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This is a blog by Meg Pickard. YMMV.
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What Seth Godin Would Do

A while back, while searching for something else entirely, I saw a WP plugin in use on someone’s random site which welcomed visitors arriving via search engine referrals specifically, saying “Hello, you got here looking for…” which I thought was a neat (in the British sense) way of supporting & managing all those random one-off visitors who find there way in through searches for particular phrases or places, or names.

Of course, when I tried to look for the plugin itself, I couldn’t find it. Oh, the irony.

So in the background, I’ve been trying to write a snippet of code which would sniff out a referring search term and do the honours for me. Time’s not been on my side, though, so I haven’t finished it yet.

…and just as well, because partly inspired by Matt Haughey’s excellent article on the subject, I discovered via feedreader this morning that the lovely Pete Ashton had found a WP-Plugin to do not exactly the same thing, but similar, showing a welcome message (and serving ads to) first-time visitors, which disappears on subsequent visits. And the fact that it’s a plugin meant that it took approximately 3 minutes to install, including starting the FTP client and making a cup of tea (optional).

So, if you’re coming here for the first time (or the first time since I implemented the plugin this morning) then you’ll see an ad above the first post on the page. When you return to the page, it should be gone, via the magic of cookies. If you don’t have cookies set on your machine, then it will always remain, though, because it checks for the presence of the cookie before showing the message and ad.

And, before anyone accuses me of selling out, I implemented the ad in that spot as well because given that there’s over seven and a half years of content on this site, it appears in a lot of web search results for all sorts of things, and as a result (no pun intended) about half my daily visitors are transients, though some are converted and come back. Which is nice. Hello!

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Category: Admin, Web, fmp

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6 Responses

  1. Rhys says:

    Don’t worry about selling out, I’m worse. I use one called MoreMoney that displays a huge google ad if people arrive from google, or yahoo or something.

  2. Adrian says:

    I did a similar thing last year. Although I had a few other parameters (10 visits or a comment before adverts disappears, and no ads on last 6 months of posts).

    Currently it pays for my hosting which suits me fine, and no only really shows to the masses who make up most of my “visit once” stats.

    I’d love to see a correlation between the quality of a bloggers writing and the amount of money they make via google ads. I suspect I would be low down that equation.

  3. Ignorminious says:

    Ooooo it works! I’m glad I like cookies :)

    Mmmmmmmm cookies…….

  4. As Marjorie Dawes would say: I LOOOOOVVVEEE! de cookies.

  5. Pierre L says:

    Not strictly related, but have a good conference on Friday. I also love your pictures, particularly those of Anna (who doesn’t have many pictures of herself on her blog), and pickle (who, presumably, doesn’t have a blog of her own). I too like the idea of the first-time cookie.

  6. Tom Reynolds says:

    …And you have just demonstrated how well my brain has got at filtering out GoogleAds – I didn’t notice anything until you mentioned it in the post and had to go scrolling back up to see it.

    Then I read the welcome message and completely blanked on the ad part (and not on purpose, its only as I type this that I realised that I did that).

    Shhh, don’t tell Google.

By way of explanation…

This is an individual post, which may not be very recent. For the latest stuff on meish dot org, please visit the main page.

By the way, I'm female. It doesn't have much impact on what I write about, or how I write, but I thought I'd point it out because so many people who link to this site seem to assume I'm male.

The clue's in the name: Meg. Like all those other female Megs.

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What’s all this, then?

This is a personal site, created and curated continuously since early 2000 by Meg Pickard, a creative geek, passionate photographer, anthropologist and web experience /community /social media specialist, who works for The Guardian & lives in London, UK.
 
The site includes a blog - a personal and evolving collection of links, opinions, thoughts, ideas, anecdotes and musings - as well as a variety of other projects. It is also a place to aggregate some of the author's distributed web activity, like photos, links and music.
 
More info about this site and its author.

Important note #1

This is a personal site. The contents and opinions contained within don't necessarily reflect those of my employer, family, or cat. They think for themselves (though mostly about tuna, in at least one case), and so do I.

Important note #2

Since the overwhelming majority of content on this site is historical, it should be regarded in light of the context in which it was originally published, and not as indicative or revealing of current perspectives, preferences or experience.

Important note #3

While I work and spend a lot of time thinking and talking about social media, participatory technologies and community development strategies, the vast majority of content on this site is not about that.

This personal site isn't about anything, except the perpetual unfolding of one person's experience, and the perspectives, observations and opinions that involves and inspires.

You still here?

Oh.