Niche Site Journal LogoThe Niche Site Journal Podcast documents the experience of three guys taking brand new niche sites from idea to profitable businesses. Join Jason, Lior, and Dennis as they share their unique processes and insights into the incredible opportunity of building niche websites.

In this episode we talk about Lior’s story of having a website get hacked, how to protect yourself from hackers, and ways to use twitter.

If you have any questions about the things we mention in this episode, feel free to post it in the comment section below. We read them all and will answer your question in the comment section or on the next podcast episode.

Those in the Master Mind Group:

Lior at musevsmuse.com

Dennis at castleforgemedia.com

Jason at jasonloveslife.com

Dennis’ Video:

Twitter yelling at me
Every day I wake up with more twitter followers.

I have 5 twitter accounts and each of them with over 500 followers (@jasonloveslife has close to 6500). Each account is used for a different part of my business. One for this site, one for my Niche Site experiments, one for my comic character, etc.

My Twitter Tricks to Get Followers

It is very simple and takes only two steps

Last week I asked my twitter followers to share with me the webComics they were reading and/or creating. The response was amazing and I still haven’t had a chance to visit them all, but the experience got me thinking about what makes a great webcomic.

A lot of new WebComic Creator thinks that if they make a comic and share it with a couple friends that it’ll get passed around & “TA-DA..!”, everyone will know about it and stardom ensues. Those of you that have been creating art online for a while are thinking, “I wish that’s how it went”, but we all know that there is a lot more involved.

In this article I will share with you the elements needed for you to not only create a successful WebComic, but to make an income from it as well.

Let’s get started….

There are 6 elements that make up a successful, engaging, webComic. They are (from most to least important): You (the creator/s), the story & art, the stage, propaganda, audience, & revenue. Elements of a WebComic

I got an email the other day from boostlikes.com saying they can help me get more page likes for my Facebook Page.  According to them they put ads on their big websites promoting my facebook page and when they reach the number paid for, they pull it off.  If this is really what they do, then it is an amazing service.

Doubts

I have to be honest that I have a lot of doubts about the service of boostlikes.com.  I have hired companies/people in the past to build up fan pages and they all used fake accounts which means the numbers went up but no one looked at the page.  Having a thousand likes for a page helps build social proof, but I personally only am looking for people who will be interested in my projects (in this case the Madman of Magic Comic Book).

My Hopes

The truth is that I will not know how good this companies service is till I try it and you will know too once I post my review.  I have used several other products that I assumed could be a scam and was pleasantly surprised at the quality.  I am hoping boostlikes.com is going to be one of those cases.

Research