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Go with Premium vs free membership. Start lean and free, then add paid premium features with a trial option.
I understand your point.@devine I'm curious as to what your thoughts are on this. I've seen you to be very informative and am having similar thoughts to a completely different website.
Would you say "no ads ever" to any website or would it be acceptable in some cases? As an example, I don't see how someone like YouTube would survive without ads.
Please don't think I'm trying to say you are wrong. I'm not! In fact, this very question has been bugging me for quite some time. Ads vs premium and/or a mix of it all.
No ads ever.
Go with Premium vs free membership. Start lean and free, then add paid premium features with a trial option.
It depends.Is using affiliate links on the same lever as having ads on a site? Like if there was a page or document blog whatever explaining or reviewing a item that would go hand in hand with the product being sold and then have a link through something like Amazons affiliate program?
It depends.
I advise to focus on bigger things. Once you're solid enough - partner up, instead participating in basic affiliate programs.
Yes.When you say partner up how would that work as far as monetizing a site? Is that like partnering with other sites to advertise their services? Thanks.
I understand your point.
Youtube is not the best example, because they run their own ad system (same as FB, VK, IG and others).
But monetizing your own website with things like adsense is a bad thing.
Nearly always.
In some scenarios it takes time for transition from adsense to something more efficient.
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