Saturday, June 28, 2008

What is Triond? How does Triond work?

Anybody who’s ever wanted to make money online has come across Triond.com, a publishing service that allows writers to publish their articles on ad-studded pages for 50% of the revenue. Since I am as greedy as I am curious, I joined and submitted 14 articles in a span of three weeks.

So far I’ve had about 1000 views. My most viewed article (200 views) is a piece on ghost companies that imitate famous urls, and my best earning article (30%) is an all revealing survey on Smiley.

You should also know that pages from my primary website (abarim-publications.com) are viewed 22.000 times a month (verify this here) and that the home page has a page rank of 4. I link to each of my articles from the home page, and to this blog from every page of the Abarim site.

I’ve social-networked myself silly, bothered all my friends and family with emails urging them to read my stuff. The grand result: So far I’ve made $1.80 from Triond.

Triond’s Hot Content
The only people that make some semi-serious money of Triond are those listed on the coveted Hot Content list. That list is shown everywhere, and its titles subsequently draw the most viewers.

Nobody knows how to get on Triond’s Hot Content list but as far as I can tell, it’s composed primarily after the articles revenues (makes sense). But I’m also pretty sure that this list is manually manipulated by the invisible editors at Triond. One article that actually dealt with this Hot Content list (tips on how to get on it) was listed only hours after it was published.

If all your articles combined make some serious money, your pen name might make it to the Hot Users list. As with the Hot Content list, your name is shown everywhere. Clicking on it will show your titles, and more readers are yours.

Thus Dies the House of Content Writing
The Internet is turning into a farce. Millions of people churn out their blog entrees, Triond articles, social network messages, like there is no tomorrow. Many millions of readers flick from link to link, skimming titles and keywords and hitting their delicious- and digg-it buttons to show others (who?) how far they’ve gone.

Bots prowl blogs and websites and index and list stats. Ads target content and flash their shiny lures at visitors. There are no readers anymore, or so it seems. There are now even companies (such as Quick Article Pro) that sell software specifically designed to write articles after a few key words you type in. So you can post it, ad it, draw more bots and stumblers, and turn this web into a billowing stew of babble.

What about me?

So what will I do? Will I create more articles to offer on this searing altar? Will I succumb to producing poor prose because I need to mention my key words (like Triond, in this case; I’m sure you’ve noticed)?

I guess I will. As baffled as I am with the sheer numbers of this industry, I’m intrigued with this most senseless Benjamin of human productions. I believe that some day this Internet will sort itself out. Search engines will become more intelligent and there’ll be a grading system that goes far beyond the mere quantity of tags or visitors.

I’m predicting that this toddler we call Internet will develop a grading system that is as complex as the grading system human use to assess another person. It will consist of thousands of parameters, weighed against each other and against the use of the masses.

I am convinced that our generation will be envied for centuries. We were there when this new and marvelous mirror of ourselves rose and turned wise.

Or as they say at McDonald’s: I’m loving it!



8 comments:

  1. Thanks for visiting my blog. You have interesting blog too......

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  2. As a fellow Triond writer, I think this post is great. True to the heart of many..

    I am still baffle at how one article makes it to the Hot Content while others don't..

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  3. Oh is it? I was searching about Triond and how to earn money and I stumbled upon thee... thanks!!

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  4. Trying to figure out Triond. This is the 5th "article" I've read. Nice to read something by someone who can actually write. The rest of what I've read offered little information, and writing-wise, wasn't worth clicking on. Good luck! And thanks for the stimulation!

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  5. im pretty new to triond (as in i made my account aout 10 minutes ago) and im wondering; is the money you earn relative to how many views you have and if so, how does triond make sure people dont just make fake accounts to boost the views. also, what is the income relative to views if it is relative.

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  6. Very interesting and informative read. Entertaining also!

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  7. You tackled the issue so well. I actually wish that all writers should pause awhile before publishing their articles in the internet and ask a few questions:
    Is this the best I could do?
    Is my article free of errors?
    Will my article benefit anyone out there?
    I believe these questions will reduce somehow the senseless babble we read online.
    By the way, I find your article well-written so I read the whole thing and even saw your profile. This is the kind of work we want to read.

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