{"id":451,"date":"2007-10-02T12:50:36","date_gmt":"2007-10-02T04:50:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.whoisandrewwee.com\/blogging\/product-review-of-blogcontent-site-monetization-widget-widgetbucks\/"},"modified":"2007-10-02T12:50:36","modified_gmt":"2007-10-02T04:50:36","slug":"product-review-of-blogcontent-site-monetization-widget-widgetbucks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/whoisandrewwee.com\/blogging\/product-review-of-blogcontent-site-monetization-widget-widgetbucks\/","title":{"rendered":"Product Review of Blog\/Content Site Monetization Widget: WidgetBucks"},"content":{"rendered":"

Tech entrepreneurs have done it again, this time infusing money-making opportunities into Web 2.0 widgets.
\nMy friend, Jim Kukral mentioned that WidgetBucks will have a launch at Tuesday midnight EST. But who can really make money out of this?<\/p>\n

Before you rush out and install on your blog, I’d do some due diligence to make sure you’ll earn something decent and that you’ll get paid.<\/p>\n

From WidgetBuck’s website: “WidgetBucks comes to you from the folks at Mpire Corporation, the award-winning meta-shopping service. Mpire’s extensive shopping data experience, including its proprietary contextual, analytics and relevancy algorithms, power WidgetBucks. Founded in 2005, Mpire is backed by Ignition Partners and former eBay executive and Pay Pal angel investor Richard Rock.<\/em>”<\/p>\n

\"WidgetBucks<\/a><\/p>\n

What is WidgetBucks?<\/strong>
\nIt’s a javascript-based widget (a small banner-like graphic) that you install on your website or blog, and it uses a comparison shopping type engine to pull relevant listings (the FAQ says “Product listings from 30,000 merchants including trusted leading brands”) and displays it there.<\/p>\n

It works on a PayPerClick basis, so it’s similar to adsense, though at $3-6 eCPM ($3-6 per 1,000 visitors), it’s claimed to pay much higher than the industry average of $1-2 eCPM.<\/p>\n

Of course compared to affiliate marketing, where I earn about $10-$100 per customer, WidgetBucks and AdSense will seem like chump change. <\/p>\n

As has been mentioned before in this blog, affiliate marketing requires that you have some marketing skills, know how to present offers, convert leads into sales.<\/p>\n

If on the other hand, you’re happy to blog about xbox360s or scrapbooking or weight management (what some bloggers label “pure blogging”), then the folks at WidgetBucks will take care of the moneymaking element for you.<\/p>\n

\"merchsense<\/a><\/p>\n

WidgetBucks has some intelligent contextual features- their MerchSense technology:
\n“MerchSense\u00c3\u00a2\u00e2\u20ac\u017e\u00c2\u00a2 is Mpire’s patent-pending contextual algorithm engine. It detects and analyzes the content of your website or blog to determine what product offers are most relevant to your audience. If you choose the MerchSense option when creating a new widget, simply place the code on your site and let MerchSense automatically provide the most appropriate ad content. MerchSense evaluates your editorial information daily, so, as your content changes, WidgetBucks will dynamically offer the highest-yielding products.<\/em>”<\/p>\n

Who’s like to benefit from WidgetBucks?<\/strong>
\nI’d hazard a guess to say that consumer-related sites would benefit the most.
\nYou could have a blog or content website (and I’m guessing you should be able to insert the code into a Joomla CMS or a vBulletin forum pretty easily too) focused on:<\/p>\n