Fine-Tuning Your Hub Experience
85Hub Table of Contents
- Let's Talk About You
Putting a better face on yourself as a HubPages author - Ditch the Tags that are Keeping You in the Ditch
Improving earnings potential by getting rid of poor quality tags - Defending Your Original Content
What your rights and responsibilities are if someone takes content from your Hubs and publishes it elsewhere. - Free Hub Help & Information
More advice from Relache to help your Hubs
Tips For A Better Hub Experience
This Hub is more of my personal advice on how to improve your
overall Hub experience. This information is geared towards the Hub
author who is interested in writing evergreen, content-rich Hubs with
good earning potential that will continue to deliver over the
long-term. If you use HubPages as a blog to rant in, or to post poetry
or serialize a novel, or you're just flooding the place with hundreds
of pictures, what I'm talking about here probably won't change much of
anything for you.
I've never wanted to have the most Hubs, I've wanted to have the most-efficient Hubs. So here are some more Hub tips and tricks to help you get the most from your Hubs.
anatomy of a web presence
HubScore Best Practices
Participate - Your Author Score is partially based on how you interact with community. Reading hubs, leaving genuine comments and taking part in the forums is all beneficial.
Don't Be Everyone's Fan - After some Hub users decided that they would get lots of fans just by becoming the fan of hundreds or thousands of people and fishing for reciprocal fans, HubPages adjusted the system so that if you become the fan of a lot of people, your HubScore is going to go right into the toilet. Only join the fan club of people who you genuinely like to read and whose work you support.
Let's Talk About You
Your individual web presence really does have an effect on your
readers. Making sure your profile presents you well does have an effect on whether readers perceive you as a credible and knowledgeable person versus someone just messing around.
Picture - Do you have one? Does it look
nice? You don't need to go hire a professional, but having a nice
picture helps. Too many people snap something with their cell phone and
wind up looking like washed-out vampires who are trying to give us a
tour of their nasal passages. If your picture is all choppy with big
pixels, you are sending a message to the readers that you don't know what you're doing. If you skip having a picture altogether, it
makes you look less professional and says you don't care. If you use a
picture of a celebrity, it makes you seem egotistical, so try not to do
that one either. Pay attention to file size guidelines too, which are like Goldilocks and the Three Bears: they must neither be too big nor too small, but just right.
Biography - Some Hub authors don't write anything, some put up a sentence or two and some seem to have told their entire life stories. None of those methods is going to work as well for you as a few basic paragraphs. Remember to use full sentences, don't write like you're texting and spell-check too. The more a reader has to scroll down, the more likely you will lose their interest. If you keep your bio short and sweet, the reader can read it and still see some of your latest/hot/best Hubs listed on their screen. That gives you a much better chance that they will go on to read some of your other Hubs and not just look at your profile and then decide to go someplace else.
Ditch the Tags that are Keeping You in the Ditch
If you look at your Hub Metrics, you'll see that there's a line labeled "Earnings Potential" and it gives a rough indication of how well you're doing on hitting keywords that have good earning potential. One star and you're not going to be earning much at all, five stars and you've got something which could potentially make you money if you get good traffic and present writing and products worth sticking around and checking out.
Notice that having a five-star earning potential does not automatically make you money. It just means you're in a much better position to make money.
I went through all my Hubs and
made note of which ones only showed one star for their earning
potential. And then I went to work on the tags. It didn't take long for
me to realize that some tags will drop your earning potential like a
stone. These tend to be words that are so general and so over-represented on the web that no one pays much for them.
They might be accurate for what your Hub is about, but chances are they
can be replaced with terms that are much more specific and direct to
the topic. Just by eliminating a few tags from various Hubs, I was
seeing one-star Hubs turn into two and three stars for earnings
potential. And when I watched over the next few months after I did
this, my earnings are up!
So here's a recommendation for
ten low-earning tags that you might want to avoid if you really are
here trying to earn a few bucks. There are plenty more out there, these
are just some that made themselves obvious.
- art
- books
- celebrity
- children
- entertainment
- food
- movie
- music
- photo
- religion
Yes, some of these are high-traffic topics but they just don't pay well at all. Notice how many could be related to the high-volume of low-quality image Hubs that flood this site?
Taking A Look At Traffic - different types of Hubs
Click thumbnail to view full-sizeFree Hub Help & Information
- The HubPages Insider
Do you wish you knew more about how HubPages works? Here's an insider's guide to HubPages to help you get the most from your Hubs! - Hub Content Guidelines
Knowing the rules and guidelines for allowable Hub content helps make for better Hubs. Learn what it means to have a Hub flagged and unpublished, and how to fix it. - Improving Your HubScore
If you've been trying to figure out how to boost the HubScores of your lower-ranking Hubs, here are some suggestions and advice for making your Hubs perform better. - Improving Your HubPages Earnings
Many Hub authors are working to get their Hubs to earn more money. Here is my advice and recommendations for boosting the earning potential of your Hubs. - Answering Hub Requests
Curious about Hub Requests? You can answer a Hub Request and make a great Hub at the same time! Get tips for making an answer Hub that provides great info and will have a long and relevant internet life. - HubPages or Squidoo?
HubPages and Squidoo are both web sites that pay the user a royalty in exchange for creating content. Learn what is similar and different for building pages and earning royalties with each.
Copied Content Alert
DMCA Information
- The Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Overview
A breakdown of the major points and provisions of the DMCA legislation that was passed in 1998. - Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Here is Google's info on DMCA, including how to file complaints with Google against sites that steal your work. - Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Wikipedia
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is a United States copyright law that implements two 1996 treaties of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). - DMCA pdf
Here's the original legislation that is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Defending Your Original Work
So you've put in hours of hard work writing content for your Hubs, you took some great pictures yourself for it, and made sure to pick some very specific products that you just know your readers will find amazingly helpful and irresistible. And then one day you see on your Hub Statistic page that there's a little red copyright symbol next to the name of the Hub.
That means your content is appearing somewhere else on the web. Most often this is a sign that some has just irresponsibly and unethically taken your work and reproduced it on their blog or web site. If you remember from the HubPages Terms of Service (you did read the TOS when you signed up at the site, right?) you own and are responsible for your content. So don't go crying to HubPages about having your content copied. The fact that HubPages built a tool into their site features that alerts you is actually pretty ground-breaking as far as web sites go.
So, what do you do next? First, go to the Hub and read the copy notice screen that now appears, as that will tell you where the copied content is appearing. Follow the link, and check it out. Then decide if you want to file an official Notice of Infringement as outlined in the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. When you hear someone talk of "filing a DMCA" with a site, this is what they are referring to. Just like you are responsible for your own content, you're responsible for learning about the DMCA, and how to properly file a complaint. Legally, certain phrases and statements need to be made and specific proof needs to be included.
I keep a form letter on my computer with all the necessary statements and affirmations, and all I have to do when one of my Hubs gets copied is fill in the spots for the website URLs and I can have it sent in about two minutes.
What to do if the site doesn't have a proper copyright page or contact info
Some websites don't have any contact info listed, or don't have a copyright policy posted, making it harder to file a NOI with them. Remember, you can always look up the web site registration at sites like whois.net and find out who owns the site. Sending DMCA complaints to the administrative contact is the next step if the site doesn't have a moderator or way of contacting them. Even if a site has their ownership cloaked, you can file with the company that is protecting their identify and get the content taken down. The next step if that doesn't work is to email the Internet Service Provider who hosts the site. And of course if the site is running AdSense ads, you can file a NOI with Google (it has to be mailed or faxed to them). Google will terminate AdSense accounts of sites that steal work, as it violates their TOS. That's a real attention-getter! You can also request that Google block or remove the offending page from their search engine if the site does not have AdSense.
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How's Your Hub Experience Been So Far?
Thanks for sharing this excellent information.
Thanks Relache, I'm trying to read all your & darksides tips before I finally make my first hub. I've got a sneaking suspicion that once I start I won't be able to stop! :)
This is an informative page.
He, just leaving you a comment to say thanks for the heads up about the Hub Metrics for each hub. I'd never noticed that before!
After reading this I went to hunt down the hub metrics, for the earnings potential item - and found it!
I was asked only yesterday by one of my referrals if HP did a word count and I told them to copy/paste into Word, well first thing this morning I will be onto them and point out the metrics!
Thanks again... I try to learn something small and new every day with HP to improve my game, but this morning you've taught me something BIG.
I have only recently began to write on the net- and belonged her for only a week- thank you I can see some of my errors just from reading your articles. I feel storngly about my writing and want to get it out there for thsoe working with elderly.
Interesting facts about tags. I'll check out my hubs and see if I can improve them. Thanks
Thanks for this information. I plan to use it on my hubs. I am still getting the hang of using Google Keywords, and Analytics, and appreciate this easy to understand assistance.
Boils down to the obvious - *targeted traffic*
You cannot just *spray & Pray* on the web.
That is a First rule of any advertising.
Very informative and easy to understand. Thanks for writing this hub. It really helps to find hubs such as this for those of us who are still learning about online writing.
Outstanding article. Appreciate the information.
This is a wonderful resource!
I love reading well-thought out hubs on the hubbing process, and your hubs never fail to disappoint relache.
Thanks Relache, great info. I'll come back often to learn more.
Love your tip hubs Relache, deff learn a lot from them !
Being new at Hubpages, I find this valuable information. This one is bookmarked to read over the advice. I am one that hasn't written many Hubs, but keep thinking about coming back to do so. I have three recipe Hubs. I believe I have "food" as a tag in all of them.
Thanks for your information.
this was really good...think i will apply some of these to my hubs...thanks
I wanted to thank you again. I went through my hubs and came up with a list of 34 tags that I had been using that were $$ killers. Simply removing them made all the difference.
Great article. Going to check my tags now - been confused about how much is good/bad, too. I always learn so much from you, Ralache - thanks!
I periodically go though older hubs to fine tune them on metrics, etc. and it helps. Great information that I wish I'd had when I first started on hubpages.
Thank you for your hub, It has great information on Hubbing that answered allot of my questions:) Very Informative
Thanks for the information. I had never paid attention to hub metrics before.
Useful information espeically with regards to the copyright
Great, having your photograph is also one way to build relationship with other hubbers, as they know whom you are
Very informative HUB. I would have never looked at the tag information if I hadn’t read your article. The comparison of HUB Vs. Squidoo as interesting and informative. Do you have any experience with infobarrel.com?
Sadly, the joke is that you'll know when you've made it as an internet writer when other people start to rip-off your work...
Great article. Thankfully no one has tried to plagarize my work, but now I know what to do in the event that my hubs are infringed upon.
Wow, I am off to edit my tags and check out the DMCA. Thank you for some very valuable info.
Very helpful hub - I'm so glad you included the section on defending your work. Although I have been writing online for awhile now, I still have trouble keeping my work from getting copied...but I guess it's a challenge for all of us. :)
Yes thank you for the tips. Some hubbers say limit the tags and some say add a lot of tags. Oh I am so confused. I guess I will have to do a trial and error. lol
interesting hub, and you obviously know what you're talking about - 600 views per day on one hub is amazing!(on the screenshot you included). I'm going to take a look at that tag thing and maybe make some small changes to my profile.
You have some good tips here. I used to always tag everything alot thinking the more it showed up the better. But I can see now how making these little changes can help in that area.
Very informative. I have always wondered about DMCA, now I know what it is. Thanks for this hub, especially the part where we protect our work.
Seems every day you learn something new.Also off to polish the tag selection.Great hub and thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the info. - time to check out my tags !
Thank-you so much for your work that went into this article as it benefits all of us!!
BJC
Great article, I learnt a lot, thanks,
Namaste
I probably go lighter on tags than many other Hub authors, and I try and be specific to what the hub is genuinely about.
Thanks for this article. Just curious, have you found that listing many similar (and specific) tags helps or hurts?
Rochelle, I stumbled upon the tag thing late one night and almost didn't believe it myself. There aren't any sudden earnings changes, but I really do think it's helped my Hubs now that I've watched them for 3-4 months since making those edits.
I just went into a few of my hubs and deleted some tags.
You are right! It made my earning potential rise. I never would have thought this was true.
Thanks for that tip. I got some housecleaning to do.
Great article. Thanks for tips and great information.













































Bhawna Sharma says:
2 weeks ago
Again a very informative read. You have done good job for new entrants like me. Thanks.