April 7, 2009

My Failed Websites And Why, Part 1

I've been reflecting lately on some of my success and most importantly my failures.  I truly believe that a person can learn from their failures and online marketing is no exception.  In this post I hope to bring to light some of my failed websites, why they failed, and what I've learned from my own experiences in the pursuit of the mighty online dollar.

ObsceneCaffeine.com

This was my first website dedicated to MySpace and was a MySpace resource site.  I was an early adopter for the MSRS script, that had a lot of promises, plenty of automation, and a programmer that was willing to offer support.  I learned my first lesson in buying online scripts with this endeavor, which 'was don't believe the hype'.

The website gained marginal traffic, in the neighborhood of 100 uniques per day and had a pretty good distribution of theme uses.  The problem was that monetiziation was virtually eliminated once Google took a stand and no longer allowed small images directly next to Adsense ads.  Essentially the entire website was created in the hopes that unsuspecting visitors would be clicking on ads, thinking they were being taken to other parts of the official ObsceneCaffeine website.

To add insult to injury, there was no development with the script.  Essentially less than 5 months after the script was released it was abandoned by it's original developer.  The support forum provided was ho hum, but for all intent and purposes...it was dead.  The overpriced script was now worthless and the website, unable to properly monetize, was worthless on the market.

What I learned from this experience was don't buy into hype and early adoption is not always a good thing.

Styckr.com

This website was created in the hopes I could create a free image host and monetize with ads like Adbrite, hopefully bringing in plenty of views.  I used a free image hosting script that worked, was supported, and was extremely user friendly.  However, modifying the script proved difficult and monetizing even more of a challenge.

All to often users would hot link images and attempts to force page loads was met with decreased traffic.  There is far too much competition in this arena for me to compete successfully, which coupled with my coding limitations proved fatal.  As I mentioned, it was successful shortly after launch, which crippled my server.  I couldn't justify leaving up a minimal money earner that constantly threatened the stability of the rest of my sites.

What I learned was that free was great, but the general public would take advantage of it at every opportunity.  Furthermore, the majority of those looking to host free images are looking to upload porn (which is it's own problem legally) and drive traffic that is less than premium.

TheTounge.org

This was the very first domain I ever purchased, complete with misspelled words. lol.  I was naive and intended to create a thriving gadget/tech community on the backend of a Joomla script.  Because creating content was a burden at the time, I figured why not cut 'n paste press releases.  As well all know, but I had yet to learn, Google hates duplicate content.  TheTounge.org was struck down repeatedly for duplicate content before I wised up and shut'er down.

Joomla was also, at the time, constantly updated and any brief period it wasn't updated it was hacked.  This was extremely frustrating and an eye opener.  Not everyone wants to see you succeed and some will even go out of their way to cause heartache that stretches far beyond the typical forum troll.

What I learned from this website was general SEO common sense.  Thanks to TheTounge.org I learned what it took to stay in the Google good graces.

Z-Blackfox.info

This website was originally purchased as an expired domain with high PR.  Little did I know that PR could be spoofed and what you were left with was a dead domain, possibly even black listed.  I held on though and after about 12 months I had developed a working directory, complete with link building news blog.

Z-Blackfox.info was also the first website that I started investing in, at least heavily with advertising campaigns.  The link directory relied on a small review fee and certain sponsored listings.  I think I broke even...maybe.

What I learned was that there is such a thing as too-good-to-be-true in domain purchasing.  Also, that just because you throw money at a project does not guarantee success.  Without a solid business model, like any business, failure is always a step away.


This is the conclusion of Part 1 of My Failed Websites and Why.  Trust me, I have plenty of other failed websites that I will be covering in another post.  It's just as important for people to share their mistakes as it is for them to share their successes.  All too often in the blogosphere guru's are willing to talk about how great they are, yet fail to mention all the failures they walked over to get where they are now.  Hopefully, this exercise will teach someone, something, at least how not to fail like I did.

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Comments on My Failed Websites And Why, Part 1 »

April 7, 2009

Makka @ 1:51 pm

Great post – and I admire your courage in admitting your failures! I guess we’ve all had them (I certainly have!) but we usually don’t talk about them. I like the way you talk about what you learned in each case – making mistakes is a great way to learn.

cldnails @ 2:53 pm

Thanks Makka!

As mentioned, I have a list of other sites I will be covering in a later post.

Hindsight is always 20/20.

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