I've been lurking on WF for some time now, but I decided to finally take the plunge and ask you guys for some help with a bit of an existential crisis I am having.
Here is my story...
The Credit Card Blog
So I have this site. It's not really performing that well, and at times I am tempted to just sell it, even though I know I'd get a pitiful amount for it considering how much work I've put into it over the last 18 months.
In theory, it's a personal finance blog with an emphasis on credit cards. I started it about a year and a half ago. Gets about 9.5k uniques a month, has over 10k backlinks in Yahoo Site Explorer. Used to be PR 4, but I've been neglecting it a bit lately, and it was recently downgraded to PR 3.
I never paid for any links, managed to get a couple of articles on the front page of Reddit and one on Digg, and I did 20-30 guest posts on high profile personal finance blogs. Unfortunately, I knew fuck all about SEO, and I didn't put in any juicy anchor text. Yes, I am a moron.
Still, apart from the PR hit, it sounds pretty sweet, right? Everyone knows that credit cards are big money in the AM world. But the problem is, only about 10% of the content is actually credit card specific, and many of the articles that bring in SE traffic aren't really related to credit cards at all.
At its height, the site was making about $700/month, which is pretty mediocre in and of itself, but now it's lucky to clear half that, due to the loss in traffic (used to get over 15k monthly uniques at its height) and the collapse of the credit card affiliate market.
And there's another catch - the blog isn't located in the root directory, its at www.domainname.com/blog. The reason for this is that I had planned to release a web app in the root directory - a sort of simple (but powerful) financial management system. The blog was just supposed to be a way to establish the domain, and get a platform to launch things from. Well, nearly 18 months later and the 'simple' web app is still not done.
I've got Google Analytics running on the domain, and the stats are pretty girm - it's got a bounce rate on 83.17% and the average time spent on the site is 1 minute and 22 seconds. That's pretty shitty, isnt it?
To cut to the chase, I guess my question is, what would you do if you were in my situation? I might be delusional, but I can't help but feel that there's a lot of potential with this site that I am just not unlocking, and I would really feel like I'd betrayed myself in some way if I sold it or let it die.
Here is my story...
The Credit Card Blog
So I have this site. It's not really performing that well, and at times I am tempted to just sell it, even though I know I'd get a pitiful amount for it considering how much work I've put into it over the last 18 months.
In theory, it's a personal finance blog with an emphasis on credit cards. I started it about a year and a half ago. Gets about 9.5k uniques a month, has over 10k backlinks in Yahoo Site Explorer. Used to be PR 4, but I've been neglecting it a bit lately, and it was recently downgraded to PR 3.
I never paid for any links, managed to get a couple of articles on the front page of Reddit and one on Digg, and I did 20-30 guest posts on high profile personal finance blogs. Unfortunately, I knew fuck all about SEO, and I didn't put in any juicy anchor text. Yes, I am a moron.
Still, apart from the PR hit, it sounds pretty sweet, right? Everyone knows that credit cards are big money in the AM world. But the problem is, only about 10% of the content is actually credit card specific, and many of the articles that bring in SE traffic aren't really related to credit cards at all.
At its height, the site was making about $700/month, which is pretty mediocre in and of itself, but now it's lucky to clear half that, due to the loss in traffic (used to get over 15k monthly uniques at its height) and the collapse of the credit card affiliate market.
And there's another catch - the blog isn't located in the root directory, its at www.domainname.com/blog. The reason for this is that I had planned to release a web app in the root directory - a sort of simple (but powerful) financial management system. The blog was just supposed to be a way to establish the domain, and get a platform to launch things from. Well, nearly 18 months later and the 'simple' web app is still not done.
I've got Google Analytics running on the domain, and the stats are pretty girm - it's got a bounce rate on 83.17% and the average time spent on the site is 1 minute and 22 seconds. That's pretty shitty, isnt it?
To cut to the chase, I guess my question is, what would you do if you were in my situation? I might be delusional, but I can't help but feel that there's a lot of potential with this site that I am just not unlocking, and I would really feel like I'd betrayed myself in some way if I sold it or let it die.