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11-24-2009, 11:22 PM
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#1
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Are webmaster boards dying out?
As I am sure everyone has noticed, webmaster boards just ain't what they used to be. Is this because there are fewer webmasters? Could it be because there is not enough money being made to spend time sig whoring?
Perhaps the business is just dying and the web boards are going down the same plughole. Who knows.
I have noticed that small focussed boards with good business and/or technical information have fewer posts, but the quality of the posts are much higher than "Happy Tuesday" or some other such meaningless drivel. I personally think it is the future of boards. Its like traffic. Huge amounts of traffic that doesn't convert is....well a shit pot of cheapskates. Small numbers and high conversion....the way of the future.
Anyone have an opinion on this?
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11-25-2009, 12:38 AM
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#2
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Evil Chris
is drinking Heineken
Clone of myself
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They are indeed dying. There's only 1 board that makes significant money, and even that one makes less now.
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11-25-2009, 01:35 AM
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#3
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil Chris
They are indeed dying. There's only 1 board that makes significant money, and even that one makes less now.
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I don't think this bodes well for the affiliate marketing system.
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11-25-2009, 09:54 AM
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#4
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Evil Chris
is drinking Heineken
Clone of myself
Join Date: Aug 2002
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhetorical
I don't think this bodes well for the affiliate marketing system.
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How many different ways are people going to say how the affiliate marketing system is slower than it used to be? This is just one more way. The glory days are gone.
If one wants to indulge in reminiscence, there's a board for that.
If one wants to bemoan the state of affairs in the industry, there's a board for that too. Might even be the same one.
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11-25-2009, 12:02 PM
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#5
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil Chris
How many different ways are people going to say how the affiliate marketing system is slower than it used to be? This is just one more way. The glory days are gone.
If one wants to indulge in reminiscence, there's a board for that.
If one wants to bemoan the state of affairs in the industry, there's a board for that too. Might even be the same one.
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I didn't say it was slower than it used to be. I said the future may not look to bright. It may disappear as an easy way into porn. A lot of discussion lately about the high cost of affiliate traffic.
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12-01-2009, 04:29 PM
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#6
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LAJ
is a bad influence
Big Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil Chris
They are indeed dying. There's only 1 board that makes significant money, and even that one makes less now.
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There is more than one "board" that makes significant money
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12-01-2009, 05:01 PM
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#7
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LAJ
There is more than one "board" that makes significant money
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Would one begin with an n and end with a d?
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12-01-2009, 05:26 PM
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#8
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LAJ
is a bad influence
Big Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Austin
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhetorical
Would one begin with an n and end with a d?
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That would be a big "nunya" to you...
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12-01-2009, 06:09 PM
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#9
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LAJ
That would be a big "nunya" to you...
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I thought we were just discussing business boards that didn't take the money and run. Anyone can rob and steal and make money.
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11-25-2009, 07:28 AM
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#10
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flip.green
is whoring for
shemaleprofit.com
Citizen X
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Can we really say they are dying? I think we are seeing a saturation in the market segment everyone has a board. Of course in these types of conditions smaller niche boards should do well. But seriously we cant say that this is bad news for the affiliate model if anything this should help smaller programs reach a higher quality audience for smaller amounts of cash.
However I do think the adult boards in general are badly in need of an overhaul. I mean come on Vbulletin is over a million years old my grandfather used to post on it in the morning before riding his dinosaur to the quarry where he worked at.
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11-25-2009, 12:05 PM
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#11
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Evil Chris
is drinking Heineken
Clone of myself
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Montreal
Posts: 12,984
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The future not looking bright? Ah come on...
This stuff moves in waves. Up, down... Things always come around eventually.
Today's webmaster board is tomorrow's newest social media platform in another form. What the form actually is? I dunno yet... let's go ahead of the curve and come up with something.
The future is so bright.... I gotta wear shades.
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11-25-2009, 01:17 PM
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#12
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Rochard
should edit this
Funbrunette's BITCH!!!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Eating Cherries
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Webmaster boards have died; Our industry has changed.
The truth is the economy has changed our business. Traffic is down, ratios are up; People are unable or unwilling to spend money on a paysite when they are concerned about making their next house payment or car payment. Affiliates are no longer making money like they were in 2005 or 2006, and have deserted the industry and gone out and got real paying jobs with guaranteed income.
Affiliates traditionally have been about half of our industry. So nearly half of our traffic based is dropping like flies, and in the mean time the general state of the economy has further reduced our sales. The two combined have reduced sales by roughly 70% across the board.
Because of this, programs are making radical changes. Some programs are letting go of their staffs like hot potatoes, and with no affiliate support nothing is getting done. I have messages into a dozen programs asking for help and no one is responding, and if I can't get what I need I can't promote you so you've just shot yourself in the foot. Then a lot of programs are no longer updating with new content; No new content and I can't feed my blog machine and I can't send you traffic. Another shot in the foot for programs.
With more and more affiliates giving up, webmaster boards are dieing.
Fuck you all, I'm moving forward. In the past two months in a row I've seen a sales increase of 10% per month. PinkStar Cash just had it's best day ever last Friday. My blog network, on a month by month, is making about 10% more than it was last month, which was up from the month prior. While everyone else has been bitching I've been building, and when this comes back I'll be able to retire. Granted, it will never be like it was four years ago, but there is still good morning to be made.
And I'll still be posting. And still posting here on XN.
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ROCHARD IS OMNIPRESENT
Director of Products & Services | YNOT
Skype rochardbuss
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11-25-2009, 03:16 PM
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#13
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
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Quote:
This stuff moves in waves. Up, down... Things always come around eventually.
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Posssibly if you can wait another five or ten years, you could be right. Who knows.
This business is still a good earner and I still do well, but not like the "good old days". But affiliates expecting updates from mainstream porn sites might be sitting on their thumbs when many of them can't afford content.
I update regularly and always will. I am usually two years ahead in content production and up to five years on one site. So it makes little difference to me one way or the other.
The new focus in this business is video and unique video. I was fortunate enough to have shot thousands of videos...not just clips...over the years on high end video cameras (mostly hd) so am turning my attention at the moment to vod. If you don't have a huge backlog of videos, it might be time to think about feathering your video nest for the future.
VOD sites are more realistic in their aff payouts as well. See the AEBN model. It could be a way forward for affiliates and content producers.
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11-25-2009, 06:41 PM
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#14
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TheLegacy
is Bi - Sexy
Moderator
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Location: Brantford, Ontario, Canada
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Rochard hit the nail on the head - although boards are in a small way helping, programs need to be more creative and helpful to webmasters. Webmasters can't load up their sites with tons of programs so they need to be selective. Overall the state of the industry is only as good as the creativity of the programs. Those who maintain and continue in the old ways are struggling. Programs who ditch their reps for pay as you go commissioned people will suffer simply because webmasters are having a hard time finding those who have been around a while to trust, much less loose respect for high turn-overs. Rochard mentioned one way of getting the word out there, and there are many more, but the boards are filled now mostly with program reps told to post, surfers and fewer and fewer solid webmasters who actually know what they are doing.
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Robert "TheLegacy" Warren
Chief of Marketing and SEO
Skype: robjameswarren
"Wise men talk because they have something to say;
fools, because they have to say something." - Plato
Last edited by TheLegacy; 11-25-2009 at 07:18 PM.
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11-25-2009, 06:43 PM
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#15
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Rochard
should edit this
Funbrunette's BITCH!!!
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheLegacy
Rochard his the nail on the head - although boards are in a small way helping, programs need to be more creative and helpful to webmasters. Webmasters can't load up their sites with tons of programs so they need to be selective. Overall the state of the industry is only as good as the creativity of the programs. Those who maintain and continue in the old ways are struggling. Programs who ditch their reps for pay as you go commissioned people will suffer simply because webmasters are having a hard time finding those who have been around a while to trust, much less loose respect for high turn-overs. Rochard mentioned one way of getting the word out there, and there are many more, but the boards are filled now mostly with program reps told to post, surfers and fewer and fewer solid webmasters who actually know what they are doing.
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My blog network pushes mostly solo girls. My biggest problem is finding content. I need massive amounts of content to keep 60 plus blogs updated daily.
Want to know who's doing it right? Spunky Cash. Every morning promptly at 9am, I get an email with their newest galleries. Sometimes I put them up ASAP, sometimes I pass on them. But I can set my fucking watch to their email, and it's official start of my day. Why can't everyone do this?
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ROCHARD IS OMNIPRESENT
Director of Products & Services | YNOT
Skype rochardbuss
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11-25-2009, 07:03 PM
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#16
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
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The point I am making here is that affiliate traffic is very expensive. Producing masses of product for affiliates is expensive and perhaps that is why there is seemingly less of it. Combined with poor conversion rates for most affiliates, you have to wonder if it is worth it. The most valuable traffic has always been self generated and costs a whole lot less. So, trying to be pragmatic here and not bury my head in the sand, what is the future for affiliate marketing?
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11-29-2009, 12:29 AM
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#17
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
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Join Date: Dec 2006
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No opinions? I would have thought that on a board where folks do business that at least one person might have a thought. Or is this just proof of my original question?
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11-29-2009, 01:08 PM
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#18
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Rochard
should edit this
Funbrunette's BITCH!!!
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhetorical
No opinions? I would have thought that on a board where folks do business that at least one person might have a thought. Or is this just proof of my original question?
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Well, that's a rhetorical question, isn't it?
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ROCHARD IS OMNIPRESENT
Director of Products & Services | YNOT
Skype rochardbuss
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11-29-2009, 06:36 PM
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#19
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rochard
Well, that's a rhetorical question, isn't it?
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Well, you would be about maybe #50 or 60. Who knows? I stopped counting.
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11-29-2009, 06:04 PM
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#20
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Feynman
should edit this
Post count + 1300
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Location: Montreal
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Hi guys! how many years haven't I logged on in here? Dunno...
Hi Chris, do you still live at the same place? Hi Rochard!
I always hated with a passion the associate programs. They are way too expensive, steal from your product innovation budget, from your product and client's experience quality budget and are generally fostering a class of businesspeople that operate on a quasi-parasitic mode, producing nothing. It came to be because those parasites highjacking search engine traffic ended up doing better than the producers themselves. Without affiliates, producers could have afforded, gradually, to sell their own stuff by themselves. But once the market gets invaded by parasites, you have no choice to adopt the same tactics. It shifts the business focus from actual value-added production to zero value-added raider-type business. Sure, the affiliate marketers are producing economic activity, but they're akin tax accountants: said economic activity would never exist without the parasites getting a free ride.
Anyhow, I delivered that rant years ago, and here I am again, skipping like an old scratched vinyl.
BTW, I still haven't bothered to sell my Angeltease.com content, I had bigger cats to skin. It's still online, but with subscription suspended, site not updated for maybe five years . I have, from the top of my head, maybe 55 photo sets and a dozen videos, a third of which were never put online. I was doing weekly updates, which was cool in those days, but way to little for today's update schedules, it seems.
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11-29-2009, 06:36 PM
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#21
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: kitsilano
Posts: 497
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Feynman
Hi guys! how many years haven't I logged on in here? Dunno...
Hi Chris, do you still live at the same place? Hi Rochard!
I always hated with a passion the associate programs. They are way too expensive, steal from your product innovation budget, from your product and client's experience quality budget and are generally fostering a class of businesspeople that operate on a quasi-parasitic mode, producing nothing. It came to be because those parasites highjacking search engine traffic ended up doing better than the producers themselves. Without affiliates, producers could have afforded, gradually, to sell their own stuff by themselves. But once the market gets invaded by parasites, you have no choice to adopt the same tactics. It shifts the business focus from actual value-added production to zero value-added raider-type business. Sure, the affiliate marketers are producing economic activity, but they're akin tax accountants: said economic activity would never exist without the parasites getting a free ride.
Anyhow, I delivered that rant years ago, and here I am again, skipping like an old scratched vinyl.
BTW, I still haven't bothered to sell my Angeltease.com content, I had bigger cats to skin. It's still online, but with subscription suspended, site not updated for maybe five years . I have, from the top of my head, maybe 55 photo sets and a dozen videos, a third of which were never put online. I was doing weekly updates, which was cool in those days, but way to little for today's update schedules, it seems.
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That was an extremely well thought out rant. The best opinion I have seen yet.
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11-30-2009, 02:02 AM
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#22
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: kitsilano
Posts: 497
xBucks: 290
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............
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12-01-2009, 11:37 AM
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#23
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Evil Chris
is drinking Heineken
Clone of myself
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Montreal
Posts: 12,984
xBucks: 413,774
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I just haven't had time to read through this thread. Maybe tonight I'll have some more input.
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12-01-2009, 04:32 PM
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#24
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LAJ
is a bad influence
Big Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Austin
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And I'll add that while posts are down everywhere... perhaps its cuz more and more people are working smarter AND harder?
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12-01-2009, 05:03 PM
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#25
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: kitsilano
Posts: 497
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Quote:
those who have been around a while to trust, much less loose respect
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Wtf does that mean? See my rant about the failure of our public education system.
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12-01-2009, 05:35 PM
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#26
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Panky
is the Queen of Mean
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Boards who offered the points system saw a decline when they removed value for the points. More than one board stopped offering stores and misc incentives in exchange for points. The point whores moved on.
Many people have left the industry or spend less time in the industry when they sought employment offline and/or began to focus more of their attention in the online mainstream world due to adult income taking a dip or they had a hard time breaking into the online porn world, got frustrated, and left.
Some people have jobs and careers in the real world and those real world jobs and careers might be eating into their online time now more than ever.
Some people on webmaster boards were never serious and few of these people ever will be. They found something that interested them, treated it like a hobby, and spent a lot of time just goofing around on the boards. Some of these people may have grown tired, bored and moved on. Others might have experienced a dip in non-adult income and had to leave to focus on that so they can later return and indulge in their porn hobby.
Some people are feeling the financial crunch for one reason or another. One might see less activity due to more people working towards staying in the black or keep from digging themselves deeper into the red.
The dynamic of a persons home board or favorite boards may have changed and they no longer enjoy posting there as much as they once did in the past.
One board is seeing a growth spurt and increased activity because they played the game well. They saw a board or two having some drama, members getting pissed off, so they went and exploited the weakness, drawing attention to their own board in the process. Boards are ultimately a business. They can be as cut throat as one affiliate program trying to outdo another.
Some boards declined or died completely because of their own internal issues. All the behind the scenes BS that occurs from time to time. Sometimes conflicts can't be resolved or eventually the internal politics boils over to the public side of a board, potentially causing issues.
Some people make their money and then walk away. They use the online world to build bank accounts and residual income. When they reached their goals, they invest that money into something else and entertain other interests.
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12-02-2009, 12:49 AM
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#27
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Evil Chris
is drinking Heineken
Clone of myself
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Montreal
Posts: 12,984
xBucks: 413,774
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Panky
Boards who offered the points system saw a decline when they removed value for the points. More than one board stopped offering stores and misc incentives in exchange for points. The point whores moved on.
Many people have left the industry or spend less time in the industry when they sought employment offline and/or began to focus more of their attention in the online mainstream world due to adult income taking a dip or they had a hard time breaking into the online porn world, got frustrated, and left.
Some people have jobs and careers in the real world and those real world jobs and careers might be eating into their online time now more than ever.
Some people on webmaster boards were never serious and few of these people ever will be. They found something that interested them, treated it like a hobby, and spent a lot of time just goofing around on the boards. Some of these people may have grown tired, bored and moved on. Others might have experienced a dip in non-adult income and had to leave to focus on that so they can later return and indulge in their porn hobby.
Some people are feeling the financial crunch for one reason or another. One might see less activity due to more people working towards staying in the black or keep from digging themselves deeper into the red.
The dynamic of a persons home board or favorite boards may have changed and they no longer enjoy posting there as much as they once did in the past.
One board is seeing a growth spurt and increased activity because they played the game well. They saw a board or two having some drama, members getting pissed off, so they went and exploited the weakness, drawing attention to their own board in the process. Boards are ultimately a business. They can be as cut throat as one affiliate program trying to outdo another.
Some boards declined or died completely because of their own internal issues. All the behind the scenes BS that occurs from time to time. Sometimes conflicts can't be resolved or eventually the internal politics boils over to the public side of a board, potentially causing issues.
Some people make their money and then walk away. They use the online world to build bank accounts and residual income. When they reached their goals, they invest that money into something else and entertain other interests.
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Good post!
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12-02-2009, 12:58 AM
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#28
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: kitsilano
Posts: 497
xBucks: 290
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil Chris
Good post!
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very good post. I am enjoying this thread
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12-02-2009, 01:00 PM
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#29
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Rochard
should edit this
Funbrunette's BITCH!!!
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Eating Cherries
Posts: 2,064
xBucks: 56,146
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Panky
Boards who offered the points system saw a decline when they removed value for the points. More than one board stopped offering stores and misc incentives in exchange for points. The point whores moved on.
Many people have left the industry or spend less time in the industry when they sought employment offline and/or began to focus more of their attention in the online mainstream world due to adult income taking a dip or they had a hard time breaking into the online porn world, got frustrated, and left.
Some people have jobs and careers in the real world and those real world jobs and careers might be eating into their online time now more than ever.
Some people on webmaster boards were never serious and few of these people ever will be. They found something that interested them, treated it like a hobby, and spent a lot of time just goofing around on the boards. Some of these people may have grown tired, bored and moved on. Others might have experienced a dip in non-adult income and had to leave to focus on that so they can later return and indulge in their porn hobby.
Some people are feeling the financial crunch for one reason or another. One might see less activity due to more people working towards staying in the black or keep from digging themselves deeper into the red.
The dynamic of a persons home board or favorite boards may have changed and they no longer enjoy posting there as much as they once did in the past.
One board is seeing a growth spurt and increased activity because they played the game well. They saw a board or two having some drama, members getting pissed off, so they went and exploited the weakness, drawing attention to their own board in the process. Boards are ultimately a business. They can be as cut throat as one affiliate program trying to outdo another.
Some boards declined or died completely because of their own internal issues. All the behind the scenes BS that occurs from time to time. Sometimes conflicts can't be resolved or eventually the internal politics boils over to the public side of a board, potentially causing issues.
Some people make their money and then walk away. They use the online world to build bank accounts and residual income. When they reached their goals, they invest that money into something else and entertain other interests.
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This is a most interesting post. I've never posted on a board because I was hoping to get paid for it, and I've never got dime from any board for posting (although one board did send me a gift last year).
I think such boards bring out the worse in posters.
Besides, I'm not desperate to the point where I need to make an extra $40 a month for posting on a board.
__________________
ROCHARD IS OMNIPRESENT
Director of Products & Services | YNOT
Skype rochardbuss
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12-02-2009, 04:09 PM
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#30
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rhetorical
is cantankerous
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rochard
This is a most interesting post. I've never posted on a board because I was hoping to get paid for it, and I've never got dime from any board for posting (although one board did send me a gift last year).
I think such boards bring out the worse in posters.
Besides, I'm not desperate to the point where I need to make an extra $40 a month for posting on a board.
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Wow, you can make that much?
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