August 2007

Friday Quick Takes

I’m going to wrap up the blogging week with an assortment of information, news, and general items to share with my readers. In sifting through my bookmarks, downloads, and assorted files I have located some “stuff” that may be of interest to you.

  • Yesterday, I downloaded and used for the first time CC PDF Converter, a program that does some of what pricey Adobe Acrobat does — changes almost any file over to the *pdf format. I am satisfied with all that this freeware product is able to do.
  • Initially, I had reservations about mentioning the Authority Blogger forum as I don’t want to spoil what looks to be a good thing. The forum was developed by Chris Garrett whose tag line for the site is, “strategic blogging for business and professionals.” My friend Bobbie Sullivan, who is a research psychologist and the owner of Aircrew Health, recommended the forum to me and offered her assurance that the site has a much more professional tone than the many “noisy” forums dominating the internet these days.
  • SEO or search engine optimization will probably always be an important thing for me as long as I have a presence on the web. The rules always seem to be changing as Google and gang adjust their algorithms and webbies do their best to dominate the SERPs. Forget PageRank — this tool is probably changing again given the late release of the most recent updated.
  • I get a chuckle from reading what some people try to pass as SEO advice. No, I won’t go mentioning some of the worst of the lot, but I find much of what passes as SEO is inaccurate, some is even rubbish. What does intrigue me are contextual backlinks, something I am just now beginning to get my mind around. If you have an opinion about this sort of thing, please share.

Have a relaxing weekend.


Photo Credit: Sanja Gjenero, Croatia

The Helium Marketplace: Don’t Make This Terrible Mistake!

Please be forewarned: the following is my “thumbs down” review of the Helium Marketplace, a place where aspiring writers can market their wares in hopes of obtaining paid employment. Why I am I warning you ahead of time? Mostly for one reason: so that you will lay your guard down long enough to hear me out. No, the Helium Marketplace isn’t some evil plot, but the pitfalls of this freelancing venue certainly outweigh the advantages. Care to read on?

What Is Helium?

Helium is a user generated content site where contributors can submit articles and receive payment for their writings based on article popularity. Peer review of these articles from other writers is what determines their value; the higher the article is rated the more reviews it receives and the better the payout per article. Readers can view view Helium articles for free.

A few days ago TechCrunch discussed Helium’s marketplace which is what piqued my interest. According to TechCrunch, Helium has more than 69,000 writers who have produced more than 400,000 articles since the site was launched in October 2006.

The Helium Marketplace

At first glance, the idea of having a marketplace on Helium where companies/individuals can purchase articles seems like a good idea. Guru, eLance, and some other sites provide this service, therefore with a hefty pool of writers to draw from a marketplace makes good business sense.

However, before you sign up there are some things you must know:

  • Articles are purchased from $16 on up with Helium claiming that some articles will fetch $100 or more. For their part Helium takes a 20% cut.
  • Writers can view each publisher�s link to see the article titles needed, publisher deadlines and their fee per article.
  • Now for the rub: According to Helium, “The publisher will select the article they like best. Only the selected articles will earn revenue for the writer.” This means that if a writer spends 2 to 3 hours (or more) crafting a well researched and expertly written article, they have no guarantee of getting paid. In other words, all the work you have done has been wasted — many topics are too specific to sell elsewhere — and you are left uncompensated.

Out of Date Listings

On August 22, 2007, I took a look at the Helium Marketplace to see their list of publishers. According to TechCrunch, the initial 14 publishers will mushroom to over 1000 sometime in September. One would hope that Helium would do a better job with the 1000 publishers then what they are curently doing with those featured as many of the listed projects have long since expired (e.g., Geosign-Automotive with expiration dates of 06-29-2007 for some of their titles). I counted seven other publishers with expired dates which makes me wonder how they will handle the larger amount.

Bad Company and an Awful Users Agreement

Okay now to be blunt: if you consider yourself a serious writer, do you want to be associated with Helium? Critics have pointed out that Helium censors content and deletes accurate articles with one writer, Craig Kohler, claiming that he was stiffed some $300 from Helium and denied his contest earnings. Mark Hamilton, a journalism instructor from Vancouver, noted on his Notes from a Teacher blog that writers for Helium give them complete and perpetual rights for contributed content. In other words, if you submit your articles to Helium’s marketplace you don’t own them.

Whatever you decide to do, please read Helium’s user agreement first to familiarize yourself with their bad offer. If you don’t, then you have no one to blame but yourself if things do not go according to your expectations.

Where You Can Find Me On The Web

I’ve been getting quite a few “friend” requests from people lately across the social network spectrum. Honestly, I sometimes have difficulty keeping up with all of them (I guess I am popular!), so to help you find me the following list will do just that. I’ve included forums, wikis, and bookmarking sites that I belong to and I list each site in order of personal importance (subject to change):

Social Networks

StumbleUpon: MattKeegan
MyBlogLog: MattK
BlogCatalog: MattK
Facebook: Matthew C. Keegan
LinkedIn: Matthew C. Keegan (added August 29, 2007)
MySpace: MattK

Webmaster Forums

Digital Point: MattKNC
Sitepoint: thearticlewriter

Bookmarking/News Sites

Netscape: iMattK
Reddit: MattKeegan
Delicious: MattKNC
Digg: Matt Keegan
Sphinn: MattKeegan (added August 22, 2007)

Wikis

Wikipedia: MattKeegan
Citizendium: Matthew C. Keegan

As you can tell, I favor disclosure when it comes to communicating online. I almost always try to use my name or some variation of it online. With Sitepoint I use my brand name, The Article Writer.

I am also registered with Ryze, BUMPzee, Spice Pages, Outpost Earth and probably a few other sites. I utilize social networks almost exclusively for business purposes so if you are a lonely, twenty-something drop dead gorgeous female then this happily married middle-aged father will encourage you to move on or at least put some clothes on!

Lastly, I may join additional social networks or drop out of current networks at any time. I rarely visit MySpace while I tend to hit StumbleUpon and MyBlogLog very frequently.

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