Tech Blog Monetization in Practice: Revenue Breakdown of Ads, Courses, and Communities
Have you ever wondered how much a tech blog can earn per month?
2026 research data provides an interesting answer: the median monthly revenue for tech blogs is $1,620. Compare this to other niches - food blogs at $680, travel blogs at $420. Tech bloggers earn nearly 2.4x more than food bloggers and 3.8x more than travel bloggers.
Even more surprising is the top 10% data. These tech bloggers reach $15,000-$20,000 per month. Honestly, I questioned whether these numbers were accurate when I first saw them. But this data comes from EarnifyHub’s professional research, not speculation.
However, median numbers alone aren’t enough. The real question is: how much can MY blog earn? Which path suits me? Ads? Courses? Or paid communities? In this article, I’ll use real data to break down the revenue formulas for all three paths, so you can directly apply them to estimate your own monetization potential.
Ad Monetization - The Numbers Behind Traffic-to-Revenue
Let’s start with ads. This is the most direct monetization method - add ad code, wait for traffic, and revenue follows. The problem is, with the same traffic, you might earn several times less than others.
RPM Difference: Tech Blog’s Natural Advantage
RPM (Revenue Per Mille, or revenue per 1,000 pageviews) is the core metric for ad monetization. Tech blog RPM ranges from $50-$150, while food blogs only reach $15-$30. Why such a huge gap?
Simply put, ad value depends on user demographics. Tech blog readers are mostly programmers, engineers, and technical decision-makers - a group with strong purchasing power and high willingness to spend on SaaS tools, cloud services, and online courses. Advertisers are willing to pay premium prices to reach this audience.
AdSense vs Mediavine: Choosing the Right Ad Platform
Most bloggers start with Google AdSense. The barrier to entry is low - basically anyone can get approved. But AdSense’s RPM isn’t high, around $1-$2 per 1,000 unique visitors.
When your traffic grows to a certain level, consider upgrading to Mediavine or similar premium ad platforms. Mediavine can achieve $10-$20 per 1,000 visitors, 5-10x higher than AdSense. But the threshold is also higher - typically requiring 50,000+ monthly visitors to apply.
Here’s a comparison table to help you estimate:
| Monthly Visitors | AdSense Estimated Revenue | Mediavine Estimated Revenue |
|---|---|---|
| 10K | $10-$20 | $100-$200 (below threshold) |
| 50K | $50-$100 | $500-$1,000 |
| 100K | $100-$200 | $1,000-$2,000 |
| 500K | $500-$1,000 | $5,000-$10,000 |
My Recommendation
The 50,000 monthly visitors threshold is a watershed moment. Below this number, AdSense is sufficient - no need to hassle with Mediavine applications. Above 50,000, upgrading your ad platform can significantly increase revenue.
One more thing: ad placement matters. Don’t plaster ads everywhere - it ruins user experience. I generally recommend placing ads at article beginning, end, and sidebar. Minimize or avoid ads within the main content.
Knowledge Monetization - The ROI Formula from Content to Courses
Ads are essentially passive income. You don’t need extra work - traffic does the job. But if you have professional knowledge to monetize, courses offer more control and active income.
Market Size: Skill-based Courses Growing Fastest
In 2026, the knowledge monetization market reached 43.2 billion yuan, with skill-based courses (programming, design, data analysis, etc.) growing 22%, reaching approximately 8 billion yuan. Udemy’s tech course library grew 70% in 2025, with registration growth of 40%. The data shows one thing: demand for tech courses is still rising.
Pricing Strategy: Choosing Among Three Tiers
Course pricing isn’t about going higher or lower - it’s about finding the right fit. I’ve identified three common tiers:
Introductory Foundation Course: 99-199 yuan. These courses suit readers just starting out, with content focused on concepts and overview. Low price barrier, relatively higher conversion rate.
Advanced Practical Course: 399-699 yuan. This is the core product for most tech bloggers. Readers already have some foundation and want to solve real problems. Content should include code examples, practical projects, and common pitfalls analysis.
Premium Bootcamp: 999-2,999 yuan. Suits readers with clear learning goals, such as career transition, job hunting, or deep mastery of a specific field. These courses typically include live Q&A sessions, assignment grading, and project reviews for deep delivery.
Revenue Calculation Formula
Use this formula to estimate course revenue:
Course Revenue = Traffic x Course Conversion Rate x Course Price
- Traffic: Blog monthly visitors
- Conversion Rate: 0.5%-2% (tech courses on the higher end, introductory courses even higher)
- Price: Based on course type
Here’s an example: Your blog has 50,000 monthly visitors, you sell an advanced practical course at 399 yuan with a 1% conversion rate:
50000 x 1% x 399 = 199,500 yuan/month
Of course, this is theoretical. Actual conversion depends on course quality, user trust, and marketing copy. But the formula gives you a rough expectation.
Platform Selection: Balancing Commission and Brand
Selling courses requires choosing a platform. Commission rates vary significantly:
| Platform | Commission Rate | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Udemy | 50% revenue share | High traffic, broad audience, market expansion |
| Teachable | 0% + monthly fee $29-$299 | Self-built brand, full control, existing fan base |
| Knowledge Planet | 0% | Community integration, fan cultivation, community-focused bloggers |
Udemy’s advantage is its built-in traffic pool - users actively searching for courses can discover your product. But 50% revenue share is painful. Teachable requires you to drive your own traffic, but all revenue is yours. Knowledge Planet suits bloggers with an existing community base, integrating courses with community operations.
A Personal Experience
I previously created a system design course. Initially, the conversion rate was only 0.3%. Later, I optimized the course outline, added practical case studies, and revised the marketing copy - registration grew 300%. Course content quality is paramount - poor content can’t be saved by great marketing.
Paid Communities - The Revenue Model from Fans to Members
Community monetization has changed significantly in recent years. A 2026 trend data point: paid community renewal rates dropped 40%. Users are no longer willing to pay for “insights” - they want “results”.
What Does Declining Renewal Rate Mean?
Simply put, users have become smarter. A few years ago, many were willing to pay to join communities, thinking they’d learn new things and meet new people. But now users ask: What specific results can I get by joining your community? Can you help me land a job offer? Can you help me ship a project?
If your community only outputs “insights” - sharing articles, chatting about ideas, occasional Q&A - renewal rates will be abysmal.
Success Stories: What Kind of Communities Make Money
I examined several representative cases:
CNBlogs VIP/PLUS: Annual fee 99-399 yuan. This type of tech community has low pricing, relying mainly on scale operations. Users are willing to pay for privileges (like PDF downloads, ad-free experience, exclusive forums).
Weight Loss Community Case: Average customer value 2,800 yuan, repeat purchase rate 10%, 20,000+ members. This community delivers clear results - successful weight loss, body transformation. Users are willing to pay high prices because there’s a concrete goal.
Zhihu Author’s 5 Years 4 Million: A Zhihu author ran a paid community for 5 years, earning 4 million yuan, adding about 1,000 new members annually. The community focuses on one area: writing for monetization. Users join to learn how to make money from writing - a very clear result.
Revenue Calculation Formula
Community revenue calculation is more complex than courses because it involves renewal rates:
Community Annual Revenue = New Members x Annual Fee x Renewal Rate^n
- New Members: Traffic x Community Conversion Rate (0.2%-0.5%)
- Annual Fee: Priced based on delivery depth
- Renewal Rate: Tech-focused on the lower end (20-30%), result-oriented higher (50%+)
- n: Years in operation
Here’s an example: 50,000 monthly visitors, 0.3% community conversion rate, 299 yuan annual fee, 30% renewal rate, 3 years of operation:
Year 1 new members: 50000 x 0.3% x 12 months x 299 = 53,820 yuan
Year 2: 53,820 x 30% + new 53,820 = 70,016 yuan
Year 3: 70,016 x 30% + new 53,820 = 74,825 yuan
Three-year total approximately 199,000 yuan.
A Critical Warning
Don’t just sell “insights”. If your community only offers article sharing, occasional Q&A, and online meetups - this model is hard to sustain. Users will pay for skill improvement, project completion, and job search success. They won’t pay for pure knowledge.
You need to think clearly: What specific results can users get by joining my community?
Mixed Configuration - The Optimal Combination of Three Paths
Looking at each path individually, you might think each has pros and cons. But bloggers who truly make money often combine multiple paths.
The Ceiling of Per-Visitor Value
EarnifyHub data shows that mixed monetization can achieve $20.20 RPM per visitor. Breaking it down:
- Ads: $0.20
- Affiliate Marketing: $15 (high-conversion products)
- Digital Products (Courses): $5
Affiliate marketing contributes the most. If you recommend SaaS tools, commissions are typically 20-40% recurring. For example, recommending a $99/month cloud service, you earn $20-$40 monthly after a user subscribes, continuing until they cancel. Hosting products have even higher commissions - a single sale can earn $50-$500.
Configuration Strategy by Traffic Level
Different traffic levels require different configuration strategies. Here’s a reference table:
| Traffic Level | Primary Path | Secondary Path | Not Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|
| <10K | Courses | Community | Ads (revenue too low) |
| 10K-50K | Affiliate + Courses | Community | Pure Ads |
| 50K-100K | Ads + Affiliate | Courses | Pure Community |
| >100K | All Open | - | - |
When traffic is under 10,000, ad revenue is essentially negligible. At this point, courses and communities are more practical choices. While course conversion rates are low, the high price point means just a few sales bring hundreds or thousands in revenue.
At 10,000-50,000 traffic, affiliate marketing deserves serious investment. Recommend tools, services, and books mentioned in your blog - whenever users purchase, you earn commissions.
Above 50,000 traffic, ads start making sense. After upgrading to platforms like Mediavine, monthly revenue can stabilize at several thousand dollars. At this point, you can layer in affiliate and courses.
A Real Case Study
There’s a blogger doing programmatic SEO with 2,500 pages, 180K monthly visitors, and $9,400 revenue. His monetization mix: primarily affiliate marketing (recommending SEO tools), supplemented by courses (teaching others how to do programmatic SEO), with ads as additional income. This combination achieved $52 per-visitor value.
Honestly, this number is enviable. But you should know - he spent 2 years building this project. It didn’t happen overnight.
Conclusion
After all this, let me summarize the revenue formulas for all three paths:
Ad Revenue: Monthly Visitors x RPM/1000 x Adjustment Factor
- AdSense RPM: $1-$2 per 1,000 visitors
- Mediavine RPM: $10-$20 per 1,000 visitors
- Tech blog natural advantage: RPM $50-$150
Course Revenue: Traffic x Course Conversion Rate (0.5%-2%) x Course Price
- Introductory: 99-199 yuan
- Advanced: 399-699 yuan
- Bootcamp: 999-2,999 yuan
Community Revenue: New Members x Annual Fee x Renewal Rate^n
- New Members: Traffic x 0.2%-0.5%
- Renewal Rate: Result-oriented 50%+, pure insights 20-30%
Your Action Path
-
Calculate First: Use the formulas above to estimate your blog’s current traffic level and monetization potential. Don’t rely on gut feelings - calculate to see where the gaps are.
-
Choose One Primary Path: Under 50,000 traffic, I recommend courses or affiliate. Above 50,000, ads start making sense.
-
Layer After Milestones: Focus deeply on one path first. After achieving stable revenue, layer in other paths. Don’t try to do everything from the start.
-
Quarterly Review: Record actual data - traffic, conversion rates, revenue. Review quarterly to see which paths work well and which need adjustment.
At the end of the day, monetization has no shortcuts. Formulas can give you expectations, but actual revenue depends on content quality, user trust, and execution. Focus on creating great content first - traffic and revenue will naturally follow.
FAQ
How big is the gap between tech blog ad revenue and food blogs?
What's the typical course conversion rate? How can I improve it?
Why are paid community renewal rates declining?
With under 50,000 monthly visitors, which monetization path should I choose?
How big is the difference between Mediavine and AdSense?
9 min read · Published on: May 17, 2026 · Modified on: May 17, 2026
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