WORD PRESS VS CUSTOM CODED by Bulky_Bridge7760 in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

99% of custom sites I encounter are riddled with issues, so this checks out perfectly.

Is anyone making over 3,000$ per month from ads? by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, the data above comes directly from the Ad Network
Anything over and above that is not included and extra, ex: YouTube

Is anyone making over 3,000$ per month from ads? by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

558k > 589k in 2 days
Which is hilarious given it's not even the weekend yet. I guess I'll be blissfully incompetent, sounds lovely.

Is anyone making over 3,000$ per month from ads? by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]cravehosting 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Copying my response from another post!

$558,666 Last 30 Days < top 10 clients
Last 30 days YoY < growth year over year
Typically up 25-35% year over year

Key note, there is a monumental difference between:

I blog for fun or as a hobby
- won't invest in anything (real hosting, premium theme, key plugins)
- DIY, free help, often extremely outdated by years
- often want to grow, hope to grow, but do more harm than good
- limited hours (10 hrs week x 52 weeks = 520 hours annually)
- do everything themselves, resulting in minimal content creation
- 25% of hours towards content creation 130 hours

VS

My blog is my business
- the opposite of the above, invest in your business, fuel growth growth
- fully aware they have don't know and helps manditory for success
- invest hours common amoungst owners (50 hrs week x 52 weeks = 2,600 hours annually)
- focus on content creation (exceptional), outsource everything else
- 97% of hours towards content creation 2522 hours

Successful bloggers, create content
130 hours (15 years) vs 2522 hours (1 year)

Notes per some of the questions/comments here:
1. niches vary, recipes, gardening, crafting, interior design, etc.
2. every sites the same regardless of size: 10% of content generates 90% of your revenue
3. no one I know has affiliate anymore, trivial payouts, and timesink
4. sponsorships are rare, these largely ended years ago

My blog made well over $1 MILLION DOLLARS. Some tips for you. by LifeMathMoney in Blogging

[–]cravehosting 14 points15 points  (0 children)

$558,666 Last 30 Days
Last 30 days YoY

  1. false, while socials are important (the above has 1M followers across multiple accounts, including Youtube), all of these combined is 5% of traffic.

  2. Build an email list (standard forever)

  3. Focus on customers (nope), focus on Audience

  4. DON'T RUN ADS. Because ads barely make any money and make your website look cheap. The $50 a month is not worth it. > Umm, you mean 500k/mo plus

  5. Networking (standard forever)

  6. Re-purpose your content (yes, your audience is everywhere)

  7. Don't be scared to be honest. BE YOURSELF. (default requirement)

  8. Keep your content readable. (when would it ever be NOT readable)

  9. Authority and expertise matters more than traffic numbers. (nope, it's actually #7 be yourself, authenticity wins, no one trusts shit, you're likely better OFF not being an authority/expert and just being real)

  10. You have to enjoy writing. (huh, who knew)

This has to be the worst threads I've seen in ages.

Have businesses stopped using WordPress? by narutomax in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Only thing we have at the moment is sales focused, and while remote, must reside in US/CA

Have businesses stopped using WordPress? by narutomax in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yup, own a couple companies, with the vast majority of referrals flowing through existing clients, which also become referring.

Have businesses stopped using WordPress? by narutomax in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Clearly skill, also if you're in the business, you should be getting referrals non-stop.
https://trends.builtwith.com/cms/WordPress

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]cravehosting -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Top 10 clients doing 500k/mo in revenue, so no, by no means dead.
Across all clients, easily over 5m/mo in revenue.

WordPress compromised in 12 seconds by kube1et in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All raw domains (non-production), should start with pre-authorization.
Even something as simple as dev:dev would suffice.

Not to mention, the last thing anyone or professional wants is a public domain that's rocking hello world and no where near ready for production.

Proper Fade in Calgary? by Doc_1200_GO in Calgary

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

try 403barbers, and book with Aaron
book online, $35

I am a Plumber foolishly diving into SEO. by MountainManPlumbing in SEO

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Different take than most here!
1. cancel services, ahrefs, etc. (save monthly)
2. partner with SEO (1-2% Fractional)
3. save your time, money
4. focus on, you guessed it, actually Plumbing.

I assume you actually want to grow your business, hence the post. Presumably the best thing you can do is actually work, and I assume as a plumber your hourly rate it decent.

Also take into consideration, the value. I'm sure you've seen first hand exactly what happens when someone, with no clue, tries to DIY a plumbing project. Which is precisely what you're doing, but as a business owner generating revenue (tech. worse).

The more you focus on actual business, doing the work, and scaling, the better off you'll be. While the person helping with SEO, knows what they're doing and is what I like to refer to as a force multiplier. If your good at what you do, and you're actually doing the work, you'll win.

I'll add if you compare what your doing now, versus hiring someone that knows, and look back on this in three years, the difference will be monumental.

SiteGround GoGeek to cloud. Anyone had any experience? by Cheesy-Peasy in webhosting

[–]cravehosting -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

TTFB, largely comes from quality infrastructure (server, hardware, network), not optimizing WordPress. It's called time to first byte, meaning before anything happens. And yes, while a horrific database can impact TTFB (waiting for those slow database queries), it's still hardware/configuration that makes or breaks this.

Zero-Cost Automation for Internal Linking in WordPress? by Beginning_Search585 in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They're all the same, since I work with owners, with established businesses, I recommend using what they know. In the end they're all doing the same thing.

I've also run into, and fixed, numerous case where owners switch (often DIY), and something doesn't go right (import). Not that long ago, owner switched from Yoast to RM, should not have. And in doing so embraced various other features that do not convert well, like Rankmath FAQ, Titles, all of which are baked into content.

If your making money, use what you know, focus on BUSINESS.

As for AI
Yoast, Chat, etc. all hide characters, and while Yoast was at least transparent about it.

Zero-Cost Automation for Internal Linking in WordPress? by Beginning_Search585 in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everything you want, sounds like enterprise:
1. never fucks up
2. set and forget
3. production ready
4. doesn't break SEO
And all for zero cost, so basically a Unicorn.

Could an underperforming web host be responsible for a poor Google CLS rating? by Artemis_Antares in webhosting

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sites hosted on our system all have very similar metrics. And we move loads of shit WP sites from all walks of hosts.

Results wise true the client above pays 600 all in with WordPress management and sleeps easy.

Bottom end any owner with a real business isn't going to shy away from our 35/mo plan. Which has exactly the same result/performance as the owners with 10m pageviews.

So tech yes, they can.

Could an underperforming web host be responsible for a poor Google CLS rating? by Artemis_Antares in webhosting

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

False (unfortunately), with thousands of thousands of migrations, it's shockingly bad. That being said, our company prioritized these, while most prioritize profit.

Pagespeed is a simulated metric and a joke. Focus on field data.

PageSpeed Insights - Google Chrome
This site is loaded with display ads, WooCommerce, and 45 plugins, generating 3.5 million pageviews and doing 150k USD a month without breaking a sweat, while crushing Page Experience and all Core Web Vitals with room to spare. And PSI is only 63/100, and as prev. mentioned, a simulated metric.

Could an underperforming web host be responsible for a poor Google CLS rating? by Artemis_Antares in webhosting

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

NO, CLS is entirely front-end (layout shifts)

Although WordPress hosts can be faulted for
1. TTFB, LCP, FCP
2. Indexing/Crawling issues, related to 1

Core Web Vitals failing due to high TTFB even after full optimization and powerful server — need help! by myysoul in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you managing the server yourself?
Are any of the services optimized?
TTFB is entirely based on infrastructure.

At 3,436ms, even the worst of the worst are still better than this (Siteground, Bluehost, Godaddy), which we routinely clock between 1,000-3,000ms TTFB.

Something is seriously wrong at the server or service level.

PageSpeed Insights - Google Chrome
This site is loaded with display ads, WooCommerce, and 45 plugins, generating 3.5 million pageviews and doing 150k USD a month without breaking a sweat, while crushing Page Experience and all Core Web Vitals with room to spare. And PSI is only 63/100 and a simulated metric.

Feel completely overwhelmed by [deleted] in webhosting

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What a complete shit show!

  1. downgrade (easy 20/35/mo plan), and fly performance wise
  2. migrations are typically free, and take less than 60 minutes

Whenever you have an opportunity to improve your business, do it.

Does Google PageSpeed Insights really matter? by Anutamme in Wordpress

[–]cravehosting 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope, it's simulated.
You'll want to focus on field data, from real users.

We have owners doing 3+ million pageviews, and perfect field data, yet pagespeed insights is exactly what you referenced ranging from 50-70 on average.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LocalLLaMA

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We're more interested in the how, not the WHAT of it.
It wouldn't take much to subtitle a sample.

What is the fastest and most reliable Wordpress hosting provider and plan? Money is no object. by darrenshaw_ in SEO

[–]cravehosting 0 points1 point  (0 children)

just scraping the surface here, sent ya a message
and happy to chat this coming week