TimSchmoyer.me

TimSchmoyer.me

Tim Schmoyer  //  Husband to Dana, father to Hannah, youth pastor, blogger at http://www.studentministry.org

May 27 / 6:22pm

Look what Hannah gets to play in tomorrow when it warms up!

Posted from Alexandria, MN

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May 26 / 7:55am

Yeah, you're jealous. You know you want one!

Posted from Alexandria, MN

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May 22 / 10:50am

Ditching AdSense and searching for an alternative revenue model for LISM. Ideas?

Earlier this month I announced the new design for my blog, Life In Student Ministry. At the suggestion of my designer, I removed most of the Google AdSense blocks in the new design to clean up the clutter. There's been both positive and negative aspects to this.

The Positive

My site's bounce rate dropped instantly and the very next day my traffic increased by 1,000 hits per day. By removing AdSense, there's less to direct people away from my site, plus there's not as much distracting visitors from my content. Furthermore, removing AdSense cleaned up the look and feel of the site dramatically, giving it a more professional feel, increasing the level of perceived credibility for first-time visitors and thereby boosting user engagement and the growth rate of new subscribers.

The Negative

My site's revenue dropped from about $300/month to $75/month, which is a very significant drop for a guy like me who depends on that income stream to keep the site running and under development. Additionally, I just removed the largest AdSense block from my site this morning, so that income will drop to about $22/month from here on out. At that rate, I may end up just removing the last block, too.

Rethinking Revenue Streams

All this has caused me to rethink everything about my site's advertising and revenue streams.I've been selling out pretty much everything from ad spaces to audio and video bumper intros for the podcasts. But in so doing I feel that, especially on the website, I've given my audience too many avenues for leaving my site. Plus it clutters and distracts from my content. The more ads I have, the lower user engagement there is.

So, now I'm thinking that having fewer ads is better both for me (higher user engagement) and for a potential few advertisers (less competition from distracting brands). Ultimately, it's more attractive for my site's visitors (i.e. less advertising clutter = better design = higher perceived credibility = higher user-engagement = better for the 1 or 2 brands who are advertising).

If I limit the number of advertisers to the four 125x125px blocks in my sidebar, I seriously need to find an alternative source of funding besides advertising income. The site costs about $150/month just to maintain, but breaking even is not an option because then there's no room for growth and future development (like launching new designs and new projects like MinistryQuestions, Online Missions Trip, and the YM Mentorship). MinistryWebsites.biz is a project I started to help fund LISM and, while it's moved past the break-even mark, it's growing too slowly to consider it an AdSense replacement for now. (The only advertising I do for that service is in the sidebar of LISM.)

Possible Solution?

I'm thinking about going toward something more like a site sponsorship. I'm not really sure what that would look like, but maybe it would be more along the lines of a package deal: 125x125 ad block for a month, a sponsored review/interview (both via text and audio interview), highlighting a promotion of some sort the advertiser offers exclusively to my audience. The value of this could be on-going because once the review/interview is published on my site, it's indexed by Google and will forever be seen by future potential customers searching for reviews even long after our sponsorship agreement is over. The value of the phone call interview recording is that it ads a very personable aspect to someone's brand where the audience hears a real voice along with someone's heart and passion. We all know people connect better with a real person behind the brand rather than just the brand itself. That's what people will remember more than a logo or URL.

There could be additional perks thrown in for sponsorships that last longer than a month (like an additional 125x125 ad space, short "sponsored by" header or footer description and links) but like I said, I'm still thinking through all this, so I'd appreciate to other ideas and feedback.

The downside to all this, of course, is that site sponsorships require more work on my part. With AdSense, I copy and paste some code into me design and it's completely maintenance-free after that. Since blogging is not my full-time job or anything, a revenue stream that is completely hassel-free is very attractive, so I have to weigh the extra leg-work of site sponsorships into the decision, as well.

Thoughts? Ideas? Anyone ever seen something like a site sponsorship?

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May 20 / 3:28pm

Hannah at the girl's 9th grade softball game enjoying the sun

Posted from Alexandria, MN

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May 17 / 2:21pm

It's a boy!

Due for release on September 29.
Filed under  //  Photos  

Posted from Alexandria, MN

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May 15 / 8:45am

Nice beautiful day to take Christmas lights down (yes, we're a little slow)

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May 14 / 1:18pm

I am the first boy to give Hannah a flower... but probably not the last. *sigh*

Posted from Alexandria, MN

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May 13 / 11:26am

Serve like Jesus (in exactly 150 words)

Someone recently asked me to contribute to a resource they're developing by writing some advice for serving. They also requested it be 150 words. So, here's what I wrote in exactly 150 words:

Serve like Jesus
Serve sacrificially: Although serving can be incredibly rewarding and fun, it can also be very taxing and costly, like it was for Jesus. Serve despite discomfort.

Serve in humility: If you serve to earn approval or to boost your own self-worth, that will be the extent of your reward. You’ll miss the amazing eternal rewards God has in store. Motives matter.

Serve continually: For Jesus, serving was a lifestyle, not a monthly project nor an annual missions trip. His life on earth was His mission. So should yours.

Serve with focus: Jesus knew to focus His time and energy. For all the people that he healed and taught, even more were left unhealed and untaught as He traveled past entire towns and communities. You can’t serve everyone, but you can serve some, and for those some, like the Samaritan woman, it may change their world forever.

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Apr 18 / 9:09pm

Reading bedtime Bible stories with Hannah

Reading books with Hannah is always fun, but it's especially fun to read Bible stories with her before she goes to bed. I know she has no idea what we're saying yet, but hopefully something will sink in eventually and the Bible will be something ingrained for as long as she can remember.

Filed under  //  Hannah   Photos  

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Apr 18 / 9:06pm

A chart one of our youth leaders wrote to train the rest of us at our meeting today

There's a lot more to this chart -- some of it hidden behind the pitchers, some of it not written on it yet -- that one of our high school leaders wrote up to use to teach us during our church's youth leader meeting/training over lunch today. Good stuff they learned from the Simply Youth Ministry Conference this year!

Filed under  //  ministry   Photos  

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