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My movie website

         

JPcinemamaster

5:03 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hello guys, my brand new movie review/artices website is coming in October. I'm going to sign up for adsense pretty soon, so I was just wondering few things?
-will I get approve for adsense?
-How do I do to adversite? My website is new and nobody knows about yet, any tips?

I'm in the US East Coast.
*Thanks

MrSpeed

5:45 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Have you ever ran or promoted a web site before?

hunderdown

5:53 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)



You need a live website to apply, so I'd wait till your site is up.

Advertising. If you have good, original content, you don't need to advertise. Tell the sites that should be interested in your site about it, and if they think their visitors will be interested, they'll link to it. Don't do link exchanges, though.

chocorol

6:11 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Don't do link exchanges, though.

Why not?
Relevant and quality link exchanges can help a lot a new website. I would say to the op to exchange links only with sites with good, no duplicated content that makes your visitor's experience a better one.

theRealairness

6:41 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Inbound links tell how important your website. So, build the inbound links to your website. You can also do pay per click to advertise. Watch out how much you spend on pay per click though. The trick is to find a cheaper keyword than your Adsense ads.

hunderdown

6:43 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)



Carefully selecting sites, telling them you've linked to them, and telling them about your site--that's one thing. Even if they never link to you, you benefit, because Google does look at quality outbound links.

Setting up an automated link exchange system, cranking out thousands of emails, and requiring them to link to your site within x days or you'll take the link down--that's quite another.

I was being overly terse. It's that second kind of link exchange, which those who aren't experienced can get seduced into doing using someone's software, that should be avoided.

JPcinemamaster

8:45 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I haven't promoted a website before, how do I do that?

Jean

8:50 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I haven't promoted a website before, how do I do that?

You have a lot to learn but you'll find the answers at [webmasterworld.com...]

jatar_k

11:22 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



Welcome to WebmasterWorld JPcinemamaster,

maybe start with this thread
[webmasterworld.com...]

mrSEman

11:57 pm on Sep 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



1) write good original content
2) place your ads according to google heat map
4) build a sitemap and submit to google
3) buy traffic with ppc engines
4a) work on inbound links
4b) work on optimizing your site for SEs
4c) work on and test ads in different places and colors
4d) check your AS stats
4e) spend many hours reading this forum
4f) write more good original content
5) GoTo #1

It's not rocket science at all. My best piece of advice is to balance #4 as best you can and don't get stuck on any one of them or you will waste huge amounts of time.

FattyB

1:16 am on Sep 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



My main site started as a movie news/review...though ended up more of an online newspaper.

The number one tip I would give is try to get stories and media (likes of stills) up before other sites. Then drop an email to sites like darkhorizons, aicn etc (any prime source site) with the news or link to the new media.

If they run it then you will get a bunch of traffic from them and other sites will also pickup on it. Keep doing it and users will start to come direct.

With reviews you should try and get your reviewers accredited to Rotten Tomatoes, they will then list your review. Though news is 100times better for traffic than reviews, in my experience.

Also get an IMDB pro account and add any relevant info on your site to their links section in the appropriate movie.

Finally stick with it and obsess, the movie sector is very competitive and relativly low value...at least until you start getting targeted camapaigns from studios...which can take a long time. Maybe target a movie niche as well...seems to have worked well for some.

[edited by: FattyB at 1:19 am (utc) on Sep. 13, 2006]

MrSpeed

2:05 pm on Sep 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



FattyB gave some excellent advice.

Isn't it funny how low value the entertainment sector is in adsense evethough they spend millions of dollars in other mediums?

Another tip I would give is to write up some article/reviews and submit them to article sites. Make sure your author block has a link back to your site. Some feel it's better to write an article just for the article dirctories so you don't get wacked for duplicate content.

It is also worthwhile to get some links from wikipedia pointing to your site.

I don't know much about the setup of your site but you may want to make sure there is some sort of a blog component.

Sign up for an account at stumbleupon and give the thumbs up to your own sites. I get pretty good traffic from stumbleupon.

You may want to consider creating some video reviews and posting them at YouTube with your url in the beginning and end of the video.

Become active in celebrity/movie forums with your link in your signature.

Above all keep on cranking out content so you start to attract natural links.