many of his readers have similar interests, they seemed to show a liking over here as well. My goal for April is to have my RSS subscribers averaging over 100 by the end of the month.

Stats from Feedburner for March 2007

The one trend that is noticeable, and will continue to be noticeable, is the drop in subscribers on Saturday and Sunday’s. I purposely try not to post content on these days, so there will obviously be a drop in traffic and subscriptions.

Search Engine Goodness

I was seeing search engine results very early on in this blog, so it’s interesting to see what people are searching for to get here. This can also drastically help with the direction that you can write your content to maximize the amount of traffic that comes in. Search engine traffic is very valuable because it’s targeted traffic. Readers searched for something specifically, and the hope is that they came to your site looking for just that. I had 176 visits from organic search engines (Google, MSN, search, and AOL). The top 10 keywords that were searched to get to my blog in March are as follows:

  1. 2008 infiniti g37 coupe
  2. 2008 g37 coupe
  3. www.nevblog.com
  4. david pitlyuk
  5. 2008 infiniti g37
  6. infiniti g37
  7. powercast ipo
  8. mercedes mansions
  9. heli expo
  10. www.davidpitlyuk.com

We can obviously see here that the keyword which brought the most traffic was in regards to my post about the new 2008 Infiniti G37 Coupe. I wrote this post early on when the car was just released and before many other sites had written about it. This gave me an advantage in the Google SERP, and put me on the top of results for some time before some of the bigger sites were able to get their content in. Just doing a preliminary look at April stats, I can see that not as much traffic is coming in from the same article, but I’m seeing a ton of traffic coming from my post on the next multi-BILLION dollar idea. In that post I talked about a company called Powercast, and how I would love to invest in them. While many other articles have been written about Powercast, not many have written about investing in it. This gave me a powerful advantage in search results, as it is a company which many people are seeing the potential for making some money on. In fact the top 5 keyword referrals in April so far all have to do with investing in Powercast. Just some food for thought.

Popular Pages/Content

It’s important to look at the most popular pages, as it can give you a few clues to make your blog better. It can tell you what articles people are most interested in reading and what articles are getting the most linkbacks. This way when you sit down and think about what you should write about, you should have a general direction to lead you in. This can also help you create a niche for your site if you do not already have one. Here’s a list of the top 10 most popular pages on this site for March:

  1. Lamborghini As A Piece Of Art
  2. Dodge Viper Coupe With Matching Helicopter
  3. An Ugly Lamborghini?
  4. The 45 Best Technology Sector Corporate Web Designs: A-G
  5. David Pitlyuk (Homepage)
  6. Mansion Hunting In Northern Virginia
  7. How I Got Over 2,000 Visitors In The First Week With $0
  8. The Next Multi-BILLION Dollar Idea
  9. Who Is David Pitlyuk?
  10. Cars (Category)

The top 3 posts were fairly popular on a few of the automotive forums that I am a part of, and therefore generated a good amount of traffic. Take a look at the top referrals analysis below to get more of an idea where my traffic came from.

I had 38 posts in the Month of March averaging 1.7 posts per day. According to my article on the number of optimal posts per day, I’m right in line! Keep in mind that I try not to post content on the weekends as I believe that’s time to try and do some relaxing.

Top Referrals

  1. StumbleUpon
  2. My350Z
  3. Autoblog
  4. G35Drive
  5. JohnChow
  6. Maxima.org
  7. NissanClub
  8. ViperClub
  9. Digg
  10. Google Reader

StumbleUpon brought 1,067 visitors that averaged 1.91 pages per visit. The majority of the traffic came from two articles that were “stumbled”. I didn’t learn about StumbleUpon until this month, but it’s a great concept…look for a post specifically about this in the near future. My350Z, G35Drive, Maxima.org, NissanClub, and ViperClub are all forum communities that I’m a part of. You can read more about generating traffic from forums in my post How I got over 2,000 visitors in the first week with $0.

  1. Bob

    04/05/2007 4:04 pm

    Nice breakdown. It’s fun to compare other blogs stats that started out around the same time :)
    ( I had 21.651 pageviews neener neener ;) )

  2. Martin Reed

    04/05/2007 4:53 pm

    Its great that those car posts brought you some good traffic, however I would be a little worried as to how targeted that traffic really is - well, unless you decide to turn your blog into ones about automobiles!

    Like Bob says though, it is interesting to see a breakdown of your stats. I may do the same for my blog.

  3. David Pitlyuk

    04/05/2007 4:57 pm

    Martin: I have actually been thinking about that in terms of what niche does my blog really fit into? I have to keep in mind that this blog isn’t meant to be something that turns into a full-time gig…if it does, great, if not, I have a great way to post my life adventures and share things that interest me. If anything I feel like I meet the target of entrepreneur. I also feel like the car posts fall into that target group as cars is more than often an inspiration for success.

    Bob: Lol, congrats on the great #’s for your blog!

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