The October Escapades of The Money Moose.
October 31st, 2007 by The Money Moose
What you’re looking at right now is a snapshot that will make history. A snapshot that will become famous. A snapshot of MoneyMoose.
October was quite eventful for this fledgling site as it burst out of its warm and cozy cocoon into the dark, scary, cold, and oddly humid world of blogging. It’s a jungle out there. We launched on Thursday, October 11th (surely a day to be remembered in history) with our three first articles:
Welcome to Irresponsible Investing - an overview of our goals.
Say No To Diversification - why investing in a single stock
could beis right for you.Your Nigerian Partner - a short bit on how the top financial advisers all come from Nigeria.
Since then, we’ve gone on to cover news, provide financial advice, and more. We’re very proud of ourselves. And so are our mothers. We think.
Of course, we’ve had some gems that have shined out through the months (in no specific order):
Your guide on the generic splash advertising page. Become a marketing genius!
How to save money on insulating your house. Toasty!
Is going to college really worth it, or is a career in the food service industry right for you?
Three very simple financial tips for making more money. You can finally eat real food!
What’s the one thing every investor needs? Why, it’s luck!
Where does India go to outsource its labor? Apparently, America?!
Now then. Some stats.
Apparently, some fancy shcmancy program called Google Analytics tells me that I’ve got:
422 visits since October 19, with my biggest referring site being StumbleUpon. Much love to you, Stumblers!
StatCounter says that I’ve got:
542 visits since October 15, with an average of 25 visits per day.
Bluehost says that I’ve got:
Around 1500 visits since site launch.
My eight ball says that I’m Elvis reborn.
In conclusion, unique visitor counts are weird. And MoneyMoose is good. That too.
See you next month!
Popularity: 3% [?]
This entry was posted on Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 at 8:38 pm and is filed under Financial Info. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.






