5 Ways to monitor your Site’s Status

Its really impossible for anyone to sit in front of the Computer 24 hours and monitor if your website is UP or DOWN. But this is really essential for everyone. There are some nice services available which can monitor your site’s status 24 x 7.

Montastic

montasticman.jpgMontastic is the first thing that i would recommend when it comes to Website Status Monitoring. Its completely free. It is really “The free website monitoring service that doesn’t suck”. I have been using them for few days now and really nice. I like their RSS feature and the “No unreasonable limit on the number of websites monitored”.

SiteUptime

sut_logo.gifSiteUptime is the next best one out there. They have three different plans : Free, Premium and Advanced. The free plan is too basic with just one monitor and 30/60 minute checks.

Free Web Monitoring

fwm.gifFree Web Monitoring is the first service that i used and i continue to use it even today. They have 60 minute checking time too, but, they allow multiple sites in a single account.

upPanel

upp.jpgupPanel was the second service that i started using. They have 3 plans too. I had the Free plan which had 30 minute lowest interval. Their Basic and Pro accounts have very nice features like AIM Alerts, SMS Alerts, Skype Alerts and Phone Alerts.

FreeSiteStatus

fsslogo.gifI read about this service over here. The features are not very clear. I think, signing up is free. But, you have to pay to start monitoring websites. The pricing depends on the number of URLs to be monitored, the time interval etc.. which can be calculated from here. This isn’t something i would recommend.


So, i suggest that you take a look at the above services and get the most out these by signing up for multiple ones. I suggest signing up for Montastic, upPanel and Free Web Monitoring.

Foldspy – Optimize your ad placements

foldspy.jpgFoldSpy is a simple service that allows you to optimize ad placements on your websites. It is more of a remotely hosted Javascript than a service. “Fold” is the part of the website that is visible without needing to scroll down. Because of different screen resolutions, browsers, user preferences and operating system, the fold is not the same for all the users. To maximize revenue from your ads, you want them to be visible to the majority of your visitors without scrolling: “above the fold”. FoldSpy finds the fold.

foldspy.png

The screenshot shows the same website (CNN), but the folds are different due to the factors mentioned above.

Installing FoldSpy is very simple. It just involves one line of code. Though the site shows a demo video, it doesn’t provide a live demo. So here, i have added it to GotChance so that you guys can test drive it. Here : GotChance.com/#foldspy.

The basic service is free for everyone. However, they have an optional PRO account option for $6/year. I didn’t try it, but here is what they say.

Foldspy Pro has everything in Free but also records stats from your site, giving you data on the unique profile of your visitors.

I had actually planned to write a post on Choosing best Ad placements. But, i completely forgot about it. Now, you can expect in a day or two.

5 Reasons Why Users Leave your Blog/Website

All webmasters work days and nights to get highly targeted traffic to their websites. But, it is a pain to lose those hard-earned visitors. There are some specific reasons why a person would leave a website. The following list is compiled out of my own experience. There are the top reasons why i don’t visit certain websites. Here i would use my Free Webmaster Resources website Templora for example.

1) Not Good Navigation

Not everyone visits your website directly by typing the URL in the address bar unless you are Google.com or Yahoo.com. So, many visitors come through search engines. So, it would be a very good idea to identify these pages by using softwares like AWStats (i use it) etc.. and make those pages as much User-Friendly as possible. Place prominent links to your homepage etc..

On my website, the Basic PHP Security Tutorial page and the SMF Theme Generator receive the most hits from Search engines and those are very much user friendly.

2) Lack of Content

This is something that everybody knows. Content is the king of everything. If there is no content on the Web, Google and Yahoo will have to shut down :D. Even a single great article can bring you in a lot of backlinks and a lot of traffic from Search Engines. But thats not going to retain your visitors. You’ll have to have some more good or average content. When i started my website, Basic PHP Security Tutorial was my only good content and was the only source of traffic. So, even though i had a lot of traffic, i was not having much returning visitors. But, after that, as i improved content by writing more articles and tutorials, i started to have some loyal users.

You can also link to related content on every page so that you can get your visitors to stay longer. If you use WordPress, you can install the Related Posts plugin (there are others available too. But many don’t work well).

3) Too Many Ads

No one likes to visit websites filled up with lots of Ads. Even if you have high quality content, if you have more than 5 Ads or even 2-3 Flashing ads, people might consider your website as a “Made For Ads”(MFA)(!) website. This is really dangerous as the users might permanently abandon your website, as i have done many websites. Again, if you take my website Templora.com as an example, i have a 468 x 60 block at the top and a 728 x 90 at the bottom. Those are not annoying and i earn sufficiently from them. I could have easily inserted a few more Square adsense blocks on my Tutorials and Articles pages, but that would definitely drive the visitors away.

4) No Activity

If you have a forum or some other type of user-generated content, User Activity can harm you very well. No one wants to post in a empty forum, though they know that everything has to be empty before it can start brimming. This is really irritating ,but thats how people are. They just want to go the way the crowd goes. This is the case with blogs too. It affects blogs in an indirect way. If you display low numbers on your RSS Subscribers widget, you are prone to losing a lot of new users. I covered it in my “5 Tips to Increase RSS Subscirbers“. Also, people judge your blog depending on the number of comments you have and the way you have responded.

5) Bad Design

This is not really an important factor. But, thats just for websites that provide very good content like Boing Boing. It is one of the most poorly designed blogs that i have ever seen, but it sits right on the #1 spot for the Most Favorited blogs and #2 spot of Technorati’s top 100 blogs. But, every blog cannot be Boing Boing. So, you’d have to have a really good design. If you don’t, you can hire me to design one for you. I’m a pretty good web designer ;).

Top Sources of Traffic (as i see them)

Though the theme of every website may vary widely, every webmaster share some common goals like :

  1. Getting on the #1 Spot on Google
  2. Receive a ton of traffic daily
  3. Make a good amount of money so as to quit the day job
  4. And the list goes on and on…

Here, i’ll briefly discuss the second point, from my view. I’ll not be talking about Backlinks, SEO, Good Content etc.. (though they are the backbones for traffic) because, they are the essentials and help on the long run. We’ll say the various ways to receive instant traffic.

StumbleUpon

StumbleUpon, undoubtedly, is the father of instant traffic. With over 2.5 million stumblers, it can send you a lot of traffic withing minutes. As i posted sometime ago, i am an active stumbler in the “Internet Tools” category. I keep up to date with it. Darren over a ProBlogger made a post, why StumbleUpon send more traffic than Digg. StumbleUpon sends traffic over a long period of time while Digg does it for just some days (just as long as the post remains on the frontpage).

Digg

Digg is another traffic monster which can at times take down your site temporarily. Though 85% of the stories cannot make it to the frontpage, all storied submitted can bring you considerable traffic.

NetScape

There are lots and lots of Digg Clones out there. There is even an open source script. But not more than 3% of them are successful. NetScape is on the top of them. A story submitted on NetScape can bring you about half the amount of traffic Digg can send you. Frontpage stories can bring you more. I use this as my next choice to Digg.

Social sites mean a lot of traffic nowadays. Though there a lot of them, only limited sites can send you lots of traffic. Reddit and del.icio.us are my next choices.

Other than such sites, blogs are huge sources of traffic. Posts on High authority blogs can bring you tons of traffic. Such blogs include all the blogs on the Top 100 Technorati list. Even sites with 600+ authority can bring you considerable traffic.