How can you Make Money FromYour Blog

You Can make money from your blog By diplaying advertisers ads on your blogs. As Tv channels and news paper generate revenue by diplaying advertisers ads on their respective channels , news papers, Magzines etc. You can also display Advertiser ads on your blog and websites. Best way of getting these ads is "Ads By google " See these ads on the top and on right side of my page, You can also have these ads by joining google adsense prgram, Now You want to what is adsense program ??
Google AdSense is the program that can give you advertising revenue from each page on your website or Blogs—with minimal investment in time and no additional resources.
AdSense delivers relevant text and image ads that are precisely targeted to your site and your site content. And when you add a Google search box to your site, AdSense delivers relevant text ads that are targeted to the Google search results pages generated by your visitors’ search request.

you will earn the revenue you when you will place advertiser ads that is google ads on your page. Every time when anyone click on these ads you will got some short of money, here clicks value can be different many times the ads look like as right here so if you have blog or website apply for it now and if you don't have, make for free at http://blogger.com for life time post good content (atleast 20 post) and then "Sign Up for Adsense ". After applying wait for approvel of your blog, and When you got approvel email then sign in and go to adsense setup choose your ads type(test, image, links) and its size such as (180x150, 728x90, 250x250 )
and links, title, background colour then click next then add channels these channels are unique identity of your ads(blog, ads position) so that you can know that which ads is clicked by your blogs visitors, then click nest and you will got some html code paste this html code in your blog, sign in your blog addnew page element Html type in layout section and paste code there
Remember do not clicks on your ads you will be banned for adsense for that, and don't voilate adsense policies, You can place maximum 3 (text or image)ads, 3 link ads, 2 search boxes in a single page, So Best of luck and happy earnings

Advertisers Publishers seeks out blog spots

It is a big blog world. Advertisers and publishers seem to have finally realised this. And they want to make the most of it.

Last week, Salt Water Blues, a Mumbai blog, revealed that a shampoo manufacturer was ready to pay for adding the shampoo brand name to the blog’s.

The author of Compulsive Confessor, a blog that gets 600 hits daily, has just completed her first book. Penguin India commissioned it after reading the blog. Another publisher loved Arun Krishnan’s blog, Cutting Chai. Krishnan’s novel, Loudest Firecracker, will be published in October.

Ravi Singh of Penguin India says, "Blogs are a new option to discover new talent." Adds Nilanjana S Roy, chief editor, EastWest and Westland Books: "You can follow a writer’s progression and the possibility of new trends on blogs." Roy discovered Krishnan’s work.

Delhi-based Jai Arjun Singh, whose blog Jabberwocky deals largely with books and movies, is finalising a deal with Pix. The TV channel wants to advertise on his blog. "I was even approached by a matrimonial website to advertise its services on my blog. I declined because it didn’t fit in with my blog’s image," says Singh.

Himmat Butalia, marketing head, Pix, says Jabberwocky has what his channel wants. "We were interested in Jabberwocky because it’s a blog that writes about old films. It goes with our channel’s target audience, since Pix showcases old and different movies," he says.

Language blogs too are getting the offers. Mohalla, a Hindi blog by Avinash Das, has been approached by an ad firm. Says Das: "A regional language blog has an advantage — it helps advertisers focus upon a narrow, specific audience."

Ad-guru Prahlad Kakkar sums it up: "An advertiser will sell anything, any which way. Blogs are in because people are talking about them." Jairaj Singh, Hindustan Times

Bloggers Doing Good but a long way to go

A bit like the Indian population, the blogosphere substantially multiplies in size with each passing day. In India, in particular, a recent and interim ban on blogs meant that bloggers were able to garner more attention than the ban itself and were thus able to get their virtual voices heard in the real world of newspapers and television. The question that we now seek to answer is this — Can India ever achieve superpower status in the blogosphere?

Author of the blog, labnol.blogspot.com, ex-IITian Amit Agarwal gave up his regular day job with Infosys to become a professional blogger. He says, "There are various factors that currently prevent India from being a blogging superpower. We do not have enough people blogging and more importantly, there aren't enough people reading blogs. To add to this, the majority of Indian blogs are personal diaries that would only be interesting to the family and friends of the blog's author."

Still to achieve critical mass

Important facts

•As of July 2006, there were 40,128 bloggers on blogspot.com, who identified themselves as Indians

•Of these, 80 per cent were male and 13 per cent female. This is a serious deviation from the global blogging gender scenario, where 45 per cent are men and 38 per cent women

•Fifty one per cent of Indian bloggers fall under the 21-30 age group

Agarwal is of the opinion that unlike other countries, many bloggers in India have not realised that blogs can be a good mechanism to generate revenue. He says, "Advertising apart, there is a lot else that you can do to make money from your blog. But this requires a desire to take on great risks and one also needs to dedicate a lot of time to ensure that one's blog is easily locatable on varied search engines. And there aren't enough people doing that." For India to break through the seams of the blogosphere, feels Agarwal, Indian bloggers need to do a lot more than just write good content.

Amit Varma's blog, indiauncut.blogspot.com, won the Best Indiblog award in 2005 and his is arguably the most popular Indian voice in the blogosphere. Varma believes that the term 'superpower', in the context of the world or the blogosphere, can prove to be very misleading. And like Agarwal, he believes that Indian blogging and bloggers have a long way to go. He says, "If we are to look at the state of blogging in the States, we would find that there are many political blogs, which are influential and help mobilise election campaigns. India is different because blogs don't have such a high readership here and Internet access isn't high enough to influence voting patterns." Varma does go on to add that the advent of vernacular blogging, however, might change this status quo as it would make blogs more ubiquitous and eventually, politically influential.

A collective private history

Delhi-based Nikhil Pahwa of mixedbag.blogspot.com believes that any connection made between a nation's blog and its superpower status, can well be logically fatal. He argues, "When the Americans started bombing Iraq, an Iraqi national found a computer in a still-functional cyber-café and blogged away. His blog went on to become one of the most powerful and popular blogs on the Internet and thanks to the blog, he was able to get a job with The Guardian. But his achievement obviously does not reflect or sediment Iraq's reputation as a superpower of any kind."

If we take Pahwa's argument a little further and conclude that blogs are personal voices that are fashioned by a larger national one, we should also be able to say that the collective of Indian blogs will eventually prove to be a useful lens through which we can view the country's transition from what it dreams to be to what it becomes. Chandrahas Choudhury, who blogs at middlestage.blogspot.com, says, "Blogs record the changes that occur and since blogs are personal voices that seek to make sense of complex issues, they collectively become the private history of a country." Shreevatsa Nevatia, Hindustan Times