Archive for the ‘ BANS ’ Category

Niche Store Writer for BANS (Build A Niche Store)

Big kudos out to Dave2point0 for launching his new product, Niche Store Writer. This post is to help Dave get the word out about this fantastic product!

This is a couple of steps ahead of my most recent series on Building My Online Business, but I’ve had the privilege of helping Dave test this product before launch and I wanted to get the word out. If you own and run stores built on BANS (Build A Niche Store) software, then you NEED Niche Store Writer product!

First things first, please note that I said stores, plural. If you have a couple of BANS stores and you like to customize them and make them pretty and you spend a lot of time working on them, this product is not going to help you. On the other hand, if you’re like me and you have dozens or even hundreds of BANS sites, Niche Store Writer is the answer to all your content problems.

The concept is simple. When you’re trying to optimize your new BANS site for the search engines, the single best way to do that is with content built around and about your niche. Plenty of keyword references on every page, you know the drill. Well if you only have a couple of BANS sites, no problem. But when we’re talking hundreds of sites, the task can sometimes seem so large that, well you just wind up not doing it.

Enter Niche Store Writer

Niche Store Writer was designed by a BANS user for BANS users. With Niche Store Writer you can make quick work of creating fresh new content for your BANS sites (or other sites…hint hint…again!) by doing keyword replacements in a template you design. Here, instead of telling you, I’ll just show you.

You get started with Niche Store Writer on the Template tab. Here you can load your previously written templates to re-use or write one from scratch. This was the most tedious part for me because I wanted to make sure my new Niche Store Writer templates would work for a wide variety of sites. For instance if you have several BANS sites built around clothing, your Niche Store Writer content template should talk generally about clothing. Then as you are writing, you can plug in your TAGS. Think of tags as keywords that Niche Store Writer will replace for you in a few minutes. Here’s a screen shot of the Niche Store Writer Template tab.

nsw1 Do You Own BANS? Then You Need Niche Store Writer!In the screen shot you can see how the [Title], [word2], [work3] and so on tags being used in the Niche Store Writer template. Now lets get some details on the Tags tab.

nsw2 Do You Own BANS? Then You Need Niche Store Writer!On the tags tab you will define the keywords and values to be substituted into the Niche Store Writer template. In addition to having a title and up to 15 keywords, you can also define certain character attributes of the html output. Put all that together and you get the Niche Store Writer edition tab…

nsw3 Do You Own BANS? Then You Need Niche Store Writer!

This is where all the magic happens! The Edition tab of Niche Store Writer not only shows you the results of the template / tags merge but it also shows you a quick report on keyword density! How cool is that! Armed with that information you can always go back to the Niche Store Writer template and add or take away a few non-keywords to adjust your keyword density to suit.

So how does all this work save you any time? Remember way back up there close to the top when I said you should create general content for your Niche Store Writer templates then plug the tags in? Here’s why. Lets say I have BANS sites for ladies shoes, three different sites for three different styles, boots, sandals, and pumps. Once I’ve written the Niche Store Writer template, all I have to do is plug my keywords into the tags tab, click on the edition tab and I have new content! Copy from Niche Store Writer and paste into BANS, next set of keywords, copy/paste, next set of keywords, copy/paste… and I’m done!

Now, I can hear you screaming from here… what about below the post? What about the store pages, thats too many templates….!!!!

Hang On There Skippy!

The way I’ve been using Niche Store Writer (yes, using…its good to be a beta tester!) is to put all the content blocks in the same Niche Store Writer template, then just copy and paste the part that applies to the page I’m working! See, where there is a lazy blogger, there is an easier way!

And Now For The Other Shoe…

Now that I’ve gotten you all pumped up and ready to drop the few bucks Dave is asking for Niche Store Writer…you’ll have to wait! Dave is making the final tweeks to Niche Store Writer this week for a full on launch next week. The Good News is that its only a week. Now, here’s a tip for you. If you want to be one of the first to know when its ready to go, be sure to subscribe to my feed. I’ll put out a quick post when its ready with a link to the website.

*** UPDATE ***

Niche Store Writer is now available! Read All About It!!!

Also…

Keep you eye on Niche Store Writer Templates. My friend Vinny is putting together a pretty awesome collection of pre-written Niche Store Writer templates to make your BANS building even easier. Wow, with all these tools…what’s gonna be left? Well, hosting, niche selection, link building… there’s plenty you can spend your new found time on! Stay tuned! Great things are on the way!

Peace

Building My Online Business

kickinthepants Building My Online Business

Sometimes it takes a good swift kick in the pants to get your attention…

…and that’s what I got this week while reading some of my favorite blogs. This site started as a journal of experiences I encountered while living and working in a connected world. Looking back over my last dozen or so posts, it has been anything but and I need to get back on track. So here goes. Let’s talk about…

Building My Online Business

For the first fifteen years or so of my professional career I worked in a wide variety of businesses; an international natural foods network marketing company, the second largest telecom company in the country, a printing company, even commercial software development. One of the reasons I was able to move from industry to industry so easily was because the underlying principles of technology were not dependent on what kind of widget was being pushed out the back door. A similar principle applies here.

Just because I have moved my business online doesn’t mean that those same underlying principles of good business practices and monetization don’t apply anymore, in spite of the way some online entrepreneurs act. Take the recent purchase of one mans goal dot com for instance. The buyer paid over $10,000 for a website with no organic product, no long tenured customers, no established monthly recurring revenue… just a name and a quasi-loyal following of readers. That’s like paying $10,000 for a convenience store that doesn’t sell anything but they have lots of people come in and look around everyday.

So How Do They Translate?

Good question. Off-line business principles make good online business principles. Things like keeping a low overhead, diversification, and return on investment still apply. Some are easier than others, take low overhead for example. It would be very easy to run a successful online business with a laptop and a digital camera. Neither are cheap but they are one time costs that will last for years. And even with a somewhat larger tech base than that, my overhead costs are very low…pretty much just the cost of Internet access.

Another of those principles that very few online business owners pay attention to is diversification, or having multiple streams of income. Why diversify? Oh, I don’t know. Lets say you are one of the eBay entrepreneurs and you’re making boatloads of cash off their affiliate program. That’s great. Now what if they pull the plug on it tomorrow, or at the end of the month? Would you be able to replace that income in 30 days?

Diversification of your online business simply ensures sustainability, another solid off-line business principle. If you had an off-line business selling widgets and you depended solely on one supplier for those widgets, what would you do if they went out of business? You have to bring the same mentality to your online business ventures.

How Am I Diversifying

Like most folks who decided they wanted to make money online, I threw up a blog and slapped some AdSense units on it, sat back and waited for my check! And waited…and waited…OH, A CLICK…for 2 cents. I got frustrated and moved on to something else. Now, with the help of the three wise men, I am working my way toward a better understand of AdSense and developing it into a significant stream of income…and it is quite a learning curve.

So while I’m working on that, I’ve recently taken a pretty large bite of the affiliate pie and added eBay to my online business portfolio. Now this is not really new for me, I’ve been signed up with the eBay affiliate program for several months…posting links and banners for them all over the place. But two things happened in the last month that have totally changed my outlook on eBay and their affiliate program and the part it plays in my online business.

The first is that eBay has brought management of their affiliate program in-house and out of the hands of Commission Junction. Now, I’ve never really had any beef with CJ, they’ve just never done anything for me…not one red cent. So I’m kinda happy that things are moving in-house with eBay. That said, they are experiencing some growing pains during the transition but hey, its eBay! Nuff said!

The second big development was my discovery of BANS or Build a Niche Store. BANS is a software designed to be loaded on your server to publish a “store like” website populated with products currently listed on eBay. Again, in the interest of full disclosure, I bought BANS back in March and built my one little store and sat back and waited for the money to start falling out of my PC. Needless to say, that hasn’t happened yet (but when it does you can bet I’ll shoot a vid and post it on Revver! lol). Anyway, back on April 7th, Vic over at BloggerUnleashed.com challenged us to build 100 BANS sites. That really got me thinking and I took the challenge!

The next day was my birthday so I made my present to myself everything it took to get the 100 sites built. I can now say that I have added 103 BANS sites to my online business and will be adding a few more each week.

So What’s Your Point?

The point is this. If those sites only average $1 a day each then that’s $103 per day and almost $3,100 / month or about $37,000 a year added into my online business coffers. Do I have your attention now?

Am I sitting back now with a bigger bucket waiting on money to start falling out of my PC? No, remember diversification? Now that I have the 100 BANS sites up, I’m working to improve my AdSense results, I’m looking for other affiliate programs, oh, and I’m getting links all over the freakin Internet!! And on the off chance that all of those options might not pay-out…I still have the bulk candy vending machines!

The bottom line is that an online business is still a business and you have to treat it that way. Its not a cool way to get to stay at home and work in your shorts, t-shirt, and flippies (but if you need any of those things, be sure to check out BloggerUniforms.info!) Seriously, you have to work like your next meal, or the light bill, or the cell phone bill depended on it.

Ok, I know this has been an epic post like you’d find on How To Make Money from Griz so I’ll go ahead and knock off here…but don’t stray too far because I have lots more online business tips to share. Things like getting a reseller account versus a regular hosting account, all the fun I had setting up BANS and at least one more post on some nifty little tools to help with all those sites.

Thanks for sticking with me this far and since you did I want to leave you with a challenge. If you are serious about having an online business, write down your goals for this year and three concrete steps you will take for each goal. And if you want to share them with the rest of us in the comments, we’ll all be pullin for you! It kinda works that way around here.

Peace.