Archive for the 'Donation challenge' Category

Economy tanks, blogs suffer! (or… advertising and readership accountability post)

Here’s our regular update on how the blog is doing. First to the stats.

June was a bumper month for us with 117430 unique visitors, 229301 visits and 1685704 page views. In July, we were back around the sort of reader numbers we had for April with 89496 unique visitors, 195867 visits and 1442702 page views (as Kim noted, more than Andrew Bolt has….) and August looks like coming in at around the same numbers. The drop off from June coincided exactly with the start of the school holidays (and uni break) and then spiked up a little, before settling back down with the onset of the Olympics. More generally, and obviously there’s a tale there, my analysis of the detailed stats shows that we get a fair bit of extra traffic associated with sustained coverage of particular events or issues - for instance the federal budget, the 2020 summit, the Bill Henson photos controversy, the Garnaut Review report and World Youth Day. That seems to be people interested in those specific things, and where we are now is probably just below the usual level of general interest in what we write about - which garners us around 6200 visitors on most week days, and around 5000 on weekends this month. That’s about 1000 less than it was before school/uni holidays and the Olympics intervened.

There was some scepticism around last year that political blogs would not easily make the transition into the Rudd era, in the absence of the stimulus of the federal election, which is when our numbers really jumped to a level that’s reasonably significant. That concern can be set aside, because clearly we’ve maintained a steady readership at around the same levels throughout this year, and when there’s more focus and public interest on particular issues that aren’t being well covered by the mainstream media, we can pull in around 1000 more visitors a day, and sometimes more - there were quite a few days in July when we were getting visitor numbers in the high 8000s. Some of the traffic “base” if you like of all these numbers is the “long tail” - visits to old posts. But in general we’re getting each visitor looking at an average of 7.5 pages, which when you take into account the fact that a lot of the traffic from seach engines to older pages only goes to one post, means that a lot of readers are engaging with a lot of the blog when they come here.

I still think we can grow these numbers, and we haven’t had any income from advertising yet, so we haven’t been able to do our own promotion beyond what we usually do, but I’d be really grateful if folks who like the joint spread the word, and also very interested in feedback on the mix and quality of posts. I’ve said something about the mix here. That takes me to advertising revenue. Continue reading ‘Economy tanks, blogs suffer! (or… advertising and readership accountability post)’

Micro fiction competition!

It’s been ages since we’ve done a competition. I’ll donate $300 for the best entry in a microfiction comp to Medecins Sans Frontieres. The idea is to write a story in 300 words or less. Must be prose. No haikus! The theme is “The Postmodern Pirate Queen”. In your story, you must include the phrases “peg leg” and “time streams”. Steampunk is a suggested but not compulsory genre. That’s all!

Suggestions on judging and criteria solicited. And matching donations encouraged! You have til midnight on Saturday.


Portrait of the Queen by *Pirate-Queen on deviantART

Now that Pamela Bone is dead…

Yeah, you might have noticed already. I’m in a Truthiness mood tonight, as Stephen Colbert might say. Remember all the loud denunciations I copped from Harry Clarke, Tim Blair et al et al etc. - all the feminists of total convenience - for not denouncing the female genital mutilation loudly enough? Coz it’s all about teh Islam and threats to Western Civ, etc., and that mob are all on the side of women’s rights, and that manly man of steel John Howard is taking us to war to free Afghani women from burqas. And George W. Bush is going to hunt those Al-Qaeda evildoers down. (And Islam is not a race, and some of my best friends… oops, hang on?) While Laura and Condi look after the oppressed women. Or something… Oh yeah, it isn’t 2003 any more… Remember that word fistula - you might not have read that on teh Blair blog - being a word of three syllables and all. And in Latin.

But I talked about it at the time. Now that Pamela Bone is dead (and God rest her soul, may she be blessed with eternal rest, and may perpetual light shine upon her), where are the voices with the loud condemn? What’s with that Australian crusade for women’s rights in benighted Islamic Middle Eastern countries? After all, we - Dolly Downer and John Howard and Tim Blair and Andrew Bolt and Planet Janet told us so - are all (post?) feminists now. It’s on the citizenship test, dude - and dudette a la 50s pinup style no doubt. (Ps - don’t use that politically correct, activist judge f-word though…)

Well, never mind. Here’s a post from The Global Sociology Blog for the benefit of anyone who wanted to continue highlighting the horrors perpetrated on women in the developing world even if there’s not a convenient culture wars damn the left angle in it. (And that’s not to say that women in the developed world don’t still cop a lot - but there’s something to celebrate about a very large majority of Australians agreeing - at least in theory when asked by pollsters - that women have rights over their own choices and bodies - even if that masks continued gender inequality in oh, so many ways…).

You can donate to Medicins San Frontieres here.

And you might be interested in the fact that rape has finally been recognised by the UN as a war crime, something I wrote about last year, but something the keyboard warriors seem to… well, gloss over is far too kind. Because the fact that women are overwhelmingly the victims of war seems to be recognised neither by the pro-war Right nor the “humanitarian intervention” so-called Left. Continue reading ‘Now that Pamela Bone is dead…’

Burma donation appeal at Troppo

The exact magnitude of the effects of Cyclone Nargis on the people of Bruma remain unclear, and will likely be so for some time. But what we do know already is it’s the biggest natural disaster in the region since the Boxing Day tsunami, and without sufficient and timely aid it will get far worse.

In the aftermath of that earlier disaster, the blogosphere did its bit to help out, notably through the efforts of the good Professor Quiggin, who matched his readers’ donations one-for-one, raising nearly $5000. This time around, Club Troppo and the Professor are trying their hand again:

He is doing the same thing again, this time in collaboration with Club Troppo. We are hoping to persuade readers to give generously in the knowledge that every dollar of disposable income sacrificed translates to nearly four dollars of aid. John will donate fifty cents for every dollar pledged in the comments threads for this post, the comments thread for the twin post at his own site, or by email to John or me. Club Troppo contributors will put in another fifty cents.

Go over to Troppo to find out how to donate. I’m going to put in $100. How about you?

LP advertising revenue and donation accountability post

People might remember that I promised on the thread about the introduction of ads on LP to report back on how it was going. We’ve now gone through the first full month of ads, so here’s the report!

The gross revenue we earned during April was $3,434.81. Commission is 50%, with 40% going to the advertising broker, and 10% to the network. So the net is $1717.40. We’re paid on the basis of $18 gross per 1000 ad impressions for each page impression. There are 2.5 ads on each page. Nielsen, which does the measuring, only counts Australian visitors, so while posts such as this one with Chelsea Clinton in the title attract a lot of search engine hits, most of that traffic would be from outside Australia. (Though our server stats suggest the great majority of traffic comes from Australia.) We also only get an ad impression (obviously) where people don’t have an ad-blocker plugin installed, or have disabled the plugin for LP.

I’m going to do a comparison between our server stats and the Nielsen numbers to estimate what proportion of views produce an ad impression, but I’m yet to do so. In the meantime, our server stats show we had 80514 unique visitors in April, 176894 visits, 1175376 page views and 3384784 hits. 46.34 gigabytes of bandwidth was served.

The site upgrade cost us a total of $4118.99. We received generous donations totalling $860, which I’ll be paying to The National Forum now that I have the invoice, and the rest will come out of the advertising revenue - which means in effect that it will take us another month before any of that revenue actually accrues to us. Thanks so much for your help! But I’m going to ask for some more - you might recall that the LP collective had agreed that the revenue would initially be shared between promotion of the blog and some recompense to me, to assist me while I’ve been sacrificing paid work in order to finish my PhD this year. The problem is that I’m still sacrificing the income, but because there’s also a time lag of about 3 months between when we earn the ad revenue and when we get paid, we won’t actually see a cent of it until September! So so far, it’s not really fulfilling that purpose, so if you’d like to contribute to the Mark scholarship fund, me, my landlord and my credit cards will all be really grateful!

Continue reading ‘LP advertising revenue and donation accountability post’

Help us fix the blog II

As mentioned on the previous post seeking input for the upgrade of LP’s site architecture, we’re going to be getting some professional web techies to give the thing a good tune up. We’re using the services of Graham Young of On Line Opinion fame’s web design folks, and we’ll also be swapping to their server. So with any luck we’ll be enjoying much faster loading speeds, and also a cleaner interface, and regular professional support will help us keep the blogging machine in good running order.

Because of the renovations, we will be off line for a bit on Monday and possibly Tuesday. So please bear with us as we work to provide you with a better blog.

Speaking of which, having made the decision to go pro in terms of tweaking and maintaining the site, we’ll be incurring some expense. We’re very grateful for the donations last time we moved servers, which covered the intial costs and bought us some months’ hosting, but if you’re feeling generous towards LP, we’d be deeply grateful for any contributions!

Continue reading ‘Help us fix the blog II’

Walking back to Zimbabwe

I’m not the world’s best Facebooker. I ignore it most of the time with the occasional looksee every now and again. But one thing about Facebook that is cool is rediscovery of lost friends.

One of these friends is Nyasha. She is from Zimbabwe and we first met back in the wild days of ESL teaching in Japan in the early 90s. Currently she is on a walk from New York to Texas to try and raise money for a plane ticket back to Zimbabwe. I’ll let Nyasha explain why:

Continue reading ‘Walking back to Zimbabwe’

Blog issues

Since Mark put up a long post last night, you may not have seen this important one about the blog being broken. Basically, we’ve crashed under the impact of a horrendously vicious spam attack, and for the last three days, there have been constant outages due to database errors. We haven’t been able to get into the admin of the blog ourselves more often than not. To cut a long story short, because too many database connections are open at any given point in time because of the spammers attempting to post comments, we’ve temporarily disabled comments in the hope that will improve the site so that we can write on it and you can read it. Rob Corr will be doing a major upgrade and a move to a new host on the weekend, when we might disappear entirely for a spell. This will involve some expense, so if you’ve got any money left over after the Melbourne Cup not devoted to higher interest rates, you may care to consider making a donation via the PayPal button! We’ll love you forever if you do! (And if you don’t for that matter…)

Really sorry about all this - with any luck everything will be all smoochy again next week, so please bear with us - we’re as frustrated as you are. Bloody election campaigns bringing all this traffic to us! Pffft, say I!

Another LP donation challenge!

j-p-z has once more come up with the idea, over on the Harry Potter (No spoilers!) thread.[1] A good cause will end up getting at least $250 and we all get some winter wordplay.

Here’s an idea, in honor of everybody lately satisfying their Harry Potter jones, and it being all wintery in Oz. (We’ll see whether or not this gets any traction…)

There hasn’t been a zany contest around here for a while; so, for the benefit of some charity, I propose the “VERY SHORT SPOOKY STORY CONTEST�. I will donate $25 per entry for the first 10 entries (up to $250… anyone care to back the next batch?) of a very short spooky story that conforms to the following rules…
Continue reading ‘Another LP donation challenge!’