More Posts Generate More Page Views: Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging (Part II)

©2011 Reflections of a Rational Republican

One of the first goals of any successful blog is to find ways of driving traffic to one’s site. It is all about getting attention. One of the most obvious initial lessons about blogging is that the higher the cumulative number of posts, the more page views one generates.

©2011 Reflections of a Rational Republican

The chart above shows an exponential relationship between daily page views and my site’s cumulative number of posts. Regression analysis suggests that the total posts I cumulatively generate explains about 37% of the data for daily page views.

If one removes outliers of more than 200 page views in a single day, the equation below describes nearly 40% of the data.

©2011 Reflections of a Rational Republican

The bottom line is that not only are one’s page views directly associated with the number of posts one generates, but that there is a predictive relationship between the two numbers that can be described by an exponential curve.

What this means in practice, is that most blogs will start slowly and then begin generating momentum.

This result is intuitive because the more posts that one has on the internet, the more opportunities one has for readers to stumble across one’s site.

Of course, such an exponential increase can not be sustained forever.

My view is that like any product, a blog’s page views follow an S-curve. Readership slowly and steadily increases, then it accelerates until it reaches a critical mass. It  then increases slowly again as it approaches a theoretical saturation point.

In the next installment, I will discuss the next lesson: leveraging the media to drive traffic to your site.

Posted in Blogging, Business, Education, Mathematics, Media, Predictions, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | 11 Comments

My Favorite Governor

There are very few politicians who tell it like it is.

However, the rare politician who does, can be a godsend.

Governor Chris Christie is one of those politicians. I just wish he would run for President.

I wanted to pass the following April 29th video of Chris Christie’s visit to the Harvard School of Education. His views on New Jersey tax rates and educational outcomes are particularly interesting.

Posted in Education, Finance and Economics, Policy, Politics, Taxes, Unions | Tagged , , | 10 Comments

Bin Laden Family Demands Obama Pound of Flesh

“Failure to answer these questions will force us to go to International forum for justice such as International Criminal Court and International Court of Justice and UN must take notice of the violation of international law and assist us to have answers for which we are lawful in seeking them.”

— Omar Osama bin Ladin, Osama bin Laden’s fourth-born son

I am sure President Obama is quaking in his boots. Were I the President, my response would be:

“Come get me.”

Yesterday, the family of Osama bin Laden issued a statement demanding evidence of bin Laden’s death. The statement, riddled with grammatical errors, further complains that the United States military killed rather than captured him.

The statement concludes with the following threat and deadline:

“A panel of eminent British and international lawyers is being constituted and a necessary action may be taken if no answers are furnished within 30 days of this statement.”

To demand that one of the most notorious terrorists in modern history be accorded the rights and dignity that he denied thousands of innocent civilians is absurd in the extreme.

My message to the bin Laden family:

“Be thankful the United States military did not treat Osama in the same manner al Qaeda mutilates its victims.”

Posted in Central Asia, Defense, Energy Security, International Security, Middle East, Policy, Politics, Terrorism, War | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Afghan Strategic Review Appropriate in Wake of Bin Laden Death

On Tuesday, Senators John Kerry (D) and Richard Lugar (R) suggested that the President review the Afghan War effort in light of bin Laden’s death.

I think the Senators’ suggestion is an appropriate one. Continue reading

Posted in Central Asia, Defense, International Security, Policy, Politics, Terrorism, War | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Born Fighting: Entertaining Account of How Scots-Irish Shaped America

©2011 Reflections of a Rational Republican

Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America is Senator Jim Webb’s historical account of how the Scots-Irish ethnic group has strongly influenced the American character. It provides a comprehensive history starting as far back as the Celtic migration from Central Europe to the Islands of Briton and Ireland, and ends in modern America. Continue reading

Posted in Book Reviews, Defense, Media, Policy, Politics, War | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Another Data Point Against Obamacare

“The medical marketplace has really become dominated by the large national carriers…It’s really because it’s not anywhere we feel we can compete effectively.”

Richard Jones, Guardian Life Insurance spokesman

Last week I received a letter from my former healthcare insurer, Guardian Life Insurance, stating that it would be getting out of the medical insurance business. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Finance and Economics, Healthcare, Media, Policy, Politics | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Obama’s National Mileage Tax Is a Bad Idea

The Obama Administration has recently floated the idea of a national mileage tax. The government would install electronic tracking equipment in vehicles to determine how many miles drivers traveled, and drivers would pay the tax electronically at gas stations.

The President proposes creating a Surface Transportation Revenue Alternatives Office costing $200 million through fiscal year 2017, to study how to best implement such a policy. The new office would examine four areas including “the capability of states to enforce payments, the reliability of technology, administrative costs, and ‘user acceptance.'”

I think a mileage tax is a non-starter for several reasons. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Clean Energy, Clean Tech, Energy Security, Finance and Economics, Policy, Politics, Predictions, Taxes | Tagged , , , | 21 Comments

Ten Lessons From Four Months of Blogging: Part I

My decision to start blogging started with a desire to publish a book. I went the traditional route and spent about a month writing a book proposal, and submitting query letters to agents.

I got lucky and landed a phenomenal agent. He told me he could sell my proposal to a small publishing house now, but would prefer to market it to one of the big publishing houses later.

I agreed. Continue reading

Posted in Blogging, Business, Education, Mathematics, Media, Predictions, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | 22 Comments

Is the Next Election a “Lock” for Obama?

With the successful elimination of terrorist mastermind, Osama bin Laden, President Obama’s prospects for an election victory in 2012 seem much brighter. In the wake of bin Laden’s death, Obama’s approval ratings have surged 9 percentage points since April from 47% to 56% according to a recent Pew Research Center and Washington Post poll.

That said, does President Obama have a “lock” on reelection in 2012? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Central Asia, Defense, Energy Security, Finance and Economics, International Security, Media, Middle East, Policy, Politics, Predictions, Taxes, Terrorism, War | Tagged , , , , , | 8 Comments

Bush vs. Obama: Unemployment

Change in Total Private Employment (in thousands), Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Update: Click here for the most recent jobs statistics.

I posted an article last month that compared the unemployment rate under President George W. Bush with the unemployment rate under President Obama at that time. I felt compelled to publish this article because some left-leaning sites were comparing Obama’s first two years and three months in office with Bush’s last and worst economic year (the above chart shows the most recent incarnation of this narrative).

In light of yesterday’s jobs numbers, some left-leaning blogs continue to use Bush’s last year as a foil to Obama’s two years and four months in office. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Finance and Economics, Media, Policy, Politics | Tagged , , | 53 Comments