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Best Blogging Practices, Part 4: The Blog Without a Name
July 27, 2010As an author, you’ve probably been told you should be blogging. Blogs are an excellent way to engage your audience and establish yourself as an authority figure. Still, many find the idea of blogging overwhelming and the actual process of writing blog posts almost unbearable. But with a little bit of planning, a few shortcuts, and some tips from the blogosphere, you can be posting and engaging with readers in no time. Here is our five-part series on blogging to help you get started:
Part One: To Blog or Not to Blog (why you should blog)
Part Two: A Blog Without a Cause (what to blog about)
Part Three: Taming the Blog Monster (managing your blog)
Part Four: The Blog Without a Name (promoting your blog)
Part Five: Blog Vital Signs (tracking your progress)
In part four of our series, we will focus on ways to promote your blog. It’s not enough to just create a blog and upload content. All of your hard work means nothing if no one knows about it.
The best way to promote your blog is through social media. Every time you publish a new post, create aquick lead line,attach a link back to your blog,and then share it on your social media accounts, including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and ot
hers. Post them on message boards and in discussions that will interest your target audience, and use relevant hashtags on Twitter to get your post in front of people who will be interested in the topic of your blog. Do this every single time you post. You may even want to post the link 2–3 times in the same media stream in order to capture different people as they view their news feed. Just don’t get too obnoxious with posting links—even it out with plenty of valuable content and personal interaction.
Here are a few more tips to get your blog out there and in front of readers:
- Comment on other blogs that cover your topic. When you post the comment, share a link back to your own blog along with your comment.
- Offer up your posts for syndication to aggregators and other outlets in your genre. Just be sure to prequalify outlets and their practices so you can keep your brand intact.
- Promote social bookmarking through such outlets as Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Social Poster, and more. Most blog services have a widget that will display a bookmarking toolbar for each post. If not, have your web designer embed this type of widget on your blog.
In our next and final post, we cover ways to track your blog’s progress and statistics.
Best Blogging Practices, Part Three: Taming the Blog Monster
July 20, 2010As an author, you’ve probably been told you should be blogging. Blogs are an excellent way to engage your audience and establish yourself as an authority figure. Still, many find the idea of blogging overwhelming and the actual process of writing blog posts almost unbearable. But with a little bit of planning, a few shortcuts, and some tips from the blogosphere, you can be posting and engaging with readers in no time. Here is our five-part series on blogging to help you get started:
Part One: To Blog or Not to Blog (why you should blog)
Part Two: A Blog Without a Cause (what to blog about)
Part Three: Taming the Blog Monster (managing your blog)
Part Four: The Blog Without a Name (promoting your blog)
Part Five: Blog Vital Signs (tracking your progress)
In part three of our series, we show you ways to manage your blog so it doesn’t manage you. If you read our original post on how to develop content for your blog, then you should already have a stockpile of posts to draw on. Next, you want to get them up into the blogosphere.
Some people enjoy blogging on a daily basis, but for most it’s too time consuming and can interfere with other important tasks. Luckily, most blog services such as Wordpress and Blogspot have the option to set a publish date and time, so you can load several posts in one sitting and have them publish automatically in the future. This way you are generating content on the recommended daily basis without the trouble of logging in and posting every day.
As I just mentioned, it is recommended that you blog daily, primarily on weekdays; regular posts positively impact search rankings in search engines such as Google and Yahoo. Still, posting a couple times a week is a good way to generate traffic on a frequent basis. The key word here is consistency. Don’t post five one week and then nothing for the next two weeks. People won’t be interested in what you have to say if they have no idea when you are going to say it. Develop a schedule and stick to it.
Another option to help you manage your blog is to either host guest bloggers or have a co-blogger. This way, the workload is divided among more than one person. Guest blogs are a great way to pull another blogger’s followers into your site (new potential readers) and to provide fresh content. Co-bloggers help take some of the burden off you, and also bring another perspective and new information to the blog. Just remember to choose cohorts who are in line with your author brand so you can keep your message on target and keep your audience engaged.
In our next post we discuss ways to draw readers into your blog.
Best Blogging Practices, Part One: To Blog or Not to Blog
July 8, 2010As an author, you’ve probably been told you should be blogging. Blogs are an excellent way to engage your audience and establish yourself as an authority figure. Still, many find the idea of blogging overwhelming and the actual process of writing blog posts almost unbearable. But with a little bit of planning, a few shortcuts, and some tips from the blogosphere, you can be posting and engaging with readers in no time. Here is our five-part series on blogging to help you get started:
Part One: To Blog or Not to Blog (why you should blog)
Part Two: A Blog Without a Cause (what to blog about)
Part Three: Taming the Blog Monster (managing your blog)
Part Four: The Blog Without a Name (promoting your blog)
Part Five: Blog Vital Signs (tracking your progress)
As Seth Godin and Tom Peters say in this video, blogging is the best marketing tool that lets you involve yourself in an actual conversation with your audience.
Now, what is a blog? I’m sure you have some idea (you are reading one now, after all), but here is another video that explains what a blog is, in simple language and with great visuals:
Now you can see why blogging is so important to your platform. It’s a free and easy way to share news, ideas, events, and other important items related to your marketing message.
Getting started
The first thing you need to do is choose a catchy, easy-to-spell, and relevant URL. Your options include:
- Purchasing a domain outright from such places as Go Daddy
- Hosting your blog on your existing website
- Using a free service such as Blogspot or WordPress
Since blogs are updated regularly, hosting your blog on your website gives you the best search engine optimization for your website, but a free site is just as good in terms of creating continuous and engaging content.
Next, you need to develop relevant content, which is covered in part two of our Best Blogging Practices series.
DailyBlogTips.com
February 2, 2009If you're new to blogging, a great site to subscribe to is Daily Blog Tips. It has valuable information no matter how long you've been blogging.
Web Map to Social Media, Part 6: Widgets
September 27, 2007
According to a recent article in the New York Times, 48 percent of Internet users--about 87 million people--use widgets. Widgets were first introduced to the World Wide Web in 2001, but they have recently joined the ranks of the hot new Web 2.0 tools that can help push your message to the masses.
The technical definition of a widget is a chunk of code that can be embedded within a page of HTML. For those of us who aren't technologically savvy, a widget is basically a small application that you can add to your blog, social networking page, or your book's web page to help increase its interactivity.
Now, you may be thinking that widgets don't really fall into the realm of social media, but I would like to think that they do. Increasing your interactive presence online will enhance a visitor's personal experience on your Web site, and widgets can enhance the social media programs you are already utilizing to increase your visibility online.
Here are a few widgets you can add to your web page to dress it up a bit:
- Google's Book Bar Wizard is a simple and customizable shelf that is extremely easy to set up. Enter the information about your book and Web site, and Google will generate the code for you. The Book Bar will allow your visitors to click on your book and preview it using Google Book Search.
- Twitter Widget keeps your fellow Twitterers and your other web followers constantly updated on your travel schedule. Add this widget to your MySpace profile page and combine two of your social media efforts.
- The Flickr Slideshow is highly customizable and allows you to post a slide show of all the wonderful pictures you took on your book tour onto your Web site.
- You can browse for more widgets at WidgetBox.com.