Wednesday, June 6, 2007

How One Blogger Increased His Revenue From $300/Mo To Over $3000/Mo With Things Other Than AdSense.


Koundamani Tamil comedy - Part 1

When I first started my blogging adventure, my goal was never to make money from it - I just wanted a place to post my ramblings. However, because one of the rambling topics I cover is about making money on the Internet, it made perfect sense to use this blog as a case study on how to take a blog and turn it into an Internet money machine.

John Chow dot Com was monetized back in September, where it made $352.94 - all of it coming from Google AdSense. In October, I added Vibrant Media IntelliTXT to the revenue mix and posted $1,361.64 in blog income. In November, blog traffic went down but income went up to $2,139.93 thanks to additional advertising options. Traffic dropped even more in December but income continued to increase as I posted a record $2,790.05 of blog income.

January is an interesting month for web publishers. Traffic is normally higher than December, but advertising rates are generally lower because Christmas is over. The end result is usually a drop in income. However, I’m happy to report that the blog posted another record breaking performance.

Total Blog Income For January 2007: $3,440.66

In five short months, I have taken this blog from zero to what many people would consider a good full time work income. How did I do this? First, let’s break down the January earnings so you can see where the money came from.

  • Text Links Ads: $621.68
  • Affiliate Sales: $545.00
  • Google AdSense: $536.58
  • Vibrant IntelliTXT: $478.18
  • TTZ Media: $183.54
  • FeedBurner Ads: $175.68
  • ReviewMe: $150.00
  • Grand Total: $3,440.66

Blog traffic for January was 255,574 page views from 133,871 unique visitors, according to Google Analytics. This is a nice increase from December but still well off the 229,853 unique visitors and 360,967 page views posted in October. However, I was able to beat October’s results by over $2,000. Here’s how this was done.

Concentrate On Value

If you look at the income breakdown, you’ll see that my biggest revenue source for January was direct ad sales. Getting direct sales allows you to realize your blog’s full income potential because you don’t have to share revenue with any 3rd party ad networks. For January, I sold direct buys to NewToTech, BuzzBums, Net Business Blog, and Financial RealTime.

The sale to NewToTech and BuzzBums was a banner, Financial RealTime was a link, and Net Business Blog was a review. By selling the review directly, I was able to realize the full $100, instead of having ReviewMe take 50%. I sold the link to Financial RealTime for $150, which is the stated price in my advertising page. A link purchased on this blog through Text Link Ads (aff) cost $200 per month, but I only get $100 of it. I think one of the reasons why advertisers buy links on my blog via TLA is they offers a $100 coupon (aff) to new advertisers.

When I say concentrate on value, I don’t mean just trying to get direct ad buys. It also means delivering value to your advertisers. I want to make sure they feel like they got their money’s worth. Remember, under promise, over deliver. Show value to the advertisers and you will realize value to your site.

Do Not Put All Your Eggs In Google’s Basket

This blog started out with nothing but Google AdSense and if that were all it ran, I would have made only $536.58 for January. Actually, I would have made a bit more because the ads would get more clicks. However, it wouldn’t be close to $3,400.

Because Google is CPC based, its pricing is affected by seasonal changes. This is why the Google ads made more in December with less traffic - the CPC rate was a lot higher because of Christmas. This is where flat priced options like Text Link Ads come in. TLA pays one flat monthly price per link - I don’t have to worry about changes in traffic or click level.

The performance of Text Link Ads (aff) has been really remarkable and I recommend every blogger sign up with them. They have completely sold out my blog and they pay much faster than other ad networks - I already received the payment for January. Check out my Text Link Ads Review for more information.

Affiliate sales came in at $545. That was enough to edge out Google for third place in blog earnings. I think most bloggers are not taking advantage of affiliate marketing - it can be one of your blog’s biggest moneymakers if done correctly. My number one performing affiliate deal was Text Link Ads. Yep! TLA again! Text Link Ads affiliate deal gives you $25 when you refer a new client or publisher to them. In January, I referred 16 accounts to them (4 clients and 12 publishers) and made $400. Another $145 was made from three SEO Book sales.

Blog income does not begin and end with Google AdSense. In order to realize the full value of your blog, you must keep your eyes and ears open to other opportunities. One way of doing that is to keep reading my blog - my eyes and ears are always open. :)

For The First Time visitor/Blogger

If you’re a first time visitor or new blogger wondering where to go after reading all this, I can offer the following advice. The first is don’t quit. Many times, it can feel like an uphill battle trying to get your piece of the Internet pie, but if you want it bad enough, you’ll find a way to do it. Remember, quitters never win and winners never quit.

I recommend you read all the old posts from the Making Money From a Blog series. This way you can see step-by-step, how I got to part time blogging, full time income. You should also check out the Top Posts. This is where I link to some of my best works, many deals with making money on the Internet.

February is the shortest month of the year. It’s going to be tough to beat the results from January. However, I would not advise betting against me.

[Via John Chow]


Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in IraqCreating Sales Tools That Build Your Brand
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Get User Feedback When Designing a Web Site


What's Hot for 2007?

One of the more difficult parts of running a Web site is being able to gauge how a user will want to navigate your site. I've tackled this problem by showing my site and its many features to as many people as possible. Since the DormItem site is designed for college students, I've found it particularly helpful to pitch the idea to students in order to form a solid concept of how to approach user navigation. I will, for example, sit down with students and simply tell them "use DormItem." I don't give them any instructions, I simply wait and see what they do. This helps me resolve simple issues that often can be overlooked when developing behind closed doors. It also helps me model my site around users' behavior, rather than defining their behavior by my own expectation of how I think they should use the site.

Daniel Scudder
Founder
DormItem
Wellesley, Mass

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The Sweet Spot of Success


Home with God: In a Life That Never Ends

Hope you’re having a swell weekend.

It’s a working weekend for me… but I will “owe” myself the time back later, doing something fun and not work-related.

Because success sucks if you can’t enjoy it.

I’ve experienced burn-out a couple of times in my long career… and eventually learned both how to spot the oncoming symptoms, and take corrective measures to get back in the groove (where I work hard and play hard and get maximum bliss from the entire process).

There’s a sweet spot you can find where you can’t wait to get back into the office each workday, and also can’t wait for the fun days to arrive. You are totally absorbed in everything you do (and not thinking about work when you play, or wishing you were playing when you’re at your desk).

Not very many entrepreneurs or small biz owners attain this Zen state of functional bliss. They get sucked into working (and thinking about work) 24/7, and fry their cerebral cortex to a cinder. (Hint: If drinking yourself into oblivion is your primary way of relaxing, you’re toasting yourself.)

On the other hand, the vast crowd of wannabe’s who just can’t seem to get started tend to give playtime higher priority than work, and get stuck in the shadowy world of unfulfilled ambition and wasted dreams.

Most of the “mega-successful” marketers I know are workaholics. Some of these guys hit the office before dawn and don’t leave until Jay Leno’s on. It’s hell going up against these beasts, if you’re competing, because they will crush you with the sheer volume of hours they put in.

Until they crisp-out, that is. Every single workaholic I’ve known has, sooner or later, hit a wall and crashed. They’ll earn millions, lose millions, pile up the divorces, and plow through health kicks in futile attempts to recharge their damaged batteries.

No thanks.

If you’re competing against workaholics, there are plenty of sneaky tricks to beat them without matching their self-destructive ways. One is to just give ‘em enough rope to hang themselves — simply by maintaining yourself in a healthy groove that is productive enough to stay even remotely competitive, while enjoying life to the max, you can outlast them over the long haul.

I don’t have scientific studies to back this up, but my experience has been that workaholics have at most a two-year cycle — two years of kicking ass, followed by two years of grief and collapse. That cycle can be as short as six months, too.

None of them escape the Reaper.

Another tactic is to just never go up against them. Go around them, instead. No matter how hard they work, they can’t keep a too-broad USP (unique selling position) covered completely. There will always be vulnerable areas… and that’s where relaxed and focused marketers can smoothly walk in and exploit exhausted competitors.

That sweet spot is really sort of a controlled obsession. While you’re working, you’re riveted on work, just like the workaholic.

The difference is… you set up your business so it won’t collapse when you take time off. And then you take full advantage of that, and take time off.

And stay riveted on having fun.

It’s not a place you get to accidentally — you must decide it’s where you want to be, and then create a plan to get there.

And stay there. Easy to fall out of the sweet spot.

Most marketers bounce back and forth — too much work for a while, followed by a depressed reluctance to work, interspersed by attempts to take time off without good planning.

I just want to remind you that the sweet spot exists, and it’s available to anyone who wants it. You must learn to channel your passions, so they don’t contaminate each other. When you’re working, you work hard — set and meet deadlines, and schedule everything as realistically as possible. (This takes practice.) When you play, you do the same thing.

I knew a professional coach who specialized in the medical field, where burn-out starts immediately in a career. Every client he had was frazzled, stuck on a treadmill, and working too hard to make any real money.

And one of the first things this coach forced each client to do… was to set up one short vacation every month. Could be just a weekend, but it had to be a real vacation — go somewhere and do something. Laying on a beach drinking Mai-Tai’s didn’t count. Educational jaunts were the best — get your mind working, hard, in another direction.

Nearly all his clients, at first, were appalled. They hadn’t taken any vacation at all in years… and the concept of one a month was terrifying.

This tactic works like a magic elixir, though. It’s a good mix of work and play, and the definitiveness of the monthly get-away not only restores your mental energy… it also allows you to work as hard as you need to, knowing there’s a wonderful break just ahead to recharge the batteries.

Success has never been about piling up cash. Right now, I know half a dozen people who are in serious health situations… and they would gladly give away every penny they have to be back in their prime.

It’s not just a cliche. You only get one go-around in life, with no reset button. And from personal experience, I can tell you the best groove to be in involves lots of productive work, coupled with excruciatingly-fun breaks.

Settle for half the money, if it means twice the enjoyment of life. Even the grandest of goals shouldn’t require the sacrifice of your will to live.

Now, go outside and play.

John Carlton, http://www.marketingrebelrant.com/


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Windfall Profits


Commuting And Marketing

It started as a joke. But Linda Katz's tumbleweed on-the-Web startup isn't just in Kansas anymore

The lowly tumbleweed is a nuisance to most inhabitants of Western Kansas. The Russian thistle bushes are everywhere. They clog drainage ditches, pile up against fencerows, and have even been known to cause traffic accidents.

But the weed is blowing only good fortune to Linda Katz of Garden City, Kan., who is proving that you really can sell almost anything on the Internet. You see, this former real estate agent, who's married to a roofer, sells tumbleweed over the Web.

"It all started as a joke,"says Katz, 49. She asked her son to build her a family Web page so she could communicate with friends and give it the tongue-in-cheek name Prairie Tumbleweed Farm. Never mind that she didn't even live on a farm, but in a subdivision. Nevermind that you can't cultivate tumbleweed, which spreads its seed as it tumbles in the wind. For authenticity's sake, Katz added a price list ($35 for a big weed, $25 for a midsize one, $20 for the small economy model). And she guaranteed that each tumbleweed was "Y2K compliant" and quality-tested to tumble in even the gentlest of breezes.

Remember, Katz wasn't looking for business, but it found her all the same, thanks to the power of Web search engines. Orders started to pour in from all the places where people love Hollywood Westerns: Alaska, Austria, Britain, Hong Kong, India. Japanese customers proved so eager that she has added a section to her Web site in Japanese. Movie and TV production companies in Britain, Finland, and the U.S. have ordered tumbleweed for props, too, including a $1,000 order for the children's show Barney & Friends. A scientist from New Mexico wanted tumbleweed for research purposes. Many of Katz's newfound customers use tumbleweed to decorate their homes, even in lieu of the traditional Christmas tree.

During Katz's first two months on the Web, the site (www.prairietumbleweedfarm.com) logged 2,000 visitors. By mid-January, the number had grown to more than 56,000. Katz says she's making about 30 tumbleweed sales a week, which suggests revenues of about $40,000 a year.

That may not sound like much, but neither are her costs. She fills orders by grazing Kansas fence lines for tumbleweed and buys her mailing boxes in bulk lots. For labor, Katz uses her five nieces and nephews (aged 11 to 19) to help collect the stuff, and she gives them a share of the profits.

"Isn't the Internet a wonderful thing?" says Katz.

 

Technorati tags: business, profit, startup, joke

Source: Windfall Profits


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Inside Canada's $4-billion pet industry


What Great Advertising Really Is

Canadians spend $4 billion each year on their pets. More than half goes to the bare necessities: food and trips to the vet. But there's a huge new market for luxury animal products—designer clothes, posh resorts, organic treats, even insurance policies. Why the sudden urge to pamper our pets? Some say it's because people are waiting longer to have children and instead lavishing love on their animals. Others blame a consumer culture gone crazy. One thing's for sure: small-business owners are cashing in

Lisa Brooks
Happy Tails Pet Resort
Huntsville, Ont., started in 1996

"I had a fantasy when I was a child of being surrounded by dozens of dogs. It was my going-to-sleep dream. The dogs would be swimming and running and playing free, and we would all live together in a big brick house. Now I've achieved that dream. This is a place for people who don't like the idea of their dogs being caged, filed away and only being taken out for occasional exercise. It's a resort for pets. We have activities like paw-print painting and pottery, but most of the time the dogs just hang out with each other and have fun. Each dog has its own cubby to sleep and eat in. They're all wood, with Berber carpet in the summer and straw in the winter. There's also a TV and a fireplace. For the larger dogs, there are cabins on the grounds, and couches. The dogs sleep wherever they feel most comfortable. My favourite part of the day is meeting our customers—it's great to see people so happy with the service. Dogs that have been here before are excited when they arrive; they can't wait to be with the other dogs and play all day. At the end of their stay, the dogs are happy to see their owners, of course, but people always tell me that as soon as their pet has said hello and settled in to the car, they fall fast asleep. It's like a switch goes off, and they sleep most of the way home, like a child coming home from camp.

Fraser Telford
Exotic-fish expert, Big Al's
Mississauga, started in 1975

"As a kid, I was into every kind of bug I could catch. Then, when I was 6, our neighbour's son went off to university, and I got his five-gallon tank and some guppies. By my seventh birthday, I was ordering my own fish through the mail. I used to think I would become a marine biologist, but I found that I really enjoyed the retail end of things. I've been at Big Al's for five years. I'm the livestock man-ager for the Mississauga store, and it's like running a small zoo or aquarium. We have over a thousand species of fish, from goldfish and guppies to large angelfish and sharks. We had a 6 1/2-foot nurse shark named English Bob (he was named after one of the gunmen in Unforgiven) who outgrew his tank. So we shipped him off to the West Ed-monton Mall. We arrived at 4 a.m. to get him ready for the flight—even sharks have to get to the airport early.

We have school tours in here all the time. Growing up, I didn't have friends who were into fish, so it's nice to be able to pass on to kids what I've learned. We do a lot of set-ups for companies that want an impressive display tank. The Mandarin restaurants have huge, beautiful tanks. We get a few celebrities in as well—a lot of athletes, guys with disposable income. We order goldfish for Don Cherry straight from a huge farm in Hong Kong, and former Raptor Charlie Villanueva used to come in frequently. We also get guys from the Leafs and Argos. Saltwater tanks are very popular. It used to be that you needed a lot of time and money to keep one, but technology has advanced to the point where it's affordable for the average person. Reef tanks are the high-end items now. We have set-ups that run $18,000 to $20,000, and those are truly im-pressive. We also get parents who come in and say, "I need a salt-water tank and the fish from Finding Nemo. Make it happen." And we do.

You usually don't notice all the strange creatures you're dealing with, but sometimes a shipment will come in from South America, with something even we don't recognize. We have to pull out the textbooks. Probably the best part of my job is talking to people from all over the world. We have suppliers in Vanuatu, the Philippines—everywhere. Often their English isn't the greatest, but as soon as we start talking about fish, we really communicate. Fish are the common language that we speak."

"My husband, Serge, and I got Tyson three years ago. He's an American pit bull terrier, and he is the first pet we've owned as adults. We did a lot of re-search first, though. We found a reliable breeder on the internet, and called her veterinarian and her references. She's in the Okanagan Valley, and so we had to fly Tyson to Toronto, but we loved him right away. So, yes—we bought a pit bull over the internet. Our friends thought we were crazy, but if you knew us, you'd know that when other people say stay away from something, that just makes it more likely we'll do it. We love a challenge. Pit bulls are a short-haired breed, and they need a bit of cover in the winter. We looked everywhere, and we couldn't find any jackets that we liked, so I designed one. I had no previous sewing experience, but every time we went to the park, people would follow us and ask us where we got the jacket. That's how it started. We entered the One of a Kind craft show in Toronto last year and won the award for best booth, and that's when things really started to take off. I'm doing this full-time now, plus working as a graphic designer. The response has been amazing, and we've had plenty of requests for new products. But right now we're focused on ex-panding into the States and Europe with our current line. None of this would have happened without Tyson, of course. He's our muse."

Diana Fischer
English Nannies for Dogs Inc.
Toronto, started in 2002

My family moved to Ghana, West Africa, when I was 5. The company where my father worked had an aluminium extrusion plant. It was shortly after we arrived that I in-herited a small zoo from another businessman who was heading back to England. He had deer and monkeys and guinea pigs and rabbits, and they all moved into our gar-den. I've been living and working with animals ever since. I've trained horses and bred sheep, and for the past 20 years I've been training dogs. I believe in discipline and being firm with animals, especially when they're young. The most aggressive dogs come from homes where they are babied too much. That's fine once a dog is trained, but only after they have learned who is in charge. The leash is essential. In India, they will tie a baby elephant to a tree. The elephant learns that he can't move off that leash. As an adult, even though the elephant could easily pull the tree out of the ground, psychologically he doesn't believe that he can. He's learned the leash. But the most important part of what my daughter, Astrid, and I do is teach people how to use their voice and body language to project confidence to their dogs. We've been in homes where a child is being bullied at school, and the family dog will bully the child as well. If we can teach that child how to stand up for himself with the dog, then he will also learn how to stand up for himself at school. You can't be fake with a dog. A dog will see straight through you.

Dr. Karen Regan, Veterinarian
Animal Hospital of High Park
Toronto, started in 1986

Like a lot of little girls, I thought being a vet would be neat. It was my dream. It wasn't until I was in univers-ity and I got a job working with a vet that I realized I could do it. I loved every aspect of the job. That's when I decided to go to the Ontario Veterinary College in Guelph, and I've been working at the Animal Hospital of High Park ever since I graduated in 1997. Our clinic specializes in exotics and so-called pocket pets, so at any one time our waiting room can have mice, ferrets, reptiles, large dogs and any number of exotic birds. The birds will often be talking—and for a vet, it's a little distracting when your patients are talking up a storm in the waiting room. We didn't really learn much about exotic pets in veterinary college—there was only a single course when I was there. But the profession has come a long way in recent years. There are journals and ongoing education programs, and we also have a network of vets on the internet who deal with exotics. So when we come across something really unusual, we have a place where we can go to ask questions. I don't really like the term "pocket pets," which gets applied to small animals like hamsters and guinea pigs. There's something about the term that implies those pets are disposable. We believe that all animals should get the highest quality of care, no matter what their size, and the people who bring their pets here think the same way. Watching the animals get better and the bond that exists between the owners and their pets, that's some-thing to see. These animals are so well-loved. It's the most rewarding part of my job.

Go to source.


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Who Is Shawn Casey? Is He For Real?


Give Yourself the Gift of Time

http://www.shawncasey.com/

It's just been brought to my attention that Shawn Casey is now giving away hia five hundred dollar e-mail marketing software for free. I grabbed my copy and while I don't feel that it's worth $500, you'd be stupid not to get it for free. This "business in a box" concept if freaking genious. So, who's Shawn Casey?

Shawn—a successful self-made millionaire and Group Leader at SFI—takes readers step-by-step through the process of succeeding on the Internet with an online home-business.

Shawn Casey is real big on teaching about the power of Joint Ventures. I know Joint Ventures are a valuable part of any business persons life, but I also know, just about every marketing guru in the world is teaching them. So I think the topic of Joint Venture is getting over-done to some degree.

When I read what Shawn Casey had to say on the subject of Joint Ventues, the following appeared to be his stance on the topic.

The way I understood him, he says if you do have a product, joint ventures almost eliminate the risk of advertising. You pay your partner nothing until AFTER he's made sales for you. And you only pay in direct proportion to the number of sales he generates!

And then of course, he plugs his own company, name and website by saying "You can even joint venture with ME! (Get all the details when you order "Mining Gold"). Now you see why I guarantee you $1,000 within your first 5-15 days."

He claims to have this one special technique that is only available to a priveledged groups he calls his circle of "power players."

From what I read, he appears to be directly claiming you could be making thousands of dollars for an hour's work, as often as you want. And he loves to tell you how this special "Insiders Only" technique is fully detailed on page 77 of his system, "Mining Gold On The Internet".

But after reading page 77 of Mining Gold on the Internet, I don't see anything very special or new. I wasn't impressed.

Shawn Casey is so focused on joint ventures that I just saw an offer where he says you get his proven super-responsive Joint Venture Proposal form letter.

Then he goes on to say it's so responsive, that when he emails it to potential joint venture partners, 2 out of 3 reply with a strong interest. And he claims that the "average" deal generates about $1,000 profit for both him and the guy he's doing the venture with. But I tested his form letter and I didn't get these amazing results he's talking about. My numbers weren't even half as good as what he's talking about.

Although, I myself wasn't overly impressed with Shawn Casey or his teachings, I'm not going to say this is a bad offer. I think Shawn has a lot of potential as a marketing guru and I plan to keep on eye on what he's doing from time to time.
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Local Search Marketing For Local Business


11-year-old entrepreneur Brook Bignell has projects cooking

Small business is often local business covering a 50-mile radius. The global connection of e-commerce makes sense for Internet companies taking orders over a wide area. But for small business the Internet age has meant creating a brochure format website and forgetting the power of search engines. The majority of small businesses have left search engine marketing out of the web marketing mix.

Your Customers Are Searching Locally

Today, the change in search engine marketing and consumer behavior has created a great opportunity for small business to connect with customers locally. This local focus means the Internet is a viable method to market to local prospects.

Local search is defined as consumers using search engines such as Yahoo or Google to research and find goods and services in their local markets.

Just how many consumers search locally? A recent comScore Networks study found over 849 million searches were performed in the U.S.

during one month in the summer. The Kelsey Group estimates over 30 billion local searches annually will be conducted by 2009. Even more significant is almost 50% of local searchers visited a local business as a result of a search.

The Value of Local Search

How much can a local search be worth? In Dallas, local search in one month revealed by Overture resulted in 1250 local searches for the keyword Dallas flowers. With over half of local searchers visiting stores, the Dallas market for flowers (at an average sale of $50) would be worth over $30,000 per month in business.

5 Tips to Catch the Local Search Wave

Learn the Basics: Before embarking on a local search engine marketing campaign spend sometime becoming familiar with search. There are many sites and books to learn more. Your new understanding will go a long way whether you do it yourself or hire a professional to handle your search marketing.

Master the Big Three: The big three search engine players; Google, Yahoo, and MSN command over 70% of the local search market. Visit the local search section of these sites and submit your businesses to the add a business area.

Use the Little Guy: With the big three as the best place to focus your local search engine marketing efforts, smaller local search players can be a viable alternative. If you're competing in a competitive keyword field, the small local search engines can provide better search ranking and lower costs per clicks. Smaller local providers include Local.com and Truelocal.com.

It's All Yellow: Local search is more than just search engines. During pre-Internet days, we heavily relied on the Yellow Pages directory. Although, print usage has declined, web-based yellow pages have seen an increase in use. Include in your local search marketing campaign the added listing to YellowPages.com and Superpages.com.

Be Address Friendly: When the search engines go scouting the Internet for local websites, they scan pages featuring local addresses. Beyond just adding an address to your contact page, include your business address in key areas throughout your website.

The Internet is an ever changing medium. Any local small business can't afford to be left behind. Make sure your small business is on the local search engine wave.

Read more on About.com.


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Business Heros - Bob Parsons


How To Start A Six Figure Online Translation Business

(Business 2.0 Magazine) -- To get a sense of how Go Daddy CEO Bob Parsons leads his life, just ask for a ride in Mad Max. That's the vehicle he keeps at his office, deep in a nondescript business park amid the sprawl that is Scottsdale, Ariz. Max, as Parsons affectionately calls it, is a customized Jeep Rubicon Unlimited: Quarter-inch armor lining makes brushes with boulders a nonissue. A steel bar on Max's front end prevents somersaulting on steep drops. Fifty-degree inclines? Bring 'em on.

Parsons is weaving among the evening commuters on a busy Scottsdale thoroughfare when, barely tapping the brake, he swerves off the road, jumps the curb, and swiftly leaves the orderly world in his rearview mirror. "This is Botswana style," mutters the 56-year-old Parsons, in a voice gruff from decades of hard living that include a combat stint in Vietnam. He plows through the shrubs, weaves between patches of mesquite and sage, and then barrels into a ditch before swerving around a 12-foot cactus in search of another path.

Bob Parsons, you see, is a risk taker.

Howard Stern lite

To some, it was even a risk when he hired the buxom brunet and occasional porn actress Candice Michelle to appear in Go Daddy's first Super Bowl commercial, in 2005. (Advisers wanted him to hire a blond.) The ad created a minor furor over its raciness, and the attention catapulted the Go Daddy brand into public awareness and earned Parsons accolades as a brilliant marketer. Since then Go Daddy has become intimately tied with its tireless and polarizing leader.

When Parsons sees something that ticks him off, he speaks up, on his blog or during his weekly satellite radio show, Life Online. He's gotten into fights with political bloggers about interrogation methods at Guantбnamo Bay. ("I just said that I supported the government," he says now.) Last spring he uncovered problems with the European Union's launch of URLs ending in ".eu," helping set off court battles that are still ongoing. ("The whole thing was a sham.") He pokes fun at companies he doesn't like ("Just what does Yahoo do, anyway?"), and he interviews Go Daddy customers on a radio segment called "Strange Domains."

He also features entrepreneurs and offbeat guests, such as the guy who paints canvases with his rear and sells the work on ButtPrintArt.com. ("So, are you making a lot of tulips?") Parsons's sign-off at the end of each program: "I just may bump with the fat woman tonight." The show is sort of Howard Stern Lite.

Parsons's antics have made him some enemies. Beefy security personnel patrol his corporate headquarters, and he once appeared at a tech conference with bodyguards in tow. But at bottom, the showmanship and bombast are simply props in a remarkable life story, and in a high-spirited tale of unorthodox business tactics and entrepreneurial triumph.

Suffocating quiet period

A self-taught coder, Parsons sold the first company he ever started, a personal-finance software maker, for $64 million. He's built Go Daddy into far and away the market leader when it comes to managing Web domain names and related products, leaving all competitors in the dust. Go Daddy's 4 million customers have registered almost 17 million domain names, more than twice its closest rival. Go Daddy adds a domain name every 2.4 seconds.

It expects 2006 revenue of $240 million, up 71 percent from last year and more than triple 2004 levels. Go Daddy says it is profitable. Parsons says his operating cash flow, a key measure of a company's cash-generating capacity, will hit $52 million this year, up 70 percent from 2005. "Everyone fears Bob," says Andreas Gauger, who runs 1&1 Internet, a German-based registrar and Web hosting company that once hoped to buy Go Daddy. "If he doesn't do anything wrong, nobody in the domain business can touch him."

And Parsons has set his sights high. He pulled Go Daddy's planned IPO in August, blaming a lousy market for new issues; he described the quiet period mandated by the Securities and Exchange Commission, in which he went off the radio for three months, as "suffocating." He says he'll come back to Wall Street eventually, though. Parsons makes the case that in four or five years, Go Daddy will be up there with Google and eBay among the leading Internet companies. It's tall talk. A lot of what Parsons says is. But he's had a knack for walking the walk, sometimes on very tough trails. And whatever happens, he will not fold. "That's just not the way I'm wired," he says.

Parsons learned his most important business lesson while sitting on a wall in Vietnam with the unshakable conviction that he was about to die. After nearly flunking out of high school, he had enlisted in the Marine Corps. He was still a raw recruit when he met up with his squad in the Quang Nam province in 1969 and learned that he was a replacement for one of four guys killed a couple of days earlier. Panic nearly paralyzed him. It was only after he accepted that his life would end in 'Nam that he could function, and he made surviving until each day's mail call his goal. "That attitude's gotten me through all the spooky stuff in business," he says.

One BASIC step

Parsons left Vietnam in 1970 with shrapnel in his legs and a purple heart. He landed a job in a steel mill near his hometown of Baltimore until the prospect of a lifetime in a mill made him do something he had never considered: attend college. He enrolled at the University of Baltimore, where he majored in accounting. "I didn't even know you needed a major," he says. "I just chose the first one listed in the book."

His entrйe into the tech industry was also largely happenstance. An accounting assignment sent him to the San Francisco Bay Area, where, to kill some time, he strolled into the bookstore at Stanford University. He picked up a book on programming in Basic, read it on the flight home, and began experimenting with a computer at work.

Ultimately he wrote a program for managing personal finances and launched Parsons Technology, setting up shop to sell software in his basement in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Twice he went broke, rebounding mainly by incurring more credit card debt. By the mid-1990s, Parsons Technology had 1,000 employees and a 4 percent share of the North American software market.

But the Web was beginning, and Parsons believed early on that the era of shrink-wrapped software like his was about to end. He sold his company to Intuit in 1994 and moved to Arizona to retire, then discovered that he was not the retiring type. He started a software company for building websites and rolled out the product amid the dotcom craziness of 1999. No one paid any attention.

A brainstorming session with his small staff resulted in a name change from Jomax Technologies to Go Daddy, but even the flashier name didn't move software. He then decided to branch out. The system for registering domain names was ripe for low-cost competition. The big player, Network Solutions, was charging upwards of $35 a year for a single name. And as Parsons saw it, customer service was abysmal. So Go Daddy became a registrar in late 2000, offering domain names for $9 a year and what soon became around-the-clock customer support.

Better service

Go Daddy's model, then as now, was to sell cheap to a lot of customers. Snag them with a bargain-priced domain name, and then sell add-on products like e-commerce shopping carts. While plenty of small discount registrars sprouted up about the same time as Go Daddy, nobody attacked the market like Parsons, especially on the service front.

One example: Every first-time customer receives a phone call from a Go Daddy rep the next day. "Attributing their success only to price really sells them short," says Elliot Noss, CEO of Tucows, a domain-name wholesaler that competes with Go Daddy. "Bob took advantage of the fact that the largest players didn't offer high-quality service or features."

In many ways, the domain-name registrar business looks foolish. There's huge money to be made in owning high-traffic domain names; indeed, a whole new industry based on accumulating valuable domains has exploded during the past year. But the margins in simply registering names for their owners are thin, thanks partly to Parsons driving down prices but also to an unusual structure.

A single company, VeriSign, runs the entire back-end system for .com names, which make up the bulk of the 105 million domains now registered around the world. VeriSign charges the registrars $6 a year for each name (a fee it's now fighting to raise). On top of that, the registrars pay 25 cents to ICANN, the nonprofit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. So if you pay $6 to register a name - and that's what some companies charge these days - the registrar isn't making a penny.

That's why the add-on products are critical. Hosting is an obvious add-on for any registrar, and Go Daddy's shared hosting business has quickly become the largest in North America. (Shared hosting means that the space you rent for your business is on a server also used by other customers.)

And Parsons was the first to sell private domain-name registrations, which keep a customer's identity out of the public database. Go Daddy was awarded a patent on this feature in November. The idea came to Parsons after he got a call from a frantic customer who said she needed to close her Web store because she was terrified of a stalker.

The Wild West

The opportunities shift constantly, and Go Daddy and its competitors try to squeeze pennies out of every twist in the game. Go Daddy, for instance, last year jumped into the auction business to take advantage of the lucrative aftermarket for domain names. Any Go Daddy name that a customer fails to renew drops into its auction system; the company then sells these names to the highest bidder.

Other tactics are less seemly. Go Daddy struck a deal a year ago with Google so it could sprinkle undeveloped sites with pay-per-click ads, something its customers don't always realize. If you have a dotcom name with Go Daddy but haven't built a site for it, Go Daddy will "park" it, filling it with third-party ads as well as ads for Go Daddy itself. If someone lands on your page and clicks on an ad, Parsons and Google make money.

Parsons downplays parking - which, to be fair, is a common practice among registrars - and says Go Daddy now makes about $12,000 a day from it. The problem is that the person who actually registered the name makes nothing.

"It's sort of a Wild West atmosphere in some ways," says Rich Miller, an analyst with Netcraft, which tracks the business. "And a lot of people work the opportunities and gray areas pretty aggressively. Go Daddy is more restrained than most." (In June, a month after Go Daddy filed to go public, the company rolled out a parking product where, for example, paying $4 a month gets a customer a 60 percent cut of Go Daddy's share.)

Even so, Go Daddy also routinely gets high marks in customer satisfaction, and Parsons credits his success to his unorthodox and somewhat unfashionable approach. He refuses to outsource anything. Virtually all of the company's technology is built in-house.

And its call centers, whose staffs have doubled in the past year to 920 people, are all in Arizona, many in the same business park as the company's headquarters. When Parsons was doing the pre-IPO dance with Wall Street, he was repeatedly asked if his call center would "scale."

Creating buzz

"I said, 'What do you mean, scale?'" Parsons recalls. He disagreed with investment bankers' suggestions that, among other things, he should keep headcount low even as he grows. "People think that because we're an Internet company, we should be less people-intensive. I believe the exact opposite. When it comes to the Internet, people like dealing with people."

Which is why Parsons has worked so hard to give Go Daddy a personality that, like it or not, sells. Parsons alone, for instance, decided to plaster the Go Daddy name on Michelle's chest in the 2005 Super Bowl ad. And for the 2006 Super Bowl, he recut the commercial, featuring Michelle appealing to an arbiter of TV decency standards, 13 times before winning approval from ABC - each time taming it down, and each time watching business climb after news reports revealed that he was having to pull back to placate censors. Says Tucows's Noss, "He played that thing like a maestro."

For proof, consider this: There are now 860 ICANN-accredited domain-name registrars. Other than Go Daddy, how many can you name?

Parsons is looking over the lineup for his radio program, and he's disappointed. The show is promoting an interview with French Maid TV, an Internet production company that makes how-to videos, such as the one for Go Daddy in which three maids pop out of the same bed, rush to a laptop, and give a quick lesson in how to register a domain name.

"What? We don't have the French maids?" Parsons says when he discovers that he'll be interviewing the company's executive producer. "I find that depressing."

The importance of lobbying

Parsons and his co-host, Nima Jones, also a Go Daddy exec, banter with the French Maid guest about how he launched the company and, more important, how he finds women who know how to move a vacuum and wiggle a feather duster. Every now and again, Parsons clicks an icon on his computer and a chorus of female voices says, "Ooh-la-la."

Life Online isn't all silliness, however. Parsons has turned himself into a kind of industry watchdog, and he uses his blog and his radio show, which airs live on Wednesday nights on Sirius and XM Radio, as his soapbox. He rants about issues that he argues are critical to the Internet overall but obviously are of huge importance to his company.

Go Daddy's top attorney, Christine Jones, is a regular guest. As the Internet and Go Daddy have grown, Parsons has learned the importance of lobbying. Jones is just back from testifying before Congress about a proposal between VeriSign and ICANN to boost prices of dotcom names as much as 7 percent a year. The deal, she explains, doesn't require VeriSign to justify the price hikes, was reached "behind closed doors," and will result in a $1.3 billion windfall for VeriSign the first year it goes into effect.

Parsons chimes in: "This is like the great train robbery if they pull it off." (VeriSign spokesman Tom Galvin calls the $1.3 billion figure a "silly" and "unknowable number." Plus, he says, VeriSign's costs are rising as Internet traffic explodes and security issues increase. "Bob Parsons is taking no responsibility for the security and stability of the Internet. VeriSign is.")

While this topic has mobilized a variety of big domain investors, Parsons has been alone in calling attention to other issues. One was the European Union's messy launch of .eu names last spring. Every company that became a registrar with Eurid, the European equivalent of VeriSign, had an opportunity to go after .eu names. Companies were given connections to the central registry, and at the moment of launch on April 7, computers the world over starting pinging its servers in an effort to snag names.

Crying foul

Parsons was looking over the results of the so-called land rush when he noticed that Go Daddy had failed to get many good names for its customers. With a little digging, he found that some U.S.-based speculators had set up scores of phantom registrars to game the system. He didn't claim that anything illegal had occurred, just that the process was badly run.

Parsons says he called Eurid officials but was told everything was proper. So he turned to his blog to spell out exactly what he'd uncovered. The Eurid auction has spawned massive litigation in Europe, about which Eurid won't comment. "It was so obviously bogus," Parsons says, "and I was the only guy in the world - the world! - who was saying anything."

The soapbox crusades make him a hero to some; to others they are just more of the grandstanding that has made Parsons a sometimes polarizing figure. His ads generate hate mail accusing him of promoting pornography. He knows full well that the safari to Zimbabwe he went on in October, in which he killed an elephant, will cause some outcry. But does he really need bodyguards?

When Parsons attended a conference called the Domain Roundtable in May 2005, he showed up with two beefy guys. They even came a week in advance to case the joint. "They were looking for where to rush the man if anything went wrong," says Jay Westerdal, who runs research firm Name Intelligence and puts on the Seattle conference.

Parsons says people mistook his guests for guards, but they certainly left an impression with the 300 attendees. "It was like they didn't get him in 'Nam so they were going to get him at Domain Roundtable," recalls Frank Schilling, one of the largest domain investors in the world. "That was weird."

A bigger battlefield

Parson's list of enemies will soon include some bigger and more potent entries. His battlefield is expanding to include all sorts of giant companies competing to meet the soaring demand from individuals and companies to build an online presence. Microsoft, for instance, recently introduced Office Live, which offers hosting and domain names to businesses with fewer than 10 employees. Parts of Google's business overlap with Go Daddy's. And Yahoo has long been trying to build a presence in this area.

Just a couple of years ago, Yahoo sent a team to Scottsdale to try to persuade Parsons to sell. Parsons balked. A few months later, he says, Yahoo's small-business unit launched an array of offerings very similar to Go Daddy's. "They called me the night before to tell me there was no connection," Parsons says, flashing a skeptical glance. Parsons feared that Yahoo might crush him. Yet today Yahoo boasts that its small-business unit has more than 1 million customers, roughly a quarter of Go Daddy's. (Yahoo won't comment about talks between the two companies.)

At this point, Parsons isn't fazed by the prospect of going up against the big boys. They'll discover, he contends, that what Go Daddy does is difficult and requires top-notch customer support that they simply don't know how to give. Parsons is still Go Daddy's only investor, so he calls all the shots. When he was preparing to go public, he says, other suitors showed up in Scottsdale. But he's not interested in selling, at least not now. He's focused on adding products that make sense to anyone who wants an online presence via a domain name, and on continuing to pump up the Go Daddy brand.

Parsons is sitting at his conference table, beneath a poster for Stanley Kubrick's Vietnam epic Full Metal Jacket, pecking away at his keyboard. He pulls up a few charts to show off Go Daddy's finances. Then he turns his head to watch a giant flat-panel screen and clicks on something that makes him really happy: an unreleased commercial featuring Michelle sporting a Go Daddy T-shirt and cutoffs and doing a striptease-type dance around a chair.

Parsons lets forth a slow growl, "Y-e-a-h." Then he asks with a smile, "You think I'd get in trouble for this one?"

Business 2.0 Magazine


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