Help:Announcements/Q207

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Friday December 27, 2024
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Before MyWikiBiz obtained the sole rights to the Centiare directory, we used to publish an announcement newsletter called CentiareWire. This is an example issue from those days of early 2007:

CentiareWire

CentiareWire -- Announcement Newsletter -- 2nd Quarter of 2007

The CentiareWire is a quarterly newsletter issued to all Centiare Users who have registered and confirmed an e-mail address.


How our traffic compares

Centiare is getting a good amount of traffic for a site that's been open to the public for only four months. We're especially proud of the fact that we average 7.0 page views per visitor. That means our look, feel, and content are engaging visitors! It's not YouTube traffic. It's not MySpace traffic. But, in terms of page views, we're already consistently beating other media sites that have been around for years and years.

1Q traffic comparison 2007

This Alexa Daily Pageviews graph for the better part of the First Quarter 2007 suggests that Centiare (the royal blue line) captures far more page viewings than any of these respectable media properties:

  • Gazette.com - the primary newspaper of Colorado Springs, CO (a metro area with population of 587,500).
  • WBTV.com - the CBS television affiliate of Charlotte, NC (the 18th largest city in the United States)
  • ArtsJournal.com - founded in 1999, the site is a digest of some of the best arts and cultural journalism culled from over 200 sources
  • FMQB.com - the famous radio trade journal, Friday Morning Quarterback, was launched in 1968 and maintains 10,000 paid subscribers to its venerable monthly print magazine, as well as daily visitors to its website

While Centiare may trail them in raw visitors, we dominate each of them in total page views.

For the first quarter of 2007, Centiare recorded nearly 14,000 visits and over 96,000 page views, according to Google Analytics. Returning visitors make up 25% of the traffic. The top inbound sources of traffic are Google search results, followed by message boards and blogs where we're mentioned. We serve about 60 to 80 megabytes of data per day.

Why not Centiare?

Recently, I invited an independent artist to create a Directory listing on Centiare. His response:

  Thanks for the interest, but I maintain my own website and would not be interested in your services.

Here is what I said in reply:

I completely understand your line of thinking from a "brand unity" perspective. But, if I may be so bold, I believe it is misguided. Centiare does not strive to "become" or "replace" your own website (even though in the case of Liz Cohen, who didn't really have her own page anywhere yet, it did sort of become a de facto homepage). We seek to be a complementary source of "one click away from your website" traffic.
In other words, just because you have your own website, would you refuse to be listed in the Yellow Pages? Would you dispose of the idea of having a MySpace page? If you had an ad campaign running on the radio, would you refuse to accept an offer elsewhere for free television advertising?
Since Centiare is free to use, the only thing you have to "lose" is some time and effort to get your page set up and looking at least as decent as a "stub" on Wikipedia.
If I can just give you one quick example...
BIG Images is a large format printer who has effectively utilized Centiare. If someone is searching Google for: "large format printing" "San Luis Obispo", they will get over 1,000 results on Google. The BIG Images homepage is # 1 in the results, and Centiare's directory listing is # 2 or # 3:
actual Google search results
However, if someone is searching Google for: "San Luis Obispo" large format printers, they will get over 100,000 results on Google. The BIG Images web domain doesn't show up in the Top 20 results (it happens to be 21st), but the Centiare page shows up 4th! Someone clicking on that link then has all the information they need to call or e-mail the print shop, or to click one more time to get to the BIG-images.com page itself.
See search results.
Why would anyone say, "Well, I have my own web page, and if it comes up 21st in some searches, I'll just have to live with that. I don't want a link that comes up 4th, if it's not to my home page."?
Sorry to sound like a sales pitch, but (as I said), what I'm "selling" is free.
Greg

What are your thoughts about this? I know for a fact that the majority of the registered users of Centiare have not made a single edit on the site. Are they, like our artist friend above, hesitant to dilute their "own website" by linking to it from here? I just don't get it, but comments are certainly welcome on my Talk page.