Yes, 10 minutes was just an example though. That would certainly be annoying, but I guess it all depends on how frequently people use wifi in cafe's. Any time I have, it's always been briefly to look something up for a minute or two.
The wifi is still free, there will just be subtle monetizing. Most larger organisations in the U.K have a registration for wifi access, which is worse than having advertisements every so often, so I don't think that would be an issue.
Hi bros,
I'm looking into monetizing a cafe's wifi. Approximately 800 people access the free wifi on a monthly basis. I'm not looking to make a lot, even £5 a week would be justified.
Some ideas I've had:
PPV video monetisation on a 10 minute access cycle
Pop-up PPC adverts (Doubtful it will...
It's an entirely different game to normal link building it seems. Additionally, white hat link building seems close to impossible due to the secrecy of such an industry.
I'm looking into automation techniques while still considering the chance of penalty.
Currently my strategy is this:
Tier 1...
Just about to finish my current book, looking to purchase a marketing-based book next to expand my understanding of the industry.
I don't tend to like the 'read-bait' books e.g "How to be a millionaire", "the 4-hour work week" and shit like that. I like more theoretical and strategic books...
So would this tiered link technique generally be considered a penalty waiting to happen?:
Tier 1 - High quality, manually made websites/web2.0s
Tier 2 - scrapebox high pr comments, automated web 2.0s and heavily spun content
Tier 3 - GSA linking fully automated
Thanks for the great response. Is it fair to say that for a beginner reading these blogs can be an initial benefit in giving you an initial feel for the industry which could later assist that gut instinct in being more accurate? I find that in whatever I'm learning, the more I know, the more...
Have to disagree, in marketing and SEO especially nothing is fixed and things are constantly interchanging. Because of that, the greatest asset you can have is perspective. The ability to understand what people are doing, what's working and what's being saturated. Following people and allowing...
Lightweight, I'm not talking minimal, but a website that is not packed with heavy media assets, javascript libraries (smooth scroll, parrallax, fixed nav switches) - It should be simple, beautiful and content-rich.
There is a ton of IM blogs out there but they are so saturated with bullshit that it makes finding the quality blogs a mission.
Anyone have any recommendations on some quality IM blogs I can follow/read?
Thanks :)