Friday, September 16, 2016

Paidverts - Earn $50 a day without Referrals !!

PaidVerts


Do you know Many peoples around you are earning over a $3000 per month Online from their Computer... 


Are You ??... If no then No Worry !

                Friends i have a trick.Today i will teach you how to earn not $3000 but $50 a day or $1500 a month. Yes, you can earn this amount from your own computer. And the best part is that you do not have to invest even a single Dollar  and you can earn $1500 per month with your own effort, You also do not need even a Single Referral. The site name is Paidverts.

So, What is Paidverts ??...

                PaidVerts is an advertising platform that pays you to interact with advertisers.
Advertisers purchase ads in their system and Paidverts deliver those ads to your account every hour. In other words, Paidverts is a paid to click (PTC) website. But Remember Paidverts is not Like the regular ptc sites which you joins and click ads for less than a single pennies. It is totally different. Paidverts is fully loaded with a very very unique Script. That's why Paidverts got their 50000 members in less than a Month. And have more than 200,000 Members Now

                In Paidverts you can earn money just by viewing ads. Yes i am not joking. You really can earn $100 a day or $3000 a Month for just clicking some ads everyday. I know you won't believe me because no one can earn such a big amount just by clicking ads. For your Believe, Today me and some of my friends had taken some screenshots of their ads. Watch them below..




Screenshot (1)..
Screenshot (2)..

Screenshot (3)..
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Screenshot (5)..

 Paidverts is a part of My traffic value which is Stable and paying their members on time since 2010. So, don't even think that paidverts will scam you. Paidverts is Legit, Trusted and Paying their every members on time.


              By Reading this Post, I am sure every one want's to know the Strategy to earn More than $1500 a month and Clicking such ads. That's why i had described the whole story below in FIVE Phases. Kindly read them Carefully...



PHASE 1 (Registration) = Before starting out you must have to register an account at Paidverts. After Registration Log in your account and go to ‘Members Home Page’. Click activation ads and view all 8 activation ads. Each activation ad will give you 50 BAPs. You can get 8 activation ads daily in your account. Try to click all the ads every day. It will help you to earn much Money.


HASE 2 (BAPs) = BAPs which is also known as Bonous Ad Points. BAP is a type of Paidverts currency which will help you to gain Paid ads. On the first day at paidverts you will only earn BAP not real cash. There is not so much difference between BAPs and Real cash. Each BAP is equal to $0.0005. You can only use BAPs to play casino games and can win some extra BAPs. You can’t use them for other purpose also you can not convert them to Money. But don’t worry, I have told you that Paidverts consists a very unique script. Your BAPs will be used by Paidverts to deliver you paid ads. For example, Today you have 1700 BAPs. Tomorrow when you log in your account you got a $0.10 ad. Then, you will see 200 BAPs has already been deducted from your account ($0.0005*200=$0.10). So, BAPs is the key to success in Paidverts. The more you accumulate – the Higher your earnings will be. Paidverts will deduct your BAPs and give you Paid ads each and everyday.


PHASE 3 (Ads) = At Paidverts everyday you can see two type of ads. Activation ads and Paid ads. Activation ads will give you BAPs and Paid ads will give you Real cash. You will recieve paid ads but don't forget to click activation ads everyday. For example if you have 2000 BAPs in your account and if there is a $2 ad in circulation then you will not recieve that ad because you don't have enough BAPs which Paidverts will deduct. But if there is a $1 ad in circulation, then there is a chance that you might recieve that ad. Paid ads are recyling throughout the day. For example, if you logged in Today at 8 Am and clicked all available ads, after that when you again log in at 4 PM then you will see some more ads are available again to click. Try to log in your Paidverts account in every 12 hours. Activtion ads expires within 24 hrs. But remember You only have 18hrs to click paid ads because Paid ads expires in within 18 hours.



PHASE 4 (Upgrading account) = Upgrading your account at paidverts will cost you only $0.05. Paidverts is not like other PTC sites where Upgrading account costs $20 a month or $800 per year. Upgrading your account at Paidverts will give you the priority to recieve Recycled ads. So, What is Recycled ads ?.. = Recycled ads are those ads which are not clicked by the member and got recycled.
         For example, there are two active members John and Sam. Both of them are active and click their ads every day and earning a lots of money. But today John goes on a Vacation and today he is not active at Paidvets. Today John and Sam both got 20 ads. Sam clicked all their ads because he is active today. But John is on Vacation and he didn't clicked any ads today. John ads will expire after 18 hours and gets recycled. So, that is called Recycled ads. Only Upgraded members recieves Recycled ads. In an average i am Reciving 8 to 12 Recycled ads Everyday.
          Upgrading will cost you $0.05 and 2500 BAPs. But don't worry only $0.05 will be deducted from your account not 2500 BAPs. But one thing you should remember that Your Upgraded membership can expire tomorrow or it can also be expired after a week. But before expiring it will deliver at least $1 worth of ads. Try to Notice one thing that Upgrading will cost you only $0.05 but it expires after delivering at least $1 worth of ads. Isn't Upgrading is much profitable.


PHASE 5 (Bulk ad packs) = As I already told you. Paidverts is a Revolution in PTCs. Do you know purchasing ad packs at Paidverts is very very profitable ??... At other PTCs when you purchase any advertising package then it costs a large amount of money and also you won’t get any Good results. But it doesn’t happen at paidverts. Each Ad pack will cost you $1 and will give you these things Instantly :-
           
             #25 (728*90) banner impression
             #100 (125*125) banner impression
             #50 visits to your website
             #3100 Bonus Ad Points will be added to your account.

Isn’t it looks much profitable ?.. With only $1 you will receive all those elements Instantly in your account with 3100 BAPs. Think a while, you purchased it with $1 and they delivers 3100 BAPs which is equal to $1.55 (3100*$0.0005=$1.55). So, I recommend you to purchase an ad pack as soon as your account reaches $1 because it is very much Profitable.
Paidverts accepts Deposit's and Withdrawl's from 8 Payment processors now and it is Increasing Everyday...

Remember that at the Begining you will not earn much money, You should have Patience in You. At Paidverts everyday your Earning will Increase. The key to earn a huge Money in Paidverts is BAPs. The More BAPs you can collect, the Higher Your Earnings will be. Purchasing Ad packs is only the Best way to collect High Bonous Points. It will give you traffic as well as a large number of BAPs also.  Think a while, if you cashout your earnings then the money will stay in your Paypal or payza accounts or Bitcoin Wallet. But if you use that money in Purchasing ads you will recieve a full 55% Profit as BAPs.
So, That's it. For what you are waiting for ? SIGN UP NOW and start Clicking For 
$$$. SO SIGN UP NOW AND SHARE THE LOVE


PaidVerts

Thursday, September 15, 2016

How much money can I make from AdSense with 1000 visitors per day ?

This is one of the most frequently asked AdSense questions and also one of the hardest to give a valuable answer to, as there are a lot of variables in play.   Average earnings per 1,000 ad impressions are said to be around $1 across the whole of the global network, but that isn’t very indicative of real results for most.

The short version of the answer is that, if you want to find out what AdSense could earn on your website you need to run AdSense. You also need to be prepared to put some work in to optimise it and achieve your earnings potential.

For the long answer read on.  I’ll walk through the variables, starting on the assumption that a site is hitting that $1 average:

If you earned $1 impression CPM, what would 1,000 visitors a day earn you?
If you know the CPM then the remaining variables are:
  • Ads per page : The average number of ad units displayed per page impression
  • Pages per visit : How many pages the average visitor views
  • Pages per visit X Average ad units X Impression CPM = Revenue per 1000 visitors
A website serving an average of 3 pages per visit, each with 2 ad units and an impression CPM of $1 would therefore earn $6 per 1000 visits.

But your impression CPM probably isn’t $1. Prices paid on AdSense are dynamic. They are fixed by auction rather than being standard across the network and the value of every impression changes.  Here is a quick run down of the important factors:

Major factors affecting CPM

CTR : The majority of AdSense bids are per click, so the Click Through Rate of your ad units has a huge impact on revenue performance.  Units that are in positions where they attract few clicks will have drastically different performance to those with high CTRs.

Geography : Advertisers are willing to pay differing amounts to reach customers in different regions.  Customers in the so called “tier 1” countries; USA, Canada, UK command higher prices. 

Your niche : The majority of AdSense ads are contextually targeted. This means that AdSense will select ads that are related to the content of your page.  Due to the auction nature of AdSense different niches will attract different levels of bid.  For instance, content about holidays and flights is likely to attract higher bids than content about your pet hamster.

Choice of ad unit size : Advertisers prefer certain ad sizes .  Less common formats tend to attract less bids, and large formats tend to attract higher bids.  The same ad shown to the same user can achieve very different final rates across different ad unit sizes due thanks to the effect of upwards price pressure in more competitive auctions. 

Visitor behaviour and demographics : In addition to contextual targeting, Advertisers can target by user demographics and behaviour (retargeting).  Having a valuable audience who shop online can push up rates thanks to the extra bids and auction pressure these methods introduce.

How good your site is: If you have a site that advertisers want to be see on, then you might also attract placement targeted ads.  These ads, specifically targeted at your website, can be very effective in increasing demand and help pushing up rates.

As you can see, lots of factors . In fact there are a lot more than can impact auction pressure and change the rates you see.  This all makes is hard to give a general “what can I make?” answer.  I’ve worked with sites that have reached their full potential at a few hundred dollars a month and those earning in the millions.  It is all down to the website.

How to Start Social Media Marketing for Businesses & Entrepreneurs

If you are one of the budding entrepreneurs or an owner of a small business, you should consider how to communicate about your product and new service.
Social media is no different from work that requires an understanding of the appropriate tools for the job. You can’t plant a seed without soil, and you can’t pitch hay with a shovel.
Below are some of my suggestions for a set of social media tools.


Listening: Growing your Ears

In the online world, the tool for listening is called a newsreader or a news aggregator. This type of software allows you to understand the conversation going out on the web.
Google Reader, which is one of the easiest to use, has just recently shut down, but some marketing community has just recently recommended a list of feed readers as a replacement.
What should you listen to? The answer depends on how you intend to use the tool; however, if you are a part of a business or company space, here’s what to think:
  • Ego search building.
    Free tools like TechnoratiSocialMentionGoogle Alerts, and TweetDeck will help socially monitor your brand. Use them to build a search on your company’s name, product names, key employees’ names, and so forth.
  • Build the same for your competitors.
  • Find niche blogs and community.
    Find all the authority blogs and community that fit your industry and niche, and subscribe to them. This will help you get the trending topics on your niche easily.
  • Find tangential categories.
    This is simple. If you’re in software niche, subscribe to an art of marketing blog. If you’re in marketing and PR, subscribe to an economy blog.
Several advanced listening tools take the data you receive and will help you make a better sense of it.

Speaking: Developing your Voice

Blogs, video, podcasts, Twitter, and tons of tools exist for speaking. Some of you might already use some of these tools that you’re comfortable with and prefer.
Here are some ideas about how your voice can be heard further.
  • Use Facebook and other social networks to point people toward your primary media by posting updates and news about your company. Find other people or businesses that share the same media and do outreach. Offer media that their audience might like as well.
  • Reach people with your conversation by putting the URL of your media in your e-mail signature and business cards.
  • Use FeedBurner to improve your RSS feed since it provides more features and enhancements than a built-in RSS feed.
  • Create and integrate list building through e-mail. Create newsletter opt-ins and encourage your audience to subscribe. Reach them through e-mail and tell them your latest updates that will interest them. Aweber helps you create and send email newsletters easily.
  • Make sure your website and all of the media you have is pointing back to you so that people know who you are, where you are, what are you up to, how to reach you, and what you are all about.

Rich Media: Starter Pack

Depending on what you use, whether it is PC or Mac, the price points difference between what you wish to have and the goal you have set. Below is a good starter pack that I recommend for making a video or audio podcasts for both PC and Mac.
  • Audio. For both PC and Mac, you can use Audacity. It is a free, easy-to-use, and multilingual audio editor and recorder for Windows, Mac OS X, GNU/Linux, and other operating systems. For Mac, GarageBand is great, and I’ve seen lots of people who used it. BlogTalkRadio is also a great solution that you can use without hardware.
  • Video. You can use the plain iMovie for Mac and Windows Movie Maker on a PC. Final Cut Pro and Express versions are handy for filmmakers and those people who want to make a new model.
  • Video Hosting. You have many choices in this category. There’s YouTube,VimeoViddlerWistia, and more. Make sure to read each platform’s terms of service to understand if they are a good choice for you.
  • Live Video. Services like UstreamYouNow, and Paltalk offer different opportunities and interesting experiences.

Community: The Social Platforms

In this list, I’ll just mention a few of the social media tools that we’re using and definitely, will not include every social network and media tools.
  • Facebook. Most of the entrepreneurs and businesses use Facebook to attract new visitors, build awareness, get customer support, do advertising targeting, and more. A social utility that connects people, it allows members to keep up with friends, upload photos, and share links and videos.
  • Twitter. Social networking and microblogging service that utilizes instant messaging, SMS, or a web interface. Not everyone might be there, but there are more people on Twitter than FriendFeed and Plurk.
  • LinkedIn. This is a networking tool to find connections to recommended job candidates, industry experts, and business partners. It allows registered users to maintain a list of contact details of people they know and trust in business. The change in design and the status stream made it more interesting, and it is currently the top in social networking sites for business.
  • Pinterest. This is an interesting online pinboard: a place where you can post collections of things you love and follow collections created by people with great taste. In case you need more, you might want to check FlickrSmugMug, and Gentlemint, which are also great for photo sharing and we’re also using them.
  • YouTube. YouTube is a way to get your videos to the people who matter to you. Upload, tag, and share your videos worldwide! We’re also sharing on Vimeo and Dailymotion.

Conclusion

The above social networking sites are just a few of what we’re interested in. Feel free to add more places and tools in the comments section below so that I can also consider them.
Certainly, there are many other networks with great communities for various interests and choose what’s best for you and your business.
If you’ve enjoyed this post, subscribe to my newsletter for exclusive business hacks that I only share with my subscribers. You can also follow me on Twitter.




Social Media Marketing,Promotion


Sunday, September 11, 2016

How To Make Money With Fiverr And Clickbank Together

What Is Fiverr

Fiverr is a website that connects people selling services starting at $5 to buyers. There are many types of services that sellers offer on Fiverr. You could even join Fiverr and make some money. All you have to do is figure out what type of service you want to offer, and then you will make money every time someone purchases your service. However, this article is about earning money by using Fiverr and Clickbank together, so continue to read on to find out what Clickbank is, and how to make money using both Fiverr and Clickbank.

What Is Clickbank

Clickbank is a giant marketplace where people can create a digital product and then sell it. Affiliate marketers can also make money by selling those products. If you are an affiliate marketer, then you can choose what product you would like to promote. When someone makes a purchase via your affiliate link, then you will make a percentage of the sale. You will know how much money you will make per sale beforehand. When you are browsing for products to promote, then you will notice that there is an area that will let you know how much commission you will make from the sale.

Using Fiverr And Clickbank To Make Money

Now that we told you what Fiverr and Clickbank is, let's tell you how to make money using both of them together. Below are a few steps you can follow, and these steps could help you earn a few dollars. Feel free to tweak some of these steps as you see fit. The steps is just a general guideline that may help you make some money by using Clickbank and Fiverr.

Step One: Go To Clickbank And Find Product To Sell

There are thousands and thousands of products you can choose from on Clickbank. You may be tempted to automatically go for products that teach people how to make money, but we advise you to think outside the box and choose other types of products.
Choose products that give relationship advice, financial advice or even social media advice. Once you have found a product, retrieve your link. Don't worry, getting your link is easy to do.
Once you have been given your referral link, you can move onto the next step.

Step Two: Go To Fiverr And Find Marketing Services

The next thing you will want to do is go to Fiverr and find someone to promote/market your Clickbank product link. You can either choose someone who is rather new to Fiverr, or you can choose to use someone who has promoted/marketed many things. Both options will be discussed below.
Choosing Someone Who Is New
Choosing someone who is new to Fiverr can work one of two ways. It can turnout to be great for you, or their services will not workout that great for you. You may want to choose someone who is new because it might mean that they have not promoted a bunch of stuff yet, which might lead to more people viewing your link that they are promoting.
Choosing Someone Who Has Provided Many With Their Services
If you choose someone on Fiverr that has promoted a lot of things to others, then their service may or may not work in your favor. It could work in your favor because if they have a very large network they are promoting to, then more people could view your link. Then again, they may promote many things and their network may not be that responsive.
Just make sure you read the users' reviews and choose the one you feel most comfortable with.

Step Three: Provide Provider With Affiliate Link

Have you found someone you want to use? Great! Now you will want to provide the person with the link you want promoted and then wait and see if you get any sales. You might make a few sales, you might make one or you might not make any at all.
Also, try to only spend $5 just so you can get a feel for the service that is being provided to you. If it doesn't workout for you, then don't use it again. If it works for you and you make a sale or two, then go ahead and use Fiverr and Clickbank as you see fit.

Good luck if you try this method.

Get Paid $100 Per Article On Listverse

Is it true that you can earn $100 per article?

If you are an online writer, then you are probably excited about the title of this hub. Getting paid a whopping $100 per article is incredible – so incredible that it might begin sounding too good to be true to many writers out there. They say if something seems too good to be true then it likely isn’t true. But I want to assure you that in this case it is totally true that you can earn $100 for every article that you write. If you are astonished by this, I don’t blame you because I myself was extremely astonished when I first heard that as an online writer I could regularly earn $100 for every article that I write and which gets published. It was totally unbelievable considering that up until that point I had never been paid more than $10 for a single article.

Where can a writer earn $100 per article?

There are quite a number of websites and blogs out there that are paying somewhere in the region of $100 per article. Some of these blogs that are currently paying around $100 per article include Back2College.com, BirdChannel.com, Cosmopolitan.com, Listverse.com, etc. All these sites are great sites with millions of visitors visiting their sites every month.
My favorite of all these amazing write and get paid websites is Listverse.com. The main reasons why I consider it my favorite among the lot is the fact that I have used it before and find it not as complex and difficult to participate in as the others. Anyone can submit their article to Listverse and get paid $100 if their article gets accepted by the site.

What is Listverse.com and how can I earn on the site?

Listverse is a website that publishes mainly list-style articles. The website is loaded with nothing but top 10 lists of extremely fascinating things. According to the website, they have the top 10 lists of everything under the sun. It is kind of true when you consider the fact that they are always publishing new lists on any topic you can think of. It will therefore not be surprising if you visited Listverse.com right now and found lists like these: “Ten Ways College Makes You Dumb”, “The Ten Most Dangerous Cities In The World”, “Ten Deaths Caught On Live On Camera”, “Ten Celebrities Who Died Of AIDS”, “Ten Mysterious Celebrity Deaths”, etc. This is what Listverse is all about. The site only publishes lists that are fascinating and appealing to their readers.
Now, that you have understood what Listverse is all about, let us now take a look at how a writer can make money from this site, which is what I guess majority of the readers are waiting for.
The only way you can earn money as a writer from this site is by getting your list-style article accepted by the site. There is no other way to earn from this site apart from that way. But I must confess that it is never a walk in the park getting your articles accepted and published on Listverse.
Listverse has simple rules that every writer who intends submitting an article to must follow. The rules are as follow:
  • The article must be the writer’s original work. There is no room for plagiarism on Listverse.
  • The article must be at least 1,500 words and contain a minimum of 10 items. This therefore means that you cannot write a list that contains 9 items. For example, Listverse will never accept a list like this “Top 9 Conspiracy Theories”.
  • The writer must link to reputable sources in order for Listverse to be able to verify what the writer is saying. And by reputable sources, Listverse is talking about sources such as BBC, CNN, etc. Listverse doesn’t consider sites such as Wikipedia, TMZ, etc reputable sources and therefore will not accept any link to such sites.
  • The list the writer submits should be one that hasn’t already been published on Listverse or anywhere else. For example, if on the Listverse site there is a list like this “10 Footballers who died on the field”, Listverse will not accept another article with similar lists.
  • Last but not least, your lists must be fascinating and appealing to readers.
You can write about anything under the sun and Listverse will accept and publish it providing you follow the rules above and that Listverse finds your article fascinating. Remember that they are paying you $100 per article. This therefore means they won’t accept any and any article unless the article is truly awesome.

Payment: How Listverse pays writers

Listverse pays you the moment your article has been accepted. After you submit your article to the Listverse Editorial Team you’ll receive a message from them telling you that they have successfully received your lists and that they would contact you in two weeks to let you know whether they have chosen to accept it for payment or not.
Here is the message I received from Listverse when I submitted my first list to them entitled: “10 Footballers Whose Deaths On The Pitch Shocked The World”
Dear Kojo Enoch,
Thank you for sending in your list: 10 Footballers Whose Deaths On The Pitch Shocked The World. We read all submissions.

We will contact you within two weeks to let you know whether we have chosen to accept it for payment or not. Feel free to send in other lists in the meantime.
Readers should know that even though Listverse tells you it takes two weeks to review your article, it normally takes just a few days for them to contact you. I was contacted about three days later and told that unfortunately my article couldn’t appeal to their readers and they could therefore not accept it. Here is the message I received:
Dear Kojo Enoch,

Unfortunately we are unable to accept your list for publication because it is a subject we feel won't appeal to our readers. We are looking for lists that are remarkable—lists that make you go "wow!" This list is missing that remarkability.

Please don't be discouraged from sending in other lists for consideration. We recommend reading the Listverse Author Guide for some pointers on successful submissions.
Even though my article wasn’t accepted, I wasn’t discouraged and I went on to submit other lists to them. After a number of submissions, one of my articles eventually got published, and I received my first $100 payment from Listverse. It was amazing. The mere thought that I had received $100 just for writing an article of about 1,500 words and the fact that my article was going to be viewed by millions of people was too incredible for me to sleep that night.
Readers should know that as soon as the Listverse Editorial Team accepts your article and decides to publish it, they send you $100 via either Paypal or Bitcoin. These are the only payment methods that the site uses. You can therefore not receive payment from them if you don’t have an account with Paypal or Bitcoin.

Conclusion

While Listverse is a great site to earn money writing, I must stress on two important things here. The first one is that when you submit your article or lists to Listverse and it gets published and you are paid $100, the work no longer belongs to you. You basically lose all the rights that you have to the work to Listverse Ltd since they have bought the article from you. The second thing is the fact that it is not very easy getting your articles or lists accepted by Listverse. Before Listverse accepts your lists, it must be extremely remarkable and appealing to their millions of readers all over the world. It takes a great deal of effort to write an article good enough and interesting enough that appeals to Listverse and their millions of readers. But if you take your time and do a proper research, you can create content good enough to be accepted by Listverse. While it is not easy, it is worth it. When your article eventually gets accepted and you receive your mouthwatering payment, no one will tell you that hard work and determination pay.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

40 Top Money Making Websites

1. Google.com

Founders: Larry Page, Sergey Brin
Annual Revenue: $50.2 billion
The best example of a website becoming “ubiquitous” is perhaps the strange case of Google.
The word “google,” which simply means to look something up on Google, was added to the Oxford English Dictionary.
For years, Google has been the standard of search engines. Using any other search engine was a telling sign that you belong to a previous generation of obsolescence.

2. Facebook.com

Founders: Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz, Chris Hughes
Annual Revenue: $5.1 billion
The tale of Facebook is, on the other hand, completely different. It too has had a seemingly bizarre effect on our language: “to friend,” “to like,” or “wall” have all assumed a place in our colloquial talk. But its story is a little different.
It was once cool to use Facebook. Then it became uncool, once everyone had it. You began to hear of people disabling their account for Lent or some other misguided ascetic reasons.
Years later, it has simply become an extension of your identity, for better or worse. It’s assumed that when you meet someone, you friend them and look through their profiles and pictures.
It’s changed entirely the distinction between our private and public lives.

3. Youtube.com

Founder: Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, Jawed Karim
Annual Revenue: $1.7 billion
Before YouTube, we had no control over what we could watch.
Youtube is truly the tube that belongs to the people, enabling us to find the weirdest, funniest, the most horrifying, or the most humane videos that give us a real snapshot into the breadth of human culture.

4. Yahoo.com

Founder: Jerry Yang, David Filo
Annual Revenue: $4.98 billion
Yahoo was one of the first web “portals,” a name for websites that bring together information from a diverse set of sources. The point of the portal, perhaps, was to create a miniature internet, so that you would never have to stray away from it to acquire what information you needed. Perhaps it was too ambitious in this respect and was therefore superseded by the calm simplicity of Google.

5. Baidu.com

Founder: Robin Li, Eric Xu
Annual Revenue: $2.36 billion
Baidu boasts the most poetic origin of all the top earning websites. The name comes from a classical Chinese poem named “Green Jade Table in the Lantern Festival,” which speaks of, after searching thousands of times, finding someone in a crowd. To founder Robin Li, this persistent search for the ideal ought to be the philosophy of a search engine, and this perhaps accounts for the great success of the great Chinese language search engine.

6. Wikipedia.com

Founders: Jimmy Wales, Larry Sanger
Annual Revenue: $2.735 million
You probably did not expect a non-profit website on this list, and you probably uttered, “Oh yeah!” upon seeing Wikipedia. This site defied what we thought would be impossible, or at least worthless: to build a reliably informative knowledge-base using anonymous volunteers on the internet.

7. QQ.com

Founder: Ma Huateng and Zhang Zhidong
Annual Revenue: $4.6 billion
The Western world might not have heard of QQ, but it’s made a huge impact in China. It’s the most popular instant messaging service there, perhaps because it features the cutest penguin mascot ever.

8. Twitter.com

Founder: Jack Dorsey, Noah Glass, Evan Williams, Biz Stone
Annual Revenue: $140 million
When I first heard of Twitter, my first thought was, “So it’s like Facebook updates, except without the Facebook. Yeah, great.” I should have curbed my skepticism. Twitter has changed the way we construct narratives around our lives by condensing what we say, feel, or think into a series of 140-character musings.

9. Amazon.com

Founders: Jeff Bezos
Annual Revenue: $61.09 billion
You’ll never need to worry about whether you’re getting the best deal. You’ll also never need to go to a retail store again. Heck, you can even get groceries on there. Who knew? Amazon, the world’s largest online retailer, can fetch it all for you. It’s like having a vending machine in your house that sells everything ever.

10. LinkedIn.com

Founders: Reid Hoffman
Annual Revenue: $972 million
Founder Reid Hoffman is a veteran of the social network concept, creating SocialNet.com in 1997, years before anyone had ever heard of Myspace or Facebook. After working at PayPal, he founded the first important business-oriented online social network.
Ok so we have reached the top 10 earning sites mark, I bet you expected most of them to be there…

11. Bing.com

Founders: Microsoft
Annual Revenue: $73.72 billion
Bing has been making a comeback in recent years, after MSN was out-competed by Google and Yahoo. Perhaps this has to do with the collaborative efforts between Yahoo and Microsoft to make Bing into a serious contender with Google. By 2011, Bing had become the fastest growing market share in core searches.

12. Yandex.ru

Founders: Arkady Volozh
Annual Revenue: $641 million
Like Baidu, you might not have heard of it. Yet it’s the 4th largest search engine worldwide. It’s also the most popular website in Russia.

13. WordPress.com

Founders: Matt Mullenweg, Mike Little
Annual Revenue: $45 million
Man is a blogging animal. Yet there was Xanga, then OpenDiary, then LiveJournal, then MySpace, then Blogger, etc. But WordPress has been the definitive blogging platform—nay, not merely a blogging platform but essentially a flexible content management system that is user-friendly to both novice and experts.

14. Ebay.com

Founders: Pierre Omidyar
Annual Revenue: $14.07 billion
The world’s largest thrift store, pawn shop, vintage dealer, antique market, used record store, etc., etc.

15. Weibo.com

Founders:Wang Xing
Annual Revenue: $482 million
Sina Weibo is China’s response (or copy?) of Twitter. Users post with a 140-character limit, add hashtags, follow other users, with many celebrity accounts.

16. Microsoft.com

Founders: Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer
Annual Revenue: $73.72 billion
We all know the story of Microsoft, titan of the computer world, crushing every competitor with its little toe. Yet for everything there is an ebb and flow, and Microsoft soon lost its hold on every soul to Apple. Of course, I kid, but Microsoft does seem a little out of place here. Maybe they’re including Windows Update in the results.

17. Tumblr.com

Founders: David Karp
Annual Revenue: $13 million
Are hipsters taking over the world? If so, then Tumblr is living proof of it. The most stylish of the blogging platforms, Tumblr is a repository for witty, self-styled intellects who post fake vintage photos of their dreary, post-capitalist lives.

18. Mail.ru

Founders: Dmitry Grishin, Alexey Krivenkov, Michael Zaitsev, Eugene Goland
Annual Revenue: $515 million
Mail.ru is Russia’s largest free e-mail service. It superseded Gmail because it’s one letter shorter and therefore saved millions of hours of lost productivity.

19. Pinterest.com

Founders: Paul Sciarra, Evan Sharp, Ben Silbermann
Annual Revenue: $45 million
One of the great surprises of recent times, Pinterest is a global pin-board of recipes, crafts, photos, and other fantastic discoveries.

20. PayPal.com

Founders: Ken Howery, Max Levchin, Elon Musk, Luke Nosek, Peter Thiel
Annual Revenue: $5.6 billion
PayPal made it safe(r) to shop online. Next: BitCoin?
Now, Paypal is this far down on the top 20 money making websites, but not because of its revenue, I leave it up to you to guess why this is…

21. Ask.com

Founders: Garrett Gruener, David Warthen
Annual Revenue: $2.8 billion
Does anybody remember Jeeves, the old Sherlock that accompanied every search you made on Ask.com? I loved Jeeves when I was 8 years old, but now I’m baffled by their success. Could it really be that their annoying toolbar that’s sneakily packaged with every Java update is working?

22. IMDB.com

Founders: Col Needham
Annual Revenue: $ 364.3 billion
IMDB is a no-nonsense website. It’s a movie database on the internet on every film ever made. No matter how bad your film is, IMDB will find it.

23. Apple.com

Founders: Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Ronald Wayne
Annual Revenue: $156.5 billion
Apple is the great American company. It has a signature product line, instantly recognizable across the globe. It came back from the embarrassing depths of tech-obscurity to become lord of it all. May they be inspiring tale for all to remember.

24. Craigslist.org

Founders: Craig Newmark
Annual Revenue: Unknown
Craigslist might be the underbelly of this list of top earning websites. It’s so bleakly designed it reeks of cynicism. The company doesn’t disavow this portrayal. Rather, it acknowledges itself as a site of real art and poetry. The poetry of seedy encounters and fraud.

25. AOL.com

Founders: Jim Kimsey
Annual Revenue: $2.2 billion
America Online was once a giant blob that threatened to eat up the internet. The most complete portal there ever was, it never wanted you to ever leave its grasp. On top of a search engine, it had its own chat rooms, IM service, games room, even what resembled an operating system of its own! Then things got tough with the merger with Time-Warner and competing with all the websites emerging with the dot-com bubble. It was once a paradise; now it’s an artifact.

26. CNN.com

Founders: Ted Turner
Annual Revenue: $322.5 million
CNN is a historical institution, the first 24-hour news channel. They embraced the world wide web revolution to become a top earning website early on, but they’re being challenged by new-comers such as Huffington Post, Al Jazeera, and emerging news blogs.

27. Adf.ly

Founders: Unknown
Annual Revenue: $300 million
You’ve probably seen adf.ly, bit.ly, or TinyURL on any one of the social networks that you use. Adf.ly is a popular URL shortening service that lets you avoid long, clumsy URL’s.

28. Alibaba.com

Founders: Jack Ma
Annual Revenue: $4.1 million
Alibaba is a Chinese trading platform for small businesses. It supplies bulk orders of everything from electronics to apparel to crude oil.

29. Huffington Post

Founders: Arianna Huffington
Annual Revenue: $27.9 million
Founded by Arianna Huffington in 2005, Huffington Post was originally a small news blog site with a small slate of political and social commentary contributors. It allowed comments for each of their columns, and it soon built a strong community. Huffington Post became enormously popular, leading AOL to purchase the site in 2011.

30. About.com

Founders: Scott Kurnit
Annual Revenue: $25.4 million
One of the most notorious, albeit quite useful, content farms on the web, About.com consists of articles with practical applications written and maintained by freelance writers.

31. Imgur.com

Founders: Alan Schaaf
Annual Revenue: $1 million
Imgur responded to the demand from message board and IM users for an easy online photo-sharing service. No registration is required. You drag your photo onto their website. Imgur uploads it. You get a link. The simplicity of their service made it an instant hit.

32. DailyMotion 

Founders: Benjamin Bejbaum, Oliver Poitrey
Annual Revenue: $50 million
DailyMotion is the second-largest video-sharing site on the web. Like all legendary startups, it was founded by Benjamin Bejbaum and Oliver Poitrey out of their living room. Based out of France, DailyMotion is popular internationally, but less so in the United States, where YouTube continues to dominate the market.

33. ESPN.com

Founders: Bill Rasmussen, Scott Rasmussen, Ed Eagen
Annual Revenue: $3.3 billion
ESPN exerted its force on broadcast media by establishing itself as the only name-brand, 24-hour sports network. It expanded its presence online, where it keeps its hold on sports fans all over the world.

34. NYTimes.com

Founders: Henry Jarvis Raymond, George Jones
Annual Revenue: $100 million
The news leader detected the threat of the internet to print journalism and adapted quickly. It maintains a strong web presence despite its subscription fee.

35. GoDaddy.com

Founders: Bob Parsons
Annual Revenue: $1.14 billion
Remember GeoCities? GoDaddy is the modern equivalent. It’s a simple, name-brand web hosting service that mainly caters to small websites that require low maintenance.

36. eHow.com

Founders: Courtney Rosen
Annual Revenue:$86.2 million
eHow is a large compendium of how-to articles that range from the simple, such as “How To Use a Can Opener,” to the complex, like “How to Replace Capacitors in an Antique Radio,” to the downright weird, like “How to Eat Roadkill.” Frequently described as a content mill, it never ceases to be entertaining or, in some cases, actually useful.

37. Vimeo.com

Founders: Zack Klein, Jake Lodwick
Annual Revenue: $5 million
There was already YouTube, but Vimeo nonetheless found a niche for itself by catering to young artists and indie filmmakers. It is also popular among established artists.

38. DeviantArt.com

Founders: Scott Jarkoff, Matt Stephens, Angelo Sotira
Annual Revenue: $10 million
DeviantArt is an online petri dish for bad art. No, I kid: it’s that and also an online community which centers on user-submitted artwork and design. There’s a great deal of interesting work here, from Flash animations to photography to skins for applications or mods of operating systems. It is a uniquely diverse exposition of many styles, many genres, and many voices.

39. Dropbox.com

Founders: Drew Houston
Annual Revenue: $240 million
After many attempts from many companies to implement an easy-to-use cloud storage service, Dropbox became a leading name. It syncs your data automatically in a folder that operates just like a system folder. And if you’re not at one of your devices, you can retrieve your data online.

40. Reddit.com

Founders: Steve Huffman, Alexis Ohanian
Annual Revenue: $10.5 million
Reddit is described as a social news and entertainment website, but what really made its name is its capacity to generate hype and memes. It is a symbol for the capacity for information to be globally explosive.
There is some overlap in this list. For instance, there are a number of search engines and video hosting websites that offer similar, if not indistinguishable, services. Yet each of these sites has made a tremendous impact on our lives, whether by providing for important demands, by connecting us to other people, or even by giving us a voice to speak. These top earning websites are known to us not because they give us something that is tremendously valuable or powerful, and that is the key feature of a website that’s here to stay.
What do you think about this list? go ahead and speak your mind in the comments below. Share the love!