Hey everyone I wanted to share some thoughts and a bit of strategy behind how I’m trying to grow Articles Guru and bring in the right kind of publishers. I’m posting this openly because I’d really value your perspective, and also to give you a transparent look at how the platform is being built. If you’ve ever used platforms like Taboola or Outbrain, you probably know the pain: You pay for clicks, but don’t really know where your content appears You have zero control over the surrounding content quality And if you place their widget… you earn almost nothing What I’m trying to do differently with Articles Guru is simple: symmetry. Instead of feeding money into a black box, you earn credits from your own traffic, and those same credits are used to promote your own articles across the network. No middleman taking the value. No hidden distribution logic. Just a transparent exchange. The platform only allows verified websites and every article goes through moderation before entering the pool. That means I’m not trying to onboard everyone. I’m specifically looking for: Mid-sized blogs Independent publishers Niche sites with real content Especially those who already tried widgets before and felt like the trade-off wasn’t worth it. If that sounds like you, you’re exactly the kind of publisher I’m building this for. Yes, there’s a verification step (DNS, file upload, or meta tag). And I know, normally that feels like a hurdle. But here’s the idea behind it: Verified publishers = trusted network Trusted network = better content quality Better quality = better click performance for everyone So instead of being “just another signup step”, verification becomes something like a trust badge inside the ecosystem. One thing I personally always missed in other platforms was clarity. So here’s the exact logic: 1 impression from your widget → +1 credit 1 click from your widget → +2 extra credits 1 impression of your article → −1 credit 1 click on your article → −2 credits So for example: If your site generates 3,000 impressions and 150 clicks through the widget → you earn 3,300 credits, which you can directly reinvest into your own content distribution. No guessing. No hidden math. This isn’t meant to be a “cheap traffic” system. The focus is on: Real users Verified domains Click validation (not just raw hits) Basic fraud prevention mechanisms If you’re active in SEO, blogging, or content marketing communities, you probably already know how rare that is. One interesting group I’m targeting: Newsletter creators who also run websites A lot of them have solid traffic but don’t monetize it well outside of email. With a simple widget placement, that “idle” traffic can turn into distribution power — without changing their content or adding ads everywhere. I’d much rather grow this slowly with real publishers than inflate it with low-quality content. There will eventually be a referral system — but even now, if you know other legit publishers, feel free to bring them in. That kind of organic growth is way more valuable. I’ll be completely upfront: This is still early alpha The pool is not huge yet Some parts are still being optimized But that’s also where early users benefit the most, less competition, more visibility, and direct influence on how the platform evolves. At the end of the day, I’m not trying to build “another recommendation network”. I’m trying to build something that fixes what’s broken: transparent mechanics real quality control fair value exchange between publishers If that resonates with you, I’d really appreciate you checking it out and sharing your honest feedback. articles.guru Thanks a lot for reading, and seriously, any feedback (positive or critical) helps a ton P.S In this forum thread, I’ll keep you regularly updated on the development progress and current stage of the project.
Hey everyone, here’s a more structured update on the recent development progress of Articles Guru, focused mainly on improvements to the widget system. The goal behind these changes was to increase flexibility, improve performance, and give publishers clearer insights into how their widgets are performing. You now have more precise control over the visual appearance of widget cards: Background color can be customized to better match your site (e.g. dark mode or neutral layouts) Hover color can be defined to control interaction behavior Corner radius is now adjustable (0–24px), instead of being fixed This allows the widget to integrate more naturally into different site designs rather than looking like a generic embed. Layout Options Three layout styles are now available: Grid The default layout, unchanged from previous versions Featured First The first article is displayed as a full-width highlighted card, followed by a grid of remaining articles Suitable for editorial or content-focused placements Text Only A simplified vertical list without images Designed for sidebars, footers, or narrow content areas where visual cards are not ideal The widget loading behavior has been optimized: A skeleton loading state is displayed instead of empty space during load The skeleton only appears after ~200ms, so it won’t affect fast-loading pages Additionally, for optimized embeds: Widgets can now lazy load, meaning content is fetched only when the widget enters the viewport This reduces impact on overall page load time There are now three embed options available: Standard Basic script embed (unchanged) Performance Includes preconnect hints, lazy loading, and layout preparation Advanced Includes all performance optimizations plus a noscript fallback All versions are automatically generated based on your widget configuration. Widget-Level Analytics Each widget now includes a dedicated analytics section directly accessible from the dashboard: Impressions Clicks CTR Credits earned Time-based charts (7, 14, 30 days) In addition, a health status indicator is shown: Strong → consistent traffic with CTR ≥ 2% Earning → traffic present, but lower CTR Quiet → no impressions recorded yet For newly created widgets without traffic, a contextual placement guide is now displayed: Recommends optimal placement areas Helps align widget design with site layout Includes basic verification steps This guide is automatically removed once the widget starts receiving impressions. These updates are part of an ongoing effort to: These updates are part of an ongoing effort to: Improve integration flexibility Reduce performance overhead Provide clearer operational data to publishers Further iterations will continue based on testing and feedback. As always, any structured feedback is appreciated, cheers and best regards!