So I have around 80 websites right now. Most are using prewritten content that's updated using rss2b. And others are scrapped content which isn't working out to great. I have some sites giving me 2-3k visits a day, while most are 50-1000 visits a day. Then I have around 25 sites giving me less then 50 visits a day, around 15 of those less then 10 visits a day. So an easy to read break down: 5 sites: 2-3k visits a day 50 sites: 50-1000 visits a day 15 sites: less then 50 visits a day 10 sites: less then 10 visits a day Out of those 25 sites that have less then 50 a day, is it worth it to continue working with them? Is it better I forget about those sites and work on sites with at least 50 visits a day? I feel I'm wasting my time on these sites. I can work with them, but it seems like an up hill battle. And not surprisingly the sites with the least traffic are all scrapped content sites. They had good traffic in the beginning, but I think they ran out of juice. Is it better to start new sites then continue working on sites that'll never come back? I've worked with banned sites before, and brought them back from nothing. Zero visits a day to 500+ a day today. What do you think? Thanks,
hey Man i ll suggest u get good PR on the domains ( by interlinking in u r sites or so ) which get less traffic nd sell them off . do what u like doing , else u will b killd by boredom of doing for the sake of doing
I was right there with you! I had 83 domains, I got to the point where I was about to crack from the stress and pressure of keeping them updated. I finally cut it down to only 4. These 4 are the only ones that I focus on and since then, the PR and traffic has more than doubled. I would stay focused on just a couple different niches at once and get them really strong before moving on.
I think its called spreading yourself too thin. Bin all but the top 5 sites, unless there are any that you a) have a passion for, and b) create high quality content for. The only reason to own 80+ websites is if you are running a network and have people employed to keep them going.