Blogging Idol Is A Joke - Why the Big Competition Fails to Measure Real Success
Posted on July 9th, 2008 by Jim under Observations
One of the biggest competitions running in the blogosphere is the “Blogging Idol” competition that is being hosted by DailyBlogTips along with a few sponsors. The idea? Essentially, this contest is focused on being the better blogger. Whoever owns a blog and manages to raise more RSS subscribers in July than anybody else will get themselves a nice $1,500 cash prize. The final count is 108 entries, gunning for the big prize.
One the official contest launch page, there is a listing of everyone in the competition (including myself), along with their progress to date with a comparison to the first of the month. I decided to join this contest not because of the $1,500 incentive, but just because I could. Sending a quick email to Dan Scocco, the owner and contest moderator, was simple enough… and I could track my performance against my peers. I wholeheartedly support Dan and most of the other competitors, but this thing has begun to reek of a scam fix-job more than anything I have seen this year.
Why Is Blogging Idol a Joke?!
Before you raise your arms and start voicing your anger that I could possibly demean the competition, hear me out. I absolutely love the idea of competing to see who is the best start-to-finish blogger out there with some win-win competition. However, a lot of the methods being used to juice RSS numbers just aren’t fair
and shouldn’t be judged as such. I’ve broken things down into three main reasons why I feel that Blogging Idol has become more of a scramble for numbers than a case study of blogging: a flawed premise, an open participation and unreasonable competitive practices.
1. The Overall Premise is Flawed
To decide who wins this competition, it was decided to go with the most dramatic increase in RSS subscriber numbers. From the get-go, we should be a bit uncomfortable with the notion that all progress will be thought of only in terms of subscriber numbers. Granted, I feel that RSS is the best method to show growth in a blog’s popularity. However, feed numbers are extremely volatile and can be manipulated with ease. I don’t like being the whistle-blower, but the whole thing is flawed from the get-go.
I get the strange feeling that people are using this to their advantage in manipulating their results. Let’s take an example from the actual competition where I suspect cheating is involved. The two front-runners to this point are Romeuy.com and StockMarketIndia.net. In both cases, the blogs appear less professional than typical industry standards, have excessive advertising, and
little to no active comments. In fact, in the case of StockMarketIndia, I found 14 straight posts with no comments whatsoever! Romeuy leads the pack, boasting a gain of 241 subscribers in just one week… one week. With an Alexa.com rank of 406,606 and just one post in July, I simply can’t see this as legitimate. Not far behind, StockMarketIndia has seen a boost of 167 readers in the same time period with little to show in terms of actual traffic. Now i’m not saying either of these bloggers are fudging numbers, but the $1,500 prize creates quite an incentive to do just that.
A lot of the growth that is represented in RSS subscriber numbers is completely valid. There are, however, cases like the two mentioned that seem to be outlandish at best. I may be poking fun at our top-two blogs, but the fact remains that there is a huge mismatch in many cases between subscriber numbers and traffic growth. The solution? This contest should be a mix of RSS subscriber growth AND actual traffic flow.
2. Unprofessional Blogs Are Allowed To Participate
My main concern is not with people faking stats, it’s the fact that the enrollment was completely open… Blogging Idol didn’t take no for an answer. I have absolutely no problem with newer bloggers with under 50 subscribers entering the contest, my concern is with blogs that are riddled with poor content and excessive
ads. The problem is that without some barriers to entry, a lot of competitors in Blogging Idol don’t have legitimate blogs to grow.
The problem? A virtual kamikaze RSS-attack can be undertaken by blogs that have no reputation on the internet. A simple interview/application process could have taken the trash out of Blogging Idol with relative ease. If things didn’t pass standards, certain entries could have been barred. The problem with this, is that blogs are essentailly demeaning themselves with begging for rss readers that it is hurting the blog’s reputation. By throwing things like a free link for subscribing out, small-time or unprofessional blogs are able to pick up dozens of RSS readers without batting an eyelash. Blogs that are more reputable in the competition such as The University Kid or Elite By Design cannot do this, less they risk reputation.
In effect, I think that it was in poor taste to allow anyone and everyone into this competition. While second-tier blogs are able to throw free advertising and other gimmicks at potential readers to artificially boost their numbers, top-tier bloggers (who should understandably be better at blogging) are unable to step down a level to grovel for fear of flooding their websites with excessive linking or content.
3. Unreasonable Anti-Competitive Methods Are Being Used to Win
The Blogging Idol isn’t a competition to decide who is the best blogger, it has become a contest of who can gain the most RSS subscribers… which isn’t what this should be about. I’m all for blogging contests to rally some interest, or guest posting on other blogs to expand your network. There are plenty of tricks of the trade to get people over to your blog. The problem lies in doing things like offering free text links for
subscribers, soliciting people on social media, encouraging standing readers to double-subscribe with email and spamming feedburner links in public arenas.
The methods being employed by certain Blogging Idol competitors are anti-competitive in nature. What I mean by this is that people are offering unreasonable incentives to subscribe that will boost numbers for the short term, but cause a fall in the long term. I’m not about to break down and spam a subscription link to people on my mailing list, and doing so is a way of gaining subscribers… not readers. The difference between a subscriber and a reader is that a subscriber is simply a number, a reader is someone that actually uses your website for information.
These types of unreasonable anti-competitive practices focused on boosting RSS numbers could effectively have been stopped with the previous two solutions I have mentioned: an application process and an additional judging parameter.
Bottom Line: It’s a shame that one of the better sounding blogging competitions is being scored in such a manner, because it really undermines those blogs out there that have an established reader base. The way Blogging Idol has decided to rank winners is allowing for unfairly incentivised subscriptions and the propensity for cheating the system with such a large cash prize in the headlights. Rant over.
-The Net Fool
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I think you crossed the line by calling the competition itself a scam, or fixed.
That would mean that I started it with the purpose of fooling people in mind, when in reality and I had and still do the best intentions of providing a funny experience for everyone.
If you claimed that perhaps some of the participants are cheating, then there I could agree, and in fact I found a couple that are, and I am investigating as many as I can.
But calling the competition a scam is a direct attack at the my person.
You say that the premise is flawed and that people are using anti-competitive tactics.
Well, guess what, the premise of the national elections is flawed, people cheat there, and people use anti-competitive tactics there. So you wanted our small blogging competition to be free of that?
Don’t bother posting a reply to this comment, I am pretty sure I won’t be coming back to read it.
I agree with many of your comments, especially about the current leading blogs!
I have looked through many of the entries and some have no traffic/comments and yet a very high RSS count.
I also think that some of the tactics being used are there purely to win the competition, I am not going to risk losing my reputation by handing out free links in exchange for RSS subscribers.
I have given up on any hope of winning due to the few scammy blogs in the contest, and am now using the whole experience to help motivate myself to gain LOYAL subscribers to my blog!
I understand it must be difficult to run the contest, but some things really need to be looked at!
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Hmmmmm, I can’t say I was very familiar with the whole contest. I had heard about it but didn’t know how it would work. I took it as a contest to see who was most resourceful….as the initial contest was to see who can gain more rss subs.
I don’t see it as any different than, people having blood drives, or telethons and such. Sure, some people will cheat the system, but, I would think that they would be in minority.
It is sad that people cheat…but, when people do so without being involved in any contest at all….it should come at no surprise that many will turn to the dark side when money is on the line.
I’m sure the contest owner will devise a way to identify cheaters…
I didn’t know there was a cash prize though…that’s new info to me..like I said, I hadn’t read up on the contest specifically.
There was one contest that I joined before at Fidel Betancourt, Jr.’s blog.
The blog disappeared right after the contest ended without giving a notice to all participants why it happened. I came to a conclusion that contests like these can harm blogs as well as the host of the contest, thus affecting their online reputations.
By the way, who won your contest? I will be updating my post about that congratulating the winners.
Pweng: You can find the winners of the June promo here http://www.thenetfool.com/tnf-june-birthday-bash-contest-results/
I really don’t understand the overreaction from Dan. I never called the competition a scam and actually gave credit to most of the entries for running a good contest. I’m simply trying to point out here that there are a lot of unfair practices that could have easily been prevented, making a better contest.
Honestly, some people are much too defensive. I like to poke fun to generate a little bit of link bait (which obviously worked
), but I don’t believe anything negative was thrown around. It’s good to see I’m not the only one picking up on some of these suspicious RSS gains though
Jims last blog post..Blogging Idol Is A Joke - Why the Big Competition Fails to Measure Real Success
Nah… Blogging idol is not for good people!!
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@Dan and Jim -This is crazy
I hope Dan comes to read the comments of jim….
And Jim how do u get link bait from this post ?
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@Rockstart Sid - hahaha, “blogging idol is not for good people”
I dunno man, you’ll always have some bad apples in the bunch no matter what you do….I always try to find the good in things, and, I think Jim also pointed that out…not everyone is cheating…but those that are mess it up for everyone.
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Haha well I have clearly already seen the kind of controversy I was expecting to generate some buzz, eh? I’m pretty much 100% sure that Daniel will be back reading this, as curiosity as to what is going on in comments will always win out over a blunt “don’t bother replying” statement. I really support Dan and what he’s doing, and DailyBlogTips is an awesome blog that you should be subscribed to if you aren’t already
That being said, I am not trying to be a complainer… I’d just prefer that $1,500 not get handed to some creep that doesn’t deserve it.
Their ways to win the contest can be cheated… I don’t know. I know good contests that end up with great results especially when the winner was me. Ha! Ha!
Come on.. cheaters are those you have a unique successful tatics… (I am not participating in Blogging idol coz I dont want others to lose
)
Dan.. I am sure u r reading these comments.. Just want to say HI to you
(Yep,I am kinda childish
)
This is a great pass time to me
I will come back again to read some more comments…
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Hi, I’m the blogger behind romeuy.com
I would just like to correct you. My blog has been online for about only 2 months. You could check the who.is records on that. This is my first post. You can see the actual date. http://romeuy.com/ramblings/hello-world You can count my number of posts too.
I would just like to say that alexa will never measure the amount of traffic your blog gets. If you would like, I can give you some numbers in my statcounter
for romeuy.com. Blog traffic is at 4.5k per day on average. I don’t know what you are really insisting that I am doing blackhat methods when in fact I am not. If you want numbers, I can show them to you
In the 2 months that my blog has been online before the contest. I have managed to gain 750+ feed subscribers. Thats before this contest started so the number that I am gaining now is passive.
I just don’t know why you are saying that I am cheating. Just because the number is growing rapidly?
I also felt bad that you called my blog “less professional than typical industry standards”
What industry standards is that? The Make Money Online niche? Man, there is more to the internet than making money online. I know some people who are into games like my blog. Thats because my blog talks about gaming. Your blog talks about another niche. It’s really simple. Have you thought about the fact that its easier to make subscribers on a gaming blog than on a make money online blog? The amount of high trend low density keywords there are on gaming topics than on a MMO topics.
And lastly the contest is not fixed. Know why? Because I don’t know Daniel aside from the fact that he is the blogger behind DBT. I am a Filipino and Daniel and I doesn’t even live on the same country. I just don’t know how the contest would be fixed
btw, you had a point when you said that the contest doesn’t really tell the best blogger or the best marketer. You just stepped over people when you belittled other people’s blogs and calling the whole thing as a hoax, scam and a joke.
Don’t bother posting a reply to this comment, I am pretty sure I won’t be coming back to read it.
hahah.. that’s cool way to end up your comment Daniel lol
oh and Jim,
The solution? This contest should be a mix of RSS subscriber growth AND actual traffic flow.
talk about romeuy.com, that blog has about 5,000-6,000 unique visitors daily. if that still make the feed count increment look unreasonable for you, i don’t know what else will
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btw. why would you also say that the my blog has excessive advertising? Because I have good traffic (not alexa toolbar users, just casual internet users who like video games) I am just optimizing my adsense earnings. One on top of the post title. Does not violate adsense TOS, I think
One skyscraper on the sidebar and one after the post. btw I also have chitika ads for US traffic. It doesnt show on international traffic and a Projectwonderful ad on top. The theme I am using has a lot of ad slots available. I used the theme specifically for that purpose 
here is a little view on my blogs traffic. I hope I could convince you guys with this
http://www.projectwonderful.com/advertisehere.php?id=20243&type=1
@ Rome: I was really referring to the other website when I mentioned excessive advertising, yours ain’t bad. I’m sorry, but I really don’t buy that you are getting that much traffic daily… it just doesn’t add up in my mind. You’ve had just one post since the contest began and the comments are showing that people thought your information was wrong anyway. There are thousands of those gaming blogs, and I really don’t think it’s very logical you are getting that many subscribers.
Again, don’t put words in my mouth that I didn’t say. I never accused you of black hat methods and even added “i’m not saying either of these bloggers are fudging numbers” to clear things up. Alexa rankings may not be perfect, but one over 400,000 clearly is likely to have slow traffic that doesn’t match up with your claims.
Also, even if you are grabbing that traffic… it remains true that you are tying into what I was talking about with unreasonable competitive practices. It’s clear by this post http://tinyurl.com/5996hk that you are soliciting email subscribers in exchange for illegal warez downloads of PSP video games. Just a bit disconcerting in my opinion mate.
This is an opinionated post, not meant to be taken word for word. Good to see I’m stirring the pot though
I’m sorry for spamming your comments section but I placed a link to my Projectwonderful advertise here page. Hope that clears this “but I really don’t buy that you are getting that much traffic daily…”
Jim, you really can’t rely on comments to determine a blog’s activity. I have a blog that gets around 80K pageviews a month, but probably only gets 25-30 comments in that span of time. The difference is that the site is more informational, and doesn’t generate a lot of replies. But it’s noteworthy enough that national advertisers have directly solicited us for advertising and such.
That said, overall I agree with your thoughts on Blogging Idol, and that’s why I chose not to enter the contest myself. Daniel seemed to take your post a little hard, but such is life. Good luck!
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@ Zander: I agree with you that you can’t look just to comments. This was just something that I picked up on that supplements other things that I believe look suspicious about some of the blog gains. Again, I had to use SOMEONE as a scapegoat to prove my point… not neccesarily calling anyone a “cheater,” but a lot of the methods have been, unethical?
There are always ways to get RSS numbers, but some of them are not good blogging practices worthy of a $1,500 purse
Glad to see you’re railing against it. It’s getting a bit annoying seeing posts everywhere about Blogging Idol.
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I have to agree, for I see many trading things so that people will subscribe, but they only will subscribe for one month. The people will lose the subscribers after the contest, so what is the point?
Interesting post - parts of it are a little harsh, but in general it’s a good bit of link bait (which is what you intend, I presume
).
Personally, I expected not to win it, but to boost RSS count - it is getting a lot of exposure in the blogosphere, and having competition is always good. If I win, great; if not, not a problem. I have found a few blogs I wouldn’t have, and have met a few people I wouldn’t have without Blogging Idol.
However, I do agree that when the incentive is so great, there will always be people that game statistics… I’ve talked about this privately with a few that agree, and some of the front runners in this competition are almost certainly using illegitimate means to boost RSS count. Buying bot traffic is one thing, but you can easily see the realness of a feed by using the below tool:
http://www.blogperfume.com/feed-analysis/
If the amount of views are lower than the number of subscribers, 99% of the time it is a fake feed count and fake traffic (people need to visit your blog to subscribe, obviously…) and if you run a few of the top blogs through that you’ll see who’s fake and who’s not. (One of the biggest fakers around is Alan @ TheRatingBlog… - run his feed link through that tool to see what I mean).
I might do a post tomorrow talking about how to tell if someone is gaming their statistics, so if I do thanks for the idea and you’ll be getting a link
Just a small point @ Zander - there is a difference between traffic and subscribers. Your blog may get a chunk of traffic, but say they’re search engine visitors… which don’t tend to comment nor subscribe to feeds, but do tend to buy products.
The subscriber to commenter ratio though SHOULD be pretty relevant because subscribers are FAR more active than your average hit. A subscriber has actually taken the time to opt in to have posts delivered to their email / reader.
I do not get how people can see a 250~ increase in RSS count having posted once (with no comments on that post) since the competition began and not posted for ten days before that legitimately, but maybe that’s just me.
I do think Blogging Idol is a cool idea, though - there will always be people that cheat in all aspects of life. Hats off to Daniel for giving bloggers a chance to promote themselves and marketing a new brand in the blogosphere (everyone knows what Blogging Idol is nowadays).
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Daniel’s comment is a complete over-reaction.
You didn’t use the word scam to use it, as it is beginning to look like a scam. You were not attacking him, just that it was a little unthought out, using something that is easy to fix, and it’s something easily exploitable.
Fact of the matter is this, ALL blogging competitions have an element of unfairness. Traffic is easy to buy, RSS numbers are easy to fix, and comments can be fixed. I get around 50-100 visitors a day through google, but my advertising rates are as high as a site . Why? Because it’s people who are interested in my site. People convert, therefore I’m able to charge much more than the $10 a month for a banner ad.
Huge traffic numbers are like huge penises. Something to brag about, but useless if you don’t know what to do with it.
The other thing is that this blogging idol is that it helps the blogging/make money online sites. A number of the sites are in that niche, and the people that read Daniel’s blog will read them. I struggle to get RSS readers, why? Because not everybody who’s in my niche knows about it. Should I really spend a few posts educating my readers, which will look out of place? Or live in the knowledge they have their site bookmarked on firefox, visit the forum, and generally contribute towards my success.
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@ Jason: Thanks for that comment, what you said is exactly how I feed 100%. It’s great to have a competition like this, but you need to know that people are more than likely fudging the numbers with a $1,500 check in their faces. Definitely a cool idea and hats off to Daniel for throwing this competition.
It was for a bit of link bait anyways
I’ll discuss that tomorrow
About excessive advertising, that’s fine with my blog man. As long as Google allows those many ad spots, I should be fine. We are here to make money, the people who won’t like it, won’t read the blog - as simple as that.
And everything else, we explained. Just providing the stock market information to large [I mean really large] number of audience, even if gets me 1-2% readers getting converted, the numbers my feedreader shows is no magic.
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“I should be fine. We are here to make money, the people who won’t like it, won’t read the blog - as simple as that.”
Do you though? I’d love to know how much you make. No adspots filled.
Outside of sponsored posts, and sponsored links, how much do you make?
Rhys - Retro Gardens last blog post..Twisted Metal 2: World Tour
I have spent the past 15-25 minutes reading through this article and all the comments and now it’s time to have my say.
I agree with a few people and Daniel that your post was a bit too harsh, but I also agree with you on a few points.
RSS subscribers can be very easily manipulated (using temporary emails to subscribe hundreds of times), but, so can every single other type of statistic (traffic, alexa rank, etc.)
I would not agree with you about calling blogging idol fixed but I do agree with you that it is pretty weird how some blogs got a huge jump of subscribers in one week.
I like Daniel since he’s such a very friendly guy and posts killer content on his blog. I understand that you were trying to write a controversial post, but maybe you didn’t think of how some people would react to it.
Overall, the only reason I joined this contest was to boost my motivation and stop being lazy. If I win, great, if I don’t, it was fun.
That’s what I think of the whole situation, sorry if the comment is a bit messed up, but I couldn’t get my thoughts out in a nice orderly way
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@ Rajaie: I’m really just making this post to raise an issue, not to condemn the competition. I think that Blogging Idol is great, it just needed to be pointed out that certain people are crashing the system. There is no way that this post was “a bit too harsh” as you claimed, I tried to stay inside the boundaries as much as possible and I really was overly nice the way I put things. If you can’t take a bit of joking criticism, you can’t handle running a blog
I understand why you made the post, and I agree with you, Blogging Idol is great and some people are crashing the system. But there is no type of system that exists that can not be crashed.
The only thing I found a bit harsh was calling the other blog “less professional than typical industry standards”
I had no problem with the article at all, and trust me, I can take any type of criticism, I’m just saying that some people might have been offended by your post
Anyway, I know you much you like writing controversial posts, and I like reading them
The one with John Cow was also a great read! 
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@ Rajaie: I agree that there is no system that can’t be crashed, but using JUST RSS is basically a set up for what is happening. Traffic is a lot harder to fake than subscriber numbers, which are I think one of the easiest statistics to game.
And yeah, I’m trying to be controversial

Maybe it’s crossed the line… but maybe it’s supposed to be
I also agree on that point, the contestants should have been judged by RSS Subscribers, Traffic, Bounce Rate, and maybe Alexa Rank. That would have been pretty hard to fake….
When it crosses the line, you know you’re doing it right!
Rajaie AlKoranis last blog post..8 Great Sources Of Free Traffic For Your New Blog
I checked out romeuy.com…..
.
His july subscribers just shot from like 200 odd to 1000+ while his hits remained the same..and the rate at which his subscribers are increasing….in 6 months hes all set to touch a million…..WOW. I wonder what tech crunch would have to say about that
Stock Market blog…..firstly dude ur just a disgrace to Indians worldwide…..
Secondly, your blog is so unprofessional. I dont remember seeing a stock market blog being so disorganized and unprofessional and content seems to be stolen from various news wires.
“Less professional than typical industry standards” - That statement is very true. Its the fact and generally Truth hurts, you just have to deal with it.
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The views expressed by my readers are not the opinions of the author of this blog.
Prem was a bit harsh there, and I wouldn’t say the mentioned blogs are “bad”… its just a particular case of suspicious gains that I wanted to highlight in a positive arena.
Well, As I said the Truth always hurts. I was just laying down the facts as it is. I did not make anything up….
The aim of the competition should have been to find a “Bloggin Idol” aka the best blogger of the month. Sadly, its gonna be someone who is not
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I personally have been using the free link with each email subscription. You may see it as short term gain and that people will leave as soon as the link is gone, but my whole aim in this is to get the subscribers receiving my content daily and let my content win them over to real subscribers.
This is already starting to work with my traffic over doubling within the first week of July and the amount of comments have also double - which is proportionate with my feed count increase.
Also, Jason (TUK) did beg by offering free links… so you might want to adjust your statement about him not being able to due to reputation.
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Ok Jim - a few things:
I’ve spent the last 15 minutes reading your article and all of these comments. You’ve really shaken things up huh?
First - thanks for mentioning me in your post. Kinda nice to know that out of over 100 blogs, you picked mine as being “reputable.”
But that’s not what I’m here to say…
I think you’ve made some valid points in your argument - mostly about people bribing subscribers and offering prize incentives. Those methods of advertising will ruin a blog in the long run. It isn’t prizes or links that win people’s minds - it is a steady stream of relevant, informative, and “necessary” content that will turn readers into loyal subscribers.
I joined Blogging Idol not so much for the prizes (although, who can say no to $1500?), but instead, I used it as a motivation to push myself and Elite By Design ahead. My blogging frequency had slowed down in May and June. With Blogging Idol, I knew it was a chance to step my game up and get more active in the blogosphere.
I’ve noticed that a lot of people are in the competition for the same reason as me - which is phenomenal. If people start to realize that hard work pays off, the blogging world will be so much better off.
Let me say that I’ve been a DBT subscriber for over 6 months now - the content is amazing and Daniel is an incredible blogger who has done very well (he even fooled me big time on April fools :P). However, I agree that the contest may be a little bugged. Not to say that a valid blog won’t win it, but just that a lot of new bloggers are learning the WRONG way to make it online. There are dozens of new blogs in this competition that are starting off in the money mindset.
Everyone - if you’re blogging purely for money, you aren’t going to make it. Sure, money on the side is nice, but if you don’t have a passion for what you’re writing and you don’t enjoy interacting with people from around the world, then blogging just isn’t for you.
That’s all I can say for right now. I’ve subscribed to comment replies, so let me know what you think and I’ll be back
If I was going to do an honest review, your guys opinions would be considered as compliments to what I would say, but a guys gotta have a heart
I also have given out free links for subscribers, but with the same intention as Tom
Anyways, good luck to all the contestants and I hope you all los, ahem, I mean, win
Looks like I was too late to fix the italics problem, anyway, I might write a post about my views on this whole thing, so be sure to subscribe to my blog to stay tuned! Just kidding, and Brian, nice idea about subscribing to the comments
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Hopefully I can get those italics fixed! I don’t know where the problem is, haha.
Wow 40 comments already?
Brian: Thanks for voicing your opinion. I joined for the exact same reasons that you did. Yes, I do concede that a valid blog does have the chance to win this thing, but it will most likely not be is my main concern. I love DailyBlogTips though (for the 26th time), and really think that this is a fantastic idea that was just steered a bit off course by certain entries.
I’d be interested to know what makes romeuy.com so popular. For starter’s it’s a video game site. There’s loads of competition in the video game niche, probably even more than in the web marketing niche. Next, a lot of his content can be easily found/reposted in more prominent gaming sites. People trust more popular sites than new ones, for original, frequent content.
I owned a gaming blog for several months and have posted mostly opinionated, original articles in the last months and it has gotten nowhere near that many visits, probably thinking because it’s a saturated niche that’s hard to compete.
So to Rome Uy, I am not doubting that there are some black hat methods done with getting more RSS subscribers. It also doesn’t show that you’re a big expert on gaming- just on marketing.
In a perfect world, it would be the passion of your subject that will make your website popular, and not exploiting knowledge of a subject that’s not related to your site’s subject matter.
I didn’t participate in this contest because I knew I’d be way too tempted to cheat. If I truly wanted to win I could easily make a program that will get me 100 subscribers in less than a 5 minutes and no one would be able to notice that I cheated, that is unless they were monitoring my stats closely.
You really can’t ramble against a contest because its no use, I have learned throughout life that making a scene about something you didn’t pay for doesn’t work well for you.
To participate in the contest you aren’t really required to do anything other than increase your subscriber count, you aren’t even asked to blog about Blogging Idol, so really “Blogging Idol” is not profiting from anything other than the attention and the ad clicks that they are getting.
As far as I know nobody payed a cent in order to participate, the only people paying for the contest are the sponsors so they are really the only ones who should complain.
I feel for you, I know what it feels to know that your competitors are cheating and there is nothing to do about it. But making a ramble post and getting people mad (And possibly making some enemies) won’t help your case. The best thing to do is to let the contest go and just get over it, that’s life and it sucks.
If the guy who started the contest wanted to actually create a blogging idol there should be way more factors at play, not just the RSS count because as stated before, anyone can manipulate those. Some things he might try to do is actually get the list of the people that subscribed and send random e-mails to actually verify their subscription, another thing would be to place a tracker in the website of the person to actually monitor their stats, the tracker would only monitor hits coming to the website to prevent someone placing the tracker in many other websites to make it appear as if they had more hits and traffic.
Just my two cents.
Germzs last blog post..Four Tips for better Writing
I like your idea about the tracker
Rajaie AlKoranis last blog post..8 Great Sources Of Free Traffic For Your New Blog
I fixed the italics problem for you Jim :).
Anyway, thanks Rajaie a tracker should be used and the competition should also measure the amount of people visiting your blog and the percentage of increase.
And since it is a blogging idol then why not let people vote for it. And In order to prevent fake votes only one person can vote and a cookie will be placed on their computer, as well as logging their ips to prevent them from making more votes.
Germzs last blog post..Four Tips for better Writing
But it still will take a lot of work and that will probably take all the fun out of it and wear down the manager!
Rajaie AlKoranis last blog post..8 Great Sources Of Free Traffic For Your New Blog
@ Germz: Great ideas, I love the thought of a tamper-proofed tracker that only Daniel could control as well as the voting. They vote on American Idol, why not have the same rules on Blogging Idol, eh?