Tuesday, 31 May 2011

ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income

ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure IncomeA complete how-to from two of the world’s top bloggers

Thousands of aspiring bloggers launch new blogs every day, hoping to boost their income. Without solid advice from experts, most will fail. This bestselling guide, now fully revised with new and updated tips and tricks from two of the world’s most successful bloggers, provides the step-by-step information bloggers need to turn their hobby into an income source or a fulltime career.

  • Earning a solid income from blogging is possible, but tricky; this book details proven techniques and gives aspiring bloggers the tools to succeed
  • Even novices will learn to choose a blog topic, analyze the market, set up a blog, promote it, and earn revenue
  • Offers solid, step-by-step instruction on how bloggers make money, why niches matter, how to use essential blogging tools and take advantage of social media and content aggregators, what a successful blog post should include, how to optimize advertising, and much more

Written by two fulltime professional bloggers, the updated edition of ProBlogger tells you exactly how to launch and maintain a blog that makes money.

Price: $24.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Monday, 30 May 2011

Blogging All-in-One For Dummies

Blogging All-in-One For DummiesA complete guide to creating and establishing your place in the blogosphere!

New blogs are being launched at the rate of 175,000 a day. To stand out from the masses, bloggers need the detailed information and advice packed into this all-in-one guide.

Here's what new bloggers need to get started and what experienced bloggers need to upgrade and even earn money from their blogs. Eight self-contained minibooks cover joining the blogosphere, blogging software, tools that extend your blog, marketing your blog, microblogging, making money from your blog, corporate blogging, and niche blogging.

  • Blogging is replacing traditional media and gaining credibility; to succeed, bloggers need a greater understanding of blogging basics, tools, and techniques
  • Eight minibooks cover getting started, software, other tools, blog marketing, microblogging (including Twitter), monetizing your blog, and corporate and niche blogging
  • Helps new bloggers become active and productive members of the blogging community
  • Provides vital information for both hobby bloggers and those who want to build a career around blogging

Presented in the fun and friendly For Dummies style, Blogging All-in-One For Dummies is a complete reference guide to starting and maintaining a successful blog.

Price: $34.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Make Money as a Writer - How to Make a Fulltime Income Writing Articles, Books, and Blogs (Mogul Mom Work-at-Home Book Series)

Make Money as a Writer - How to Make a Fulltime Income Writing Articles, Books, and Blogs (Mogul Mom Work-at-Home Book Series)"I'd Give Anything to Work from Home!"

If you've ever wanted to work from home, you're not alone!

And if you're like most mothers...

? You Want More Time with Your Kids

? You'd Like to Earn More Money

? You Desire More Control Over Your Schedule - Flexible Hours, Specific Days Off

But how can you make it happen?

Let Me Explain...

You really can have it all...a happy family, a successful career, a great income, and even more time for yourself!

? If you are a CREATIVE mom looking to bring in extra cash every month without sacrificing your freedom...

? If you are a CLEVER mom looking for a way to quit your job and finally stay at home with your kids...

? If you are a RESOURCEFUL mom looking for a way to have more free time, make more money, and achieve your own success...

Writing is the opportunity you are looking for!

Writers are becoming more and more in-demand every single day. Businesses and individuals alike are in constant need of writers to create written content, including articles, stories, books, and blogs...and they're willing to pay good money!

Do you need any experience? No! The business of writing is easy to learn and I'll show you everything you need to know! I'll even show you how to get your first clients!

In just a few days, you could have your own freelance writing business up and running...all you need is a computer!

If you're ready to write for a living...get this book!

Price: $8.97


Click here to buy from Amazon

Sunday, 29 May 2011

Twitter Revolution: How Social Media and Mobile Marketing is Changing the Way We Do Business & Market Online

Twitter Revolution: How Social Media and Mobile Marketing is Changing the Way We Do Business & Market OnlineNO RULESThe revolution is underway. The power of social media lies with the people who use tools like Twitter.com. You decide how to use your power.Our goal is not to create rules to follow on Twitter. We simply want to give you the best tips, resources and strategies to guide your success on Twitter at an accelerated pace. Our mission is to help you avoid trial and error as early adopters were forced to endure, and help you participate in one of the greatest communication revolution of our time. This book was designed to help show everyone from the small business owner to the CEO of a large corporation; from work at home moms to politicians in Washington, DC how they can participate in the fastest growing social network and micro-blogging revolution taking place right now. Join us on Twitter!

Price: $18.97


Click here to buy from Amazon

Saturday, 28 May 2011

The Huffington Post Complete Guide to Blogging

Book Description
The editors of The Huffington Post--the most linked-to blog on the web--offer an A-Z guide to all things blog, with information for everyone from the tech-challenged newbie looking to get a handle on this new way of communicating to the experienced blogger looking to break through the clutter of the Internet. With an introduction by Arianna Huffington, the site's cofounder and editor in chief, this book is everything you want to know about blogging, but didn't know who to ask.

As entertaining as it is informative, The Huffington Post Complete Guide to Blogging will show you what to do to get your blog started. You'll find tools to help you build your blog, strategies to create your community, tips on finding your voice, and entertaining anecdotes from HuffPost bloggers that will make you wonder what took you so long to blog in the first place.

The Guide also includes choice selections from HuffPost's wide-ranging mix of top-notch bloggers. Among those who have blogged on HuffPost are Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Larry David, Jane Smiley, Bill Maher, Nora Ephron, Jon Robin Baitz, Steve Martin, Lawrence O'Donnell, Ari Emanuel, Mia Farrow, Al Franken, Gary Hart, Barbara Ehrenreich, Edward Kennedy, Harry Shearer, Nancy Pelosi, Adam McKay, John Ridley, and Alec Baldwin.

A Message from Arianna Huffington

Dear Amazon customer,

I'm thrilled to be working with Amazon.com as an online bookseller and partner for the publication of our new book, The Huffington Post Complete Guide to Blogging. Amazon understands how to use the Internet to harness intelligence that enables people to make informed decisions. That mission is similar to that of The Huffington Post, a news and opinion site I co-founded in May 2005, and which has grown to become the most linked-to blog in the world. Bringing people together and sparking interesting conversations among my friends is ingrained in my DNA, and the world of blogging has opened up this passion to endless possibilities. It's fast-paced, limitless, and best of all, there's room for everyone. That's why I'm so excited about our Complete Guide to Blogging--if you have ever tried to start your own blog, wondered if you could, or if you're just an insatiable blog-addict, this book is for you. Our team of editors and contributors has put together all the tools you'll need to build your blog, strategies to create your community, ideas for finding your blogger voice, and countless, hilarious anecdotes and stories.

What are you waiting for? Start blogging!

Best,
Arianna

Questions for Arianna Huffington

Amazon.com: There are over 100 million blogs in the world, and counting. Does the world need another one? Is it too late to start one that will have any sort of impact?

Huffington: There is always room for another blog – the key is having something to say, and the ability to say it in an interesting way. That combination will allow you to break through in almost any medium, but especially in blogging. New bloggers are rising to the top all the time.

Amazon.com: When you meet someone and tell them, "You should blog!" (which it's my understanding happens quite often), what is it about them that makes you think they'd be a good blogger, especially in the long term? Are there some writers you wouldn't say that to?

Huffington: I invite people who have an interesting point of view, a provocative way of looking at the world. And the best bloggers tend to be a little obsessed about something. When I see those things, I get excited about offering a platform to express them. One of the original reasons for starting HuffPost was my feeling that some of the most interesting voices in our culture weren't online--and I wanted to make it easier for them to make the transition.

Amazon.com: Has the Huffington Post turned out the way you planned? What surprises did you adapt to take advantage of?

Huffington: We had our hopes, but no one could have predicted that HuffPost would become such a huge success. One of the things that surprised us was the passion expressed by our community, so we worked hard to provide them an easy way to comment, and an environment where civil discourse is encouraged.

Amazon.com: As many people have noted, the Obama campaign was the first to really harness the power of the web for fundraising and organizing. Do you think running in the first heavily blogged election also made his victory more possible?

Huffington: Obama's online operation was state of the art--incorporating everything from viral videos to texting-as-a-grassroots-organzing-tool to social networking sites to its online fundraising juggernaut--and was a key component in his success. It wouldn't be overstating things to say that if it wasn't for the web, we'd be inaugurating a different 44th president on January 20th. And thanks to blogging--and YouTube, instant fact-checks, and viral emails--it was much harder for his opponents to use the tactics of the past: fear, smear, and anything goes.

Amazon.com: You and your editors have written a book about blogging (while noting the irony of doing so). There's a lot of talk about the relationship between blogs and newspapers, but less so about how blogs will live with books. Aside from the obvious examples of bloggers getting book deals, how do you think blogs and books will affect each other?

Huffington: Anything that keeps people reading is a good thing! And blogging has certainly led to a renaissance of sorts for the written word. We live in a culture dominated by visual imagery and communication, so having so much vital writing on the web has helped re-habituate the younger generation to reading ... and hopefully blogs will be a gateway drug that leads them on to the harder stuff of books. And people blogging about books is obviously a great way to promote the best of the new releases (and some deserving older releases that never got the attention they warranted).

Price: $15.00


Click here to buy from Amazon

#Code Bytes: Conversations With Internet Entrepreneurs

#Code Bytes: Conversations With Internet EntrepreneursWith the foreword written by John Chow, who is widely considered one of the world's most well known bloggers, we have assimilated quite possibly the most comprehensive resource for the aspiring and savvy Internet Entrepreneur.

This book features interviews with: Chris Brogan, Timothy Sykes, Yaro Starak, Jeremy Schoemaker, Chris Pirillo, Aaron Wall, Jason Falls, Neil Patel, Liz Strauss, Jim Kukral, James Martell, Rand Fishkin, Joe Pulizzi, Shawn Collins, Zac Johnson, and more. 

As an added feature, a portion of the proceeds from book sales will be allocated to several scholarships that are designed to help aspiring Internet entrepreneurs startup an online business.  

In this first series of #Code Bytes, we have scoured the Internet for some of the most successful entrepreneurs online. These individuals have cracked the code to turning their passions into financial freedom.  

The initial purpose of the interview series contained in this book was to share the stories of successful Internet entrepreneurs on our blogs to provide insights to why so many people fail online.  

Amazingly, as we were doing these interviews, all of the featured entrepreneurs shared common elements that allowed them to overcome common pitfalls.  

The reason we decided to turn these conversations into a book is because we believe in abundance and wanted to reach as many individuals as possible with hopes of changing lives.

Price: $22.95


Click here to buy from Amazon

Friday, 27 May 2011

The Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing Our Culture

The Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing Our CultureAmateur hour has arrived, and the audience is running the show

In a hard-hitting and provocative polemic, Silicon Valley insider and pundit Andrew Keen exposes the grave consequences of todayâ??s new participatory Web 2.0 and reveals how it threatens our values, economy, and ultimately the very innovation and creativity that forms the fabric of American achievement.

Our most valued cultural institutions, Keen warnsâ??our professional newspapers, magazines, music, and moviesâ??are being overtaken by an avalanche of amateur, user-generated free content. Advertising revenue is being siphoned off by free classified ads on sites like Craigslist; television networks are under attack from free user-generated programming on YouTube and the like; file-sharing and digital piracy have devastated the multibillion-dollar music business and threaten to undermine our movie industry. Worse, Keen claims, our â??cut-and-pasteâ? online cultureâ??in which intellectual property is freely swapped, downloaded, remashed, and aggregatedâ??threatens over 200 years of copyright protection and intellectual property rights, robbing artists, authors, journalists, musicians, editors, and producers of the fruits of their creative labors.

In todayâ??s self-broadcasting culture, where amateurism is celebrated and anyone with an opinion, however ill-informed, can publish a blog, post a video on YouTube, or change an entry on Wikipedia, the distinction between trained expert and uninformed amateur becomes dangerously blurred. When anonymous bloggers and videographers, unconstrained by professional standards or editorial filters, can alter the public debate and manipulate public opinion, truth becomes a commodity to be bought, sold, packaged, and reinvented.

The very anonymity that the Web 2.0 offers calls into question the reliability of the information we receive and creates an environment in which sexual predators and identity thieves can roam free. While no Ludditeâ??Keen pioneered several Internet startups himselfâ??he urges us to consider the consequences of blindly supporting a culture that endorses plagiarism and piracy and that fundamentally weakens traditional media and creative institutions.

Offering concrete solutions on how we can rein in the free-wheeling, narcissistic atmosphere that pervades the Web, THE CULT OF THE AMATEUR is a wake-up call to each and every one of us.

Price: $22.95


Click here to buy from Amazon

How to Start a Recipe or Cooking Blog for Fun & Profit

How to Start a Recipe or Cooking Blog for Fun & ProfitDid you love the movie Julie and Julia? You can start a cooking blog, too!

Are You Ready to Turn Your Passion for Cooking Into a Business that will Put
Extra Cash in your pockets in this Tough Economy? Here's the Perfect
Home-Based Business for Busy People Who Love to Cook 

Everyone has to eat, so starting a recipe blog is something that could brings you lots of fun opportunity and profit if you love to cook. This eBook will show you how to put one together, step by step.

We believe there isn't a person on this planet that doesn't have favorite recipes to share. And, there isn't anyone on this planet who doesn't want more money. And, there isn't a person on this planet that doesn't enjoy FOOD!

Are we correct? ;)

That's why, as a business model, starting a recipe blog has some major benefits:

1.All people eat food.
2."Recipe" and "Recipes" is searched hundreds of thousands of times each month.
3.Eating is something we do 3 or more times each day.
4.And, blogging can be an easy way to make money online.

This business definitely has potential. With this guide, you'll have the tools to begin your recipe blog today.

In this book, you'll learn the steps necessary to setup a great blog in no time. The text covers the more basic things you'll need, like how to:

Set up your Business
Do Niche Market Research
Develop Content
Create Online Promos
Monetize Your Blog
Think Ahead

as well as specific blogging and food related concerns, like:

copyright laws for recipes
ghostwriting
where to find content
guest blogging
where to submit your articles
food related keywords
how to create your target market

...and so much more. Once you've read this resource, you'll have learned everything you need to get your recipe blog going and on its way to making a profit for you.

Price: $4.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Thursday, 26 May 2011

Easy Wordpress SEO: Discover How To Optimize Your Blog For The Search Engines! AAA+++

Easy Wordpress SEO: Discover How To Optimize Your Blog For The Search Engines!  AAA+++Have you ever wished it was easy to set up a perfectly optimized website? That with just a few clicks, you could have your blog ranked in the search engines, without spending days working on improving your search results?

If you don't have the money to hire an SEO consultant, and don't really want to spend days, weeks, or even months working to get your site ranked highly in the search engines, than this is the report for you. Discover some of the most essential Wordpress tweaks, tips, and plugins in this easy to read report.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear Readers:

We are dedicated to providing our customers with cutting edge information with the latest and most popular ebooks & hot topics at very affordable prices. Our mission is to create positive change in your life. We carry hundreds of unique titles including "Literary Classics" under many categories for your convenience. Please click on the name "Manuel Ortiz Braschi" at the top of the page, next to the title, or write "Manuel Ortiz Braschi" at the search box and you will be taken to our main page in Amazon, where you will be able to check all the interesting, unique and informative titles that we carry at Amazon Kindle.

Price: $0.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Blogging Professional: The Complete Guide To Building A High Profit Blog Empire!" Make Money As A Professional Blogger! AAA+++

Blogging Professional: The Complete Guide To Building A High Profit Blog Empire!Unlike the majority of 'how to get rich guides' online, the Blogging Professional focuses on PROVEN strategies to building incredibly profitable blog machines that will consistently drive in targeted traffic and generate income a dozen different ways and the best part of it all? Once you set it up it will continue to run on complete auto pilot!

There are stealth strategies that pro bloggers use to keep their blogs updated with fresh content without ever having to spend hours each day updating their websites. I will show you how they do it.

There are over a dozen different ways of successfully monetizing your blog that the majority of newcomers overlook, leaving thousands of dollars on the table. I will show you exactly how to make the most money possible from every single blog you ever create.

Take a look at what else you will discover:

How to instantly choose a winning topic for your blog that will begin to generate income in just a few days, even if you have never been successful with blogging before! (There are a handful of industries that are surefire winners.. I reveal them all)

How to instantly set up your entire blogging empire, faster and easier than anything else you have ever tried even if you have NEVER installed a script in your life! (You can have a fully functional, optimized blog set up and running in under an hour)

The easiest methods of monetizing your blog so that you are able to start making money in less than 72 hours! There is more to profitable blogging than Adsense. I'll show you the top earners that you NEED to include on your website if you truly want to make the most money possible.

How to drive in an unstoppable flood of targeted traffic absolutely free! Jump start your blog is a HUGE way just by following my step by step "launch from zero" process.

Discover the industry trade secrets of the blogging gurus. People like Darren Rouse and Shoemaker are earning an absolute fortune from online blogging, but they aren't the only ones. Find out how you can join the ranks of the top earners using underground strategies never before revealed.

The Instant Blog Cash Formula: Finally, you will know exactly how to set up automated blogs that continue to drive in cash even when you are miles away from the computer! Never babysit your blog again.. set it all on complete auto pilot and focus your time on expanding your blog network.

This is barely scratching the surface of what I reveal within the pages of the Blogging Professional. I've spent the last three years of my life perfecting this system, and let me tell you, I hold NOTHING back!

From start to finish, the Blogging Professional is an all inclusive, complete guide to building an online empire with simple, laser targeted blogs.

Whether you are brand new to online business or if you have a bit of experience with blogging, the information revealed within this exclusive blueprint will show you everything you need to know to build highly profitable websites quickly and easily.

If you put even half of the strategies revealed within the Blogging Professional guide into action, you will be able to build your very own unstoppable cash machine, faster and easier than anything else you've ever tried. Then, replicate the process to make even more money. It's as simple as that! If you truly want to make money online, you absolutely need to grab a copy of the Blogging Professional guide.

Price: $0.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Google Blogger For Dummies

Google Blogger For DummiesAre you bemused by blogs? Eager to become a blogger? Google Blogger For Dummies can help you start blogging sooner than you think.

More than 14 million people are promoting a business, connecting with family and friends, and sharing opinions with Google Blogger. This book helps you start a Blogger account, create content, build an audience, make money from your blog, and more, all without learning to program. You’ll be able to:

  • Learn the parts of a blog, what Blogger does, and how to choose goals and blog topics
  • Choose a domain name, learn to use the dashboard, pick a template, and configure settings
  • Dress up your blog with themes and find out where to get plenty of free ones
  • Learn blogging etiquette and some secrets for long-term success
  • Make money from your blog with Google Adsense, contextual and text link ads, and merchandising with CafePress
  • Set up multi-user blogs or branch into mobile blogging, podcasting, or video blogging
  • Take advantage of social networking sites and learn simple search engine optimization techniques
  • Maintain your blog with tools like Blog This! and Quick Edit
  • Moderate comments effectively, track your stats, and more

Google Blogger is a great choice for beginning bloggers, and Google Blogger For Dummies gives you the know-how to venture confidently into the blogosphere.

Price: $24.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Learn How To Make Money Blogging - Blog Mastermind

The Blog Mastermind coaching program led by six-figure Yaro Starak teaches you how to set up and profit from a successful blog. Start making money from blogs by following this step-by-step, weekly coaching program.


Check it out!

Monday, 23 May 2011

The Blog Blueprint - The Ultimate Roadmap to Auto Blogging Profits

The World's Premier Auto Blog System. Incredible Training, Powerful Content, Promotion and Blog Installation Tools. Hot = Conversions! Awesome Upsells Converting at over 50%. $10,000 in Affiliates Prizes http://blogblueprint.com/affiliates


Check it out!

Underground Blogging Secrets

Mavis Nong and Phill Turner reveal the underground secrets to producing a successful money making blog in this ground breaking product. Blogging is a major way Internet Marketers make money online and now you can too. Get Started Today!


Check it out!

Sunday, 22 May 2011

Blog Traffic Cash

Learn and Apply the Basic but Proven Blogging Formula that Makes Money for the Top Internet Marketers. Generous 50% Commissions - Affiliate Tools: http://www.blogtrafficcash.com/affiliates


Check it out!

Saturday, 21 May 2011

Make Money With Blogging

Discover How To Use Your Blog To Make Easy Money. This Is A Very Professional EBook, Gathering All The Information, Methods And Tips On How To Make Money With Blog. No Technical Skills Are Required. Easy & Very Simple!


Check it out!

Easy Blogging Guide

If you have ever wanted the freedom that comes from owning your own business and the satisfaction that comes from speaking your mind and having readers pay you for it then it's time for you to order! Don't wait any longer!


Check it out!

Friday, 20 May 2011

Max Blog Money 2010 Pro Blog Edition

Lowest price for this training! Includes over an hours worth of step-by-step video training teaching you how to correctly build, optimize, and make a profitable Wordpress blog. Perfect for beginner bloggers, tons of helpful bonuses inside. Tech. Support!


Check it out!

Thursday, 19 May 2011

Learn How To Make Money Blogging - Blog Map to Success

Earn 50% income every month. Step-By-Step Weekly Coaching Program for producing a professional looking and high converting blog that has visitors swelling in numbers. By Sahil Mehta Affiliates page - http://www.blogmaptosuccess.com/affiliates.html


Check it out!

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Beginners Blog Profits

Discover how any beginner can earn real money by simply blogging


Check it out!

First Money Enabled Blog - The Basics 4 Wordpress

24 videos - Wordpress: clear and basic instructions on all the major features. Plus 1 "resources" text file of key components Needed to Make Money from a Blog. No hype, no fuss, just the Basics. Detailed Install and configure instructions.


Check it out!

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Instant Blog Submitter

Manage & Distribute content to unlimited WordPress Blogs on auto-pilot. Generate massive amounts of Free money-making traffic with this killer tool. www.instantblogsubmitter.com


Check it out!

Profitable Blogging Secrets

The No Holds Barred, Solid And Simple Way For Anyone To Build A Profitable Blog! 60% Commission On Every Sale With Automatic Up-Sell. http://profitable-blogging-secrets.com/tools.html


Check it out!

Monday, 16 May 2011

How To Build A Money Making Blog

How To Set Up Your Blog, Post Great Content, Grow Your Readership, And Make Money Doing It!


Check it out!

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Blogging and Wordpress Video Tutorials

If you want to make money online you have to learn the basics of internet marketing and blogging. Our video course will help you greatly. Step-By-Step Video Tutorials Reveal Exactly How To Set-Up a Profitable WordPress Blog in Minutes


Check it out!

The Blogging Insider - 70% Commission!!!

Earns You 70% Commission! A Wealthy Blogger Teaches You Step-by-Step How To Create, Generate And Exploit Money Making Blogs. Includes 6 bonuses to make selling this easy. Affiliate Tools Here: http://www.theblogginginsider.com/affiliates.html


Check it out!

Saturday, 14 May 2011

Free-Blog-Advertising

Elite Membership Will Drive Thousands Of Targeted Visitors To Your Blog


Check it out!

Cash Generating Niche Blog Package

This niche blog comes with unique template, plugins, advanced features, monitized for CB, adsense and other affiliate programs. Fully setup. This is a real money maker!


Check it out!

Friday, 13 May 2011

Blogging for Profits

This ebook presents a No Nonsense approach to start making money with blogs, fast! Earn 75% Commissions on each sale!


Check it out!

Thursday, 12 May 2011

The Blog Money Pit

Turn your passion into money by learning to create your very own blog. Building a blog is as easy as using a word processor. No programing skills required. WordPress Video Course teaches you how. Get it Now


Check it out!

Wednesday, 11 May 2011

How to choose good SEO Keywords

The problem with good keywords is that they are not usually words at all. Good SEO Keywords are usually phrases, i.e. two or more words combined in a proverb or idea. When you enter the keywords in your meta keywords section, not words, Use phrases.


Why? I will give you two reasons.


While you can use the single word keywords, then you are competing for the position with millions of other sites that also use the same keywords.


For example, suppose you write a post about how to prepare a manuscript for ebook publishing. While you can use the keyword "ebook", you'll be up against millions of other blog posts about e-books, even if they are on the ebook reader, ebook sales or ebook marketing.


By extending your keywords to the keyword phrases, like "ebook publishing", or perhaps even "prepare the manuscript for ebook publishing," restrict you severely field competitive sites, allowing your site to rise higher in Google search results for the phrase.


When was the last time you searched anything on Google uses only one word? It is right: never.


If you search for ebook publishing tips you don't search for "ebook" or "publishing." Both are too broad. Instead, look for a complete phrase, "ebook publishing tips". About how to find relevant websites, this is also how you should write and develop their own pages and services so that others can find your Web sites.


A good website that I use to search for relevant keyword phrases to use in my blog post is Google Insights for search.


At the top of the page, enter the only keywords keywords that you would like to write a post about. You can select options including a geographical area in the world to focus on, or what time period you are interested in and press Search.

Google Insights

Here is a short video from Google about what Google Insights can do.



Let us look a little deeper into how you can use Google Insights for search to write blog posts around a central keyword or phrase. Let us say, for example, you wanted to write a post on the "Top Blogs". If you specify "Top Blogs" as a search term, and not change anything else, would you find that since 2004, interest for searches related to "best Blogs" has steadily increased.


It is good news! You have struck a rising trend which might make a good blog post or, even better, blog series.

Interest over time

But Google Insights also provides you with a list of related keywords and key phrases that people search on Google, as well as keyword trends:

Top searches

The phrase you originally searched, "Top Blogs" does not appear to be the best choice for keywords. Better and more popular phrases appear to the left, with breakout trends on the right. As indicated, it means the word "breakout" to the timespan chosen this keyword has trended up 5000% or more.


Select some of the phrases or words that are most popular or traded up and write your post with a focus on those conditions. As in the picture below, you may be better off focusing on words such as "top blog," "top blogs," "best Blogs", or "2010 best design Blogs."


But – and this is crucial – search, while useful, do not display the last traded. Remember that by using the search criteria standard, which goes all the way back to 2004. Do you want to later trends to understand current searches. So you can do is adjust the duration filter, maybe just in the last 12 months, as shown in the image below:

Reseraching "best Blogs"

By adjusting the filter time frame, you can get a bitter picture of what people are searching for more recently. The following illustration shows not much has changed but the top search term on the right. People want to know what the best blogs 2011 var. maybe you can write a blog post about this instead of the more general idea of the "best Blogs."

Refining of keyphrase

Let me give one last example.


Suppose you start a blog about men's health. Of course, you want lots of visitors as soon as possible. So what sort of services would be best to start with? Let Google Insights for search will tell you. You would begin to leave the keyword search field blank, and then modify the filter that reflects a recent timeframe and "men's health ' category.

Google insights about "men's health"

By doing this, you'll see the most popular and over traded search terms on Google.

Google Insights search resultsMen's health search results

Indicates that if you start a blog post on men's health, you would be wise to do a series about androgen insensitivity, vasectomies, circumcision and the uncircumcision.


Hmm, I wonder why these keywords are popular? I'll let you research on your own … but not your computer at work – your boss might not understand!


Using Google Insights for search to choose better keyword phrases will not automatically rocket site at the top of Google search results, but such a practice helps you write more targeted and focused articles, which over time will give you more readers.


Have you been using Google Insights for search yet? Share your experience in the comments below.

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Why your Self Hosted blog is more valuable than your Facebook page

Facebook has taken the Web by storm in a very short time.  In addition to being the highest-rated network community, it is the second most visited website in the world according to Alexa, popular blog measurement tool.  Facebooks popularity is so great that the deposed Google as King of the Web one day in 2010.


While Facebook offers relationships, fun and exposure, are the following five reasons why I think the blog hosting system is more valuable than your Facebook page.


You have limited control on Facebook. You have access to profiles and pages that you create, but access is not the same as the owner.  And your design options are minimal. Your blog, on the other hand, is your space to do what you want, when you want, how you want.  From design to content.


I remember a time when Facebook sends a message to the millions of members information them content ownership.  Apparently belonged to one shared on Facebook.  After lots of protests and opposition supported the social networking giant. I am not convinced.  Generally, if you don't own anything, can't you control it.  If Facebook is shutting down suspending or your account, you will not have access to the content you provide.  Web site hosting system is definitely a better choice for the creation of the media.


People who sign up to receive your blog updates tend to be most interested in the content you provide.  It is more likely that this group will convert into loyal followers. You can have all the fans that you want to use on Facebook, but if these people are not interested in what you share on your blog, all you need is a great remote fans on someone else's site.


You must pay to get your message to your targeted group on Facebook.  On your blog, people will pay you to get its message to the audience.  Because you control at the site, determine which type of ads you want, how long you will let them run and how much they would cost.


If someone performs a Google search on name or undertaking, viewed pages Facebook within the top five search results.  It is impressive.  But if you blog quality content consistently, your site will be ranked within the top five — or at least on the first page.  Even if your host system site appears under your Facebook page in search results, owns at least you site.


Some people can never join Facebook. other leave.  Even with these transitions have always access to your blog.  You do not want to alienate people who are likely to support you just because they are not on Facebook.


The above are five reasons why I think the blog hosting system is better than your Facebook page. Use Facebook to end – not as an end in itself. Used to make contacts and drive traffic back to your website you own and control.  Remember that if you don't own it, you cannot control.  And you will never own Facebook.

WP troubleshooting tips from the trenches

I am one of those types who think when something works well, it is a good opportunity to destroy it. After all, not to how development and innovation happen?


My construction business had been slow so I decided to build my homepage under some downtime.


I learned a lot about WordPress and SEO by my capacity improvement tweaking and dismantling of this site, and I think my tips can help beginners and experienced WordPressers both!


If you haven't already, I recommend you sign up for a free Google Webmaster Tools account.  Much of the following service is based on the information you can get from this very important tool.


It's never fun to go to your account to Google Webmaster Tools to find that Googlebots are discover pages on your site that you didn't know existed, or URLs that are non-existent. Or to find that your home page is not indexed because there is a trailing backslash at the end of your home URL. The worst was when I thought that both www and non-www versions of my URL was indexed – it is not good for SEO.


I've tried many plugins along the journey. One thing I have tried to do is use as few a plugins as possible in an attempt to make the site as quickly as possible (since Larry Page is such a speed freak).


I am presenting here are some plugins that I have found help my site play nice with Google and is well worth the weight that they add to my WP installation.


When you have changed my permalink structure four or five times and my domain name twice, I had a mess that Google as pointed out to me during the "crawl errors" and "HTML errors" section in Webmaster tools.


Two plugins helped clean up a lot of mess: redirect and Link Juice keeper.


Redirection plugin, you can place 301 redirect to any URL within a domain. To tell the truth, in many cases, I had no idea where these bad URL came from – I knew only that Google is telling me where they crawl errors. And how I got all these errors are not in this post.  When you use 301 redirect, transfer all the PageRank from the homeless to the page you're page 301-redirect to.


Link Juice Keeper (or LJK) is what I use to virtually clear all bad URLs that I can't find a page to redirect to. LJK redirects automatically to all non-existing URLs and 404 errors to your home page. So when you go through and 301-redirect URLs can point to good, specific pages, you can choose to take up the rest – LJK plus everyone else who shows up.


But be aware that any of the subsequent redirects that might better be replaced by LJK makes a redirect to a more appropriate page on your site, so it's good practice to periodically check if any new errors and correct redirect them if possibleinstead of just letting them go to your start page.


By providing a home to all of these "homeless pages ' you preserve any link juice that these pages are within the domain. If a page with an incorrect URL can be found on the ' net, then it has value — but not if it leads to a page that "the page cannot be found". Why not make use of all these pages and have them be paths to the content you want to rank for?


Another great plugin I came across is the cbnet Ping optimizer.


Did you know that every time you make an edit in a post or a page on your WordPress blog, you ping a bunch of update services like Google, Technorati and many more? This action allows them to know that you have some new content and that they should send their bots to take a look.


Is great … if you're like me, and constantly corrects some spelling or tweaking your pages very regularly. Perhaps you reformat a favour and keep update and publish it again and again until it looks just right.


While consciously improve your content, you can do yourself to be a spammer in the eyes of those update services. Cbnet Ping optimizer makes what is control the pings only ping update services when you create something new (a post or page) — not when you edit an existing entry or page. If you made a bunch of edits that have been modified significantly page or entry, so you can go ahead and manually force-ping services.


A Firefox addon that has been useful for me, SEO doctor.


SEO doctor gives good SEO-related information about the page displayed in your browser. It lets you know, for example, if you use two H1 tags (not good), as well as many other SEO mistakes.


SEO doctor told me that an important page on my blog was not to be indexed because of a canonical link. In the end I found that the plugin all in one SEO was the culprit. Once I unchecked the option Canonical URLs, problem solved. I still love the AIO SEO and think it is invaluable, but without SEO-doctor, I would never have found this problem.


The other day, I had noticed from my site meter account that Google indexed my site with both www and non-www URLs.


Site Meter, unlike many other trackers show Googlebot's visit, which I love. I have been able to see that Google actually came to my site with specific keyword search criteria! Trace these back to SERPs, I saw that there were both forms of URLs in search results. After a ruthless research I came across a site that is mentioned in the same WordPress problems. The author disabled plugin W3 total Cache and the problem was resolved.


I cleaned up my .htaccess file, and if the provisions revising and that seemed to fix it, but I'm sceptical.  To be sure it does not happen again, I did the non-www URL (www is my standard format) link I use to check out my site from my desktop and bookmarks. So when I click the link, i see in the address bar of your browser to be sure that the non-www URL resolves to the www version.


The last thing you want is to make Google dissatisfied with you. For a beginner, I believe it is important to monitor all this vigilant until the dust that settles. If you do not believe that you must monitor your website, then you do something to optimize it, if you are, have you no feedback on the search engine and your progress might be hindered.


These are my favorite WP troubleshooting tips. What are your? I would like to hear about them in the comments.

Monday, 9 May 2011

10 Things TV Shopping networks, you can learn about making money Blogging

 

I found myself entranced recently by a “presentation” on a TV shopping network. I usually flip straight past these networks, as I was of the opinion that they were cheesy shows, presented by couldn’t-quite-make-it TV presenters, and that they pushed sub-par products onto poor, lonely, hapless, housebound consumers who didn’t know better. Not that I was judgmental about them in any way…


But this time I found myself stopping for a moment, just to see what they were about.


As the “presentation” (which is what they called it—at this stage, I was still thinking of it as a cheesy, garbage-pushing intrusion) unfolded, I found myself becoming fascinated by the sheer audacity of it.


These shows face an enormous sales challenge, the scale of which could appropriately be linked to climbing to Base Camp, possibly without an oxygen mask. While no-one could call their techniques sophisticated, they are effective. The home shopping industry is a multi-billion dollar industry and sales actually increased during the global financial crisis, when all other retailing was going down the toilet.


What can we learn from how the TV shopping networks sell their wares? Without becoming cheesy and surrendering all integrity, of course. Well, the short answer is: a great deal! Here are the top 10 tips that we can take away from those who sell from, and to, the couch.


The messages the TV shopping networks provide are repeated, over and over and over and over. They know that telling us once isn’t going to do it. Telling us twice is not enough either. We need to be told repeatedly about the product, the offer, the deal, the limited stock. They tell us—and they keep on telling us.


Ask yourself: How often are you sharing your message with your readers? We get bored with our own message long before our readers do. Don’t tell ‘em once, don’t even tell ‘em just twice. Tell ‘em over and over.


Not only is the information repeated on these shows, but it’s funneled. They start off by overviewing the entire list of products and packages that are being presented. Then they go through each one in turn, detailing each product—what the product’s about, what’s in the deal, and what’s in it for us.


Ask yourself: Have you structured your information so it’s easy to digest? Have you overviewed your offering (helicopter view) first, and then dropped into the detail? Don’t expect us, your readers, to organize your information—lay it out for us.


Aren’t you utterly tired of marketing gurus telling us not to share the features of our products and focus exclusively on benefits? I am!


The TV shopping networks prove how false a technique that really is. Features tell us the what, while benefits tell us the so what. Without the what the so what seems contrived, or made up. Features provide us with evidence—they’re the proof so many of us need. If all we hear is that the product is made from “all-natural products that smooths and brightens the skin with no harmful ingredients” we can find ourselves responding with, “Meh … aren’t they all saying that?” But when we hear the list of ingredients, or hear what’s not in the product, or hear any of the other details about the product, it provides us with proof.


Ask yourself: Are you explaining the what and the so what of what’s in your product or service? Are you making it easy for us to believe in your benefits by sharing at least something about the features?


The TV shopping network presentations show us the products in action. We see the Mink, marble-pressed mineral foundation with hydrating beads being dusted onto the model’s face—see how quick and easy it is to apply? We see the weight loss powder being mixed up with fresh fruit in the blender—see how “pantry friendly” the pack size is?


Ask yourself: Are you showing us how easy, quick, simple, effective, or whatever else your product or service is to use? What else can you do to put your product or service into action so your prospects get to see it in use before they buy?


The TV shopping networks not only demo their products so we can see them in real-time action. They also show us people who have been using the products for a long period of time (often years), and get them to tell us what a difference their products have made to their lives. This is different to the demo, which is in real time and could possibly be faked. Results from real people aren’t quite so easy to simulate.


Ask yourself: Are you showing us the results that people who use your product and service get? Your testimonials page is one of the best ways of doing this—but are you keeping the testimonials fresh and updated? Build your “mountain of testimonials” over time, and keep adding to them.


Throughout the presentation, the presenters gave us updates about how the product was selling. When a certain level of stock had been sold, we were updated that “this product has just gone limited,” signalling that only a few were left. This happened from minute one: the presenters signaled that the product was already selling. Combined with point 9 below, this creates a compelling case to pick up the phone.


Ask yourself: How fresh is your information about your products and services? Have you updated your product or service in some way, and forgotten to tell your readers and prospects about it? Have you sold a milestone number, such as 100, or 1000 products? Has your list reached a milestone number of subscribers? Share what’s newsy and make your prospects and readers feel part of the action!


These home shopping shows rarely showcase single products for sale. Even big-ticket items are bundled up with bonus products to sweeten the deal. Instead of a single bronzer being sold, they sell us the Forever Flawless package with 3in1 skin perfector and auto lip-liner in a choice of three colours with the Diamonds Are Forever dusting powder—all packaged in a lined satin make-up bag for touch-ups on the go!


Ask yourself: How can you add bonuses to what you already offer? Or how can you make clearer to your prospects the bonuses you already offer? Tell us how much we’re saving or the value of our bonuses, so the final sale price makes us feel fortunate to have been so smart.


These shows offer discounted pricing (although verifying that is problematic, giving the urgent timeframes they place on the offers); they sweeten the deal by offering some form of discount off ordinary pricing, however small. They also step out what we’re getting (the value of our whole package, with bonuses), and tell us what we’re saving.


Ask yourself: How have you explained your pricing? Is it a flat-footed statement of plain fact, or have you made an effort to show us what a great deal we’re getting? Even if you do not have a limited pricing offer, how can you make it easy for us to see how fabulous your pricing really is? Do you throw in postage and handling? Is your pricing less than some other poorer-quality, higher-priced competitor? What’s special about your pricing? How else can you position your pricing so that we feel oh-so-smart for buying what you’re offering?


Through the use of updates, limited availability, and discounted pricing, a sense of great urgency is created on these shows. Viewers of the TV shopping networks are lead down a carefully constructed path that leads inexorably to action. Namely: picking up the phone and ordering at least one, if not more, products. Sure, they educate. Yes, they demonstrate. But ultimately, they’re here for one thing—to sell their product. They aren’t embarrassed about it, either. There is no coyness in their communications, no hesitation in their message.


Ask yourself: Why would a prospect buy your product today? What have you done to make it easy for them to feel good about making a Right Now purchase, rather than making it easy for them to delay the buy? If you can only create a false sense of urgency (and that makes you feel sleazy), what else can you do encourage action now?


It’s never really finished with the TV shopping networks. The sell, that is. After the presentation ends, there are other messages (commercials on a home shopping network seem like the ultimate act of a snake eating its own tail, and yet they have them!). But they always come back for one more up-sell. Often it’s positioned as a Buyers’ Choice segment—a short segment that highlights one of the packaged up bumper-bonus deals that we’d be mad to miss!


Ask yourself: Where is there an opportunity for you to do a late up-sell in the education and sales process you offer? Where can you offer a “wait—there’s more!” opportunity that truly adds value and book-ends the sales message you are delivering?


You may not wish, or even need, to use all of these strategies. The TV and home shopping networks are a particular breed that not all of us wish to emulate in full—their sales approaches are more sledgehammer than fine scalpel, for one thing. But they can teach us a lot about selling: how to position our products, how to present them, how to craft our communications, and how to make the sale. After all, that’s what they’re in business to do—make the sale.


Perhaps you aren’t using the right-kind-for-you aspects of these techniques as conscious convincers for your prospects. Perhaps all you need to offer is one more thing in one more way—a tweak rather than an overhaul—to increase your conversion rates.

Ask yourself:
What more can I be doing to make this sale easy for my prospects? That’s what the TV shopping networks do.

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Two e-Marketing strategies that work

That surely many of you know, build a mailing list can greatly benefit your company.


Bloggers constantly harp on about how much money can you do if you have enough subscribers, and how well it can be in the social proof. This is true, is what is left is often what you should do when you have your mailing list started.


This means bloggers are still paying their $19-a-month Aweber fees, no real idea how they will get their money back.



I want to share with you two great ways to get your email marketing campaigns from the ground.


The first strategy will help you get more subscribers and build your authority in your niche, while others will help you get more page views and affiliate sales--all in an ethical way, of course. Both of these methods will also help build stronger relationships with your subscribers, and get them to trust you. This is very important that better your relationship with your subscribers, the longer they stay around.


So, let's get to the methods that shall we?


The method is pretty much short course sounds: you set up a short course which your site visitors are typing in when they log on to the distribution list. Over the next few days (usually seven, but the course duration may be more or less depending on what you have to offer), your subscribers will be sent a new part of the course. This is done automatically via your autoresponders, so you don't have to be physically around for your course will be delivered.


Depending on the niche that I am catering to, I often prefer this method to send out a single ebook in exchange for an email address. This is because it achieves some objective:

It helps build a strong relationship with your customers in a short time. It may take a while for subscribers to trust you, if you send them the highest quality emails each day for a week, building this confidence is much faster.A short course can offer greater perceived value then a single ebook, which means you get more subscribers.It'll get people used to open and work with your e-mail messages. A subscriber who does not open e-mail messages are pretty much useless, so send them daily email (initially) will help them to associate e-mail messages with quality. This should mean they are more likely to open future e-mail messages they receive from you.

This approach works, each email message as a reminder.


E-books are good, many people tend to read the first chapter, positioning it for further reading later and never get it back. With an e-course, but is sending them a new place every day, so they're always reminded that they are reading to do. This means that they are more likely to read each part, and they should be reminded to return to any part of the Miss when a new e-mail.


Another good thing about short courses is that they quickly can help you establish your authority in your niche. If all the others in your niche offers e-books, and offers a course – something that most other people will likely be paid for – people will watch you more positive than your competitors, and they should be more open to see what you have to offer.


You can see an example of this strategy here. In the side menu is offered a seven-day course for anyone who enters their email address. On the collection of e-mail addresses is your primary goal, you can make the box to opt-in is at the top of the page, however.


It is not necessary, however, you might want to incorporate this next strategy for seven days the course too …


In this strategy, are you looking to get your subscribers to further interact with you as soon as they are ready to view e-mail messages. This is a method that can be applied to your existing e-marknadsföringskampanjer and although it's easy, it can dramatically increase your site's page views and reader loyalty.


Using this technique to send subscribers the short to medium length emails. In these emails, you will include a guide or anything else that is helpful for the reader, and at the bottom, a link to more information about this topic. The link goes to a page on your website, you will get more page views, which you point the Subscriber in the direction of further assistance. Note that it is important not to include all ads in these emails.


This strategy can be used for any mail you send out that you have more information on the topic of your site. I usually use it extensively in my autoresponder series, but it can be applied to all mail that you want.

More page views. You will include a link back to your site, do you have more people who visit your site.More sales. While you are not selling anything directly in your email, can some of the pages you link to from your emails promoting affiliate products or ads that you can make money on.For more visit your hidden gems. If you have a large site, there are often articles that are useful to visitors that they don't see. using this method, you can show people about your less visible, but only as useful articles.Open faster. If e-mail messages is helpful and genuine, will more people continue to open and work with them.

I've used this method effectively for some time now. It has led to me with the highest quality open courses and a high percentage of Clique frequences – both are far above average in the industry.


This method works because people do not feel that they are being sold to. If you ever sell to people in your email, get your subscribers turn-over rate very high. While people can open the first see what you have to say, after a while, they catch wind of your game and start ignoring your messages.


If you help them in every email, but are people more inclined to look forward messages to and interact with them regularly. In addition to this, they can make you sales if you have an affiliate offer or other method that monetization of the linked page in the site.


I have often written email my autoresponder but not had anything to link back to. So what I did? Well, I have added to email my autoresponder anyway, because the information was still valuable in itself.


Well with this method, it always gives you ideas for new topics. You may want to record all e-mail messages that you send as further is not documented on your site, and in the future, write an article or post about them, you can then go back and add a link to your e-mail (if they are in an autoresponder) so that all future subscribers have the additional bit of interaction.


So there you have it-you can improve your email marketing efforts in two ways. With these methods will help build your authority, you get more subscribers, build a better relationship with your customers and get your more sales.


What other methods allow you to efficiently build your e-mail list?


Shaun is the owner of Ultimate Mailing List, a website dedicated to helping you build an efficient and profitable mailing list. Unsure of how to build a list or for more email marketing tips? Then check out all of us.


Saturday, 7 May 2011

How to write great reviews

Product review posts are in many ways the core of what blogging is about—the ability for all of us regular folks to express an opinion about a product, be it good or bad.  Every day, tens of thousands of product reviews are written on blogs across the world, and often, on just one product alone, hundreds of new opinion/review posts are written each week.


The goal of most folks when they write a review post is to share their opinion with the world about the product.  But how do you differentiate writing a review post that only sees a handful of eyeballs, from ones that see thousands of readers every day—and in some cases ranks even higher than the manufacturer’s own product page?


The single biggest difference between writing a product review that’s just so-so, and writing one that kicks butt is demonstrating an in-depth knowledge of the product.  A product review that is written by someone who understands the product inside-out will organically attract more attention than one written by someone who’s just stumbling around.


If you understand the product inside and out, show off that knowledge.  If you don’t, then learn it quick!  When people search the Internet for a review of a specific product, they’re looking for detail and coverage of the product.  What they aren’t looking for is a short blurb with a few “Four out of Five Stars!” icons tossed in.  If they were looking for that, they’d just check the ratings on their favorite online retailer’s site instead.


No, when they look for a product review, they’re looking for unbiased feedback from knowledgeable experts in that field.  The most popular product review sites for any niche are written by folks that understand the product and every little detail about it.  While short “I just opened up the box”-type reviews have their place, one has to realistically understand that place won’t be at the top of search engine results.


If you review products often, you can easily get into the rut of thinking “my readers already know what I’m talking about.”  And while this may actually be true, you have to step back and look at what your end-state target audience is.


In many cases, it’s not only your regular readers, but also everyday people searching the wild blue yonder trying to find information about that specific product.  And in many cases, they know nothing about that product or its genre.  If I were to go out and buy a new camcorder today, I’d likely be starting from scratch to find out what’s a normal feature, and what’s a totally cool unique feature.


In thinking about it from that angle, you should always introduce functionality within a product as if the person never knew it existed. The benefit to doing this is that you not only explain that piece of functionality, but also teach your reader something new.  This is critical.  Users who find blogs educational will almost always stay around for more.  If they don’t learn anything new, they’ll simply wander elsewhere and not come back.


In addition to approaching a product from the newbies’ standpoint, it’s also important to delve into subjects that long-time users of the product or product series will find useful or educational.  You can do this in a number of ways, but I find the easiest way is to simply talk about the evolution of a given feature from product to product.  By doing so you illustrate not only your understanding of the product, but also your understanding of past products within the same line/genre/niche.


Longtime users often come to product reviews looking for a fix for “their issue.” This is generally an issue that’s caused them deep annoyance for a period of time. It tends to be the one and only thing they’re hoping to hear has been fixed or solved.  By covering these key desires of previous generations of products or competitor products, you’re no longer just another reviewer, but someone who truly understands the product they’re reviewing. 


In short: know the product pains, and address them.


There is no quicker way to turn off readers than regurgitating canned PR pieces from a manufacturer.  Not only can the average human detect it, but search engines do as well.  People immediately gloss over anything that looks like either PR text, or PR images. I always shoot all of my own images.  While my photographic skill varies between barely functional and decent, readers know they’re real images that show off how the product works in the real world—not carefully crafted pictures photo-shopped in the best light.


Speaking of PR, be careful with what you keep of products. In my case, I have a pretty clear policy that anything I test goes back to the company.  I generally poke at it for about 30-45 days, and then once I publish my review, I send it back.  Often I’ll end up purchasing another copy of the product to be able to answer questions about it over the long-term.  Just remember, most readers can quickly see whether or not you’re praising a product simply because you got it for free. Using those PR snippets never helps that case, either.


If there’s one thing that folks know about my reviews, it’s that they’re both complete and accurate. 


I spend inordinate amounts of time ensuring that every detail is correct.  When I proof my reviews, I often sit back and read them from the perspective of a nit-picker.  As such, I ponder every little detail.  Is that 100% accurate?  Should there be a caveat noted?  Are there fringe cases where someone might disagree?  If so, address those issues.  By addressing edge cases and tiny details up front, you address concern within the reader’s mind about review accuracy.  It also helps to drive the key tenant of product reviews that I touched on earlier: showing in-depth knowledge of the product.


And while I try to avoid making mistakes, it’s certainly possible that in my 60-80 page reviews, they occur.  I always include a little snippet that simply says “If I’ve written something that doesn’t quite jive, just let me know and I’ll research it and get it fixed”.  We’re all human, and reminding readers of that puts everyone at ease.


I’m told one of the biggest draws of my blog is that when folks find a given product review, they’re given information not only about that product, but about how to use that product to its fullest potential.  I do this of course within the product review itself, but also by providing comprehensive links to relevant content throughout my site.


I have numerous other articles and posts that explain what a given feature does, even if it’s not product specific. If I’m talking about how to use that feature, I’ll give a brief introduction within the review, but then I’ll direct folks to another post for an equally in-depth post on that specific feature.  This has the added benefit of increasing page views and reducing bounce rates.  And remember one of the other key pillars of a good review—educating?  Well, by introduce readers to other educational content, and they’ll find your blog even more beneficial.


This is one step many folks overlook, which is puzzling to me.  I usually make a point of circling back to the company that made the product, and having a brief conference call or email exchange to discuss both the pros and cons that I found while reviewing the product. Why would I do this?  A whole bunch of reasons!


First, doing this creates a bridge between my readers and the company—a great way to funnel future feedback to them … or from them. 


Second, in some cases issues I found aren’t really issues, but things that can be solved a different way.  This is information I can then pass onto readers, helping them out should they encounter the same problem, and increasing your value as an educator.


Third, people just want answers. While complaining and making a racket about a problem is fun for a while, it’s not what makes for a good long-term readership draw to your site.  By talking to the company you can often understand the “Why” of an issue, and get realistic answers on how that decision was made.  Even if the issue can’t be fixed, at least folks can understand the reasoning—and then independently decide for themselves the validity of it.


I spend a fair bit of time not only immediately after I post an in-depth product review—but also for months and years—answering peoples questions about the product.  This shows that I’m still involved with the post and niche, and that I care about helping them out. 


Do this, and readers are far more likely stick around with you and see what else you have to say.  In addition, this back-and-forth discussion tends to answer questions that others are searching for, once again helping to drive up PageRank on your product review posts.


As you’ve read countless times on ProBlogger, the easiest way to build support for your blog is to invest in your niche’s community.  But “investing” doesn’t mean that you partake in seagull-style forum link dropping.  It means that you look for questions on forums that you spend time in and answer the question there.  Once you’ve fully answered the question there, then include a link to relevant off-site content if and only if it’s relevant.


Folks can easily see through link-dropping, but by answering the question fully and then mentioning that additional reading is just a click away, you truly contribute to the community, instead of just bettering your own blog.


Last but not least, if you’re reviewing a product that’s new on the scene, sending a quick note to relevant media outlets and popular sources of information in that niche can be a great way to spread the word.  I generally send a quick note letting them know I’ve published something new and that it may be of use to their readers. And then I leave it at that.


In the same way that you on your own blog have a vision for what would be published, they do as well.  So respect the fact that every review you post may not be exactly what they’re looking for, and don’t pester them continually—that’s not good for you long term.


Last but not least, with any product review it’s important to write a summary or wrap-up.  That’s what readers skim for.  While I write 60-80 pages of stuff on most of my in-depth reviews, I understand that at the end of the day people skim to the end of the post. Be sure to outline the pro’s and con’s there.  Summaries also help to gel together longer reviews into concise opinions—after all, that’s why the reader came to your site in the first place.


Do you write product reviews on your blog? What tips can you add to this list?


.

2 Blogging Myths: traffic measures success and content is King

Admit it — you think I am crazy for dogging two most common judgment blogger objective – traffic and good content. Let me explain before you roll your mouse on the screen, please.


Blog traffic is very important. With no traffic, how will anyone see your masterpiece on writing blindfold for improved focus? Your blog needs traffic.


But traffic is not a valid measure for success. If traffic is a valid measure of success, would be every bloggers starting point an immediate failure for months if not longer.


Success metrics must be applicable to persons at all levels of experience. High traffic is later a major challenge to you is successful (which ProBlogger has), but it is simply not relevant for new bloggers who want to know how to do.


Traffic compared to the experience and time online is also an outdated statistics, because it has more to do with luck and marketing than anything else:

Better marketers need to better traffic – especially in the beginning.I have seen horrendous Blogs (messy layout, weak content, horrible grammar, etc.) with thousands of subscribers.I have seen great blogs that are virtually invisible online because they don't know how you, or to gain exposure.Time separates the wheat from the chaff (unless you market never your blog, what goals, good luck).

For a beginning blogger, it's hard to see the big bloggers pull in thousands of visitors every day while you are reaching 50 on a good day. It takes time and effort to get your name out there so you can get a chance to be judged fairly by Web users. I know that many quality bloggers have simply quit because they equated low traffic with error.


63,494 Blogs started in the last 24 hours (according to blogpulse.com at the time of writing), and many of these bloggers will end during the first few months. The first months is important.


We have all heard classic "content is King ' point of view as well as the opposite," unseen content is useless "perspective. In fact both have some truth – you need a lot of content and you must ensure that people know about it.


But to say that content is King gives the author the wrong focus.


So, what is the best measure of success?


Success is measured by what the readers think about your content.


I have just Blogging (on my site) for a month, and as such, my traffic is hilariously low. However, I am very hopeful for retain and gain new readers because of how I measure my success.


When I read articles about content as King, I get the impression that we should write the best content we create. The problem is that the author's opinion of "best content" doesn't matter too much.


Content isn't King, nor traffic: readers is King!


Some would say that this is what "content is King" really means, but it is for interpretation. To say that your audience is King leaves no doubt.


Readers decide what they want to read, how much and when. They determine which Blogs and what incredible popularity soar Blogs bite the dust. The King because they control all bloggers fate. So how do we satisfy their interests? How do we know what they want?

You want to shape your content for your readers. Okay, but how do you get it?You do this by listening to what readers said.You listen by measuring the number of concrete positive responses (Facebook fans, tweets, comments, new subscribers, etc.) compared to the number of people who showed a record (individual posts views can be seen with Google Analytics, but make sure you block your own IP address views to prevent skewing the statistics).

This approach is mainly targeted at people beginning to like myself, but it is relevant for all bloggers.


Once you've "made it" and get lots of traffic, the positive responses in relation to your traffic (and increased traffic yourself via readers share) quite obvious indicators of how your posts are received. You have a much larger sample, in this case, and accurate calculations needed for prompt text cannot. But I'm sure you'll do them anyway because of how funny it is.


I think I will be a successful blogger. It is not because of my traffic — last Saturday, I had a whole six unique visitors (AJ, weekends).


My readers, not my traffic, prefiguring my success to respond positively. The first week, I told a couple who are friends with my blog was changing their lives. I take that over 1,000 visitors.


My last post was seen as only 22 unique visitors that day I posted it, but from that it had seven Facebook likes. My subscriber count doubled from seven to 14. Approximately 32% of the readers liked it enough to share it with their Facebook friends.


If I were to attract 2,000 visitors a day and maintained that 32% share rate (unlikely, but interesting), would that mean 640 Facebook like the post, which of course would be able to increase my traffic significantly.


I have had other posts was seen as a much larger number of people with a much lower response — it is a huge statement by readers. I would be a fool to ignore it and write what I want.


As a blogger, you need to have a willingness to customize your vision and substance on the market. Let's face it: blogging is a business. You have to promote your product (blog post), and network with other companies (blogger), and create value for customers (readers).


It is important to note that there are many other factors come into play here – the time the post was published, the length of the post, topic of interest, marketing, statistical variations, influential power that share your entry, and so on.


It is not an exact science due to the variables involved, but it is still the best measure of success for a blogger at any level. That is why I recommend allow comments on your posts or at the very least, add social sharing options to bloggers starting point. Disabling comments because it looks bad that have no comments, and you'll miss out on a chance to gain valuable feedback.


Even at low traffic levels, I found you can still get a good feel for your winners and losers. For example, the abovementioned entry with fewer views a much bigger response than any other entry with more views on my blog. The readers have spoken.


Note that different posts will have different reactions. The popular posts that I mentioned has zero comments, but people were sharing it and subscribe to because of it.


Another post I wrote the deeply thinking was shared less, but have more comments. Both records were successful based on the number of views.


I would like to hear from you about your experiences and get your thoughts and comments on this idea. If you are reading this, your feedback is King!

Friday, 6 May 2011

Why should you take out the money to review Guest Post submissions

Three months ago I started charging $ 20 to consider a guest blog post submissions and it changed my life. Not just clear out many of the most annoying e-mail messages in your Inbox, it elevated the quality of the posts I get and reduced the time I devote to editing them to levels I would never have dreamed possible.


When your blog reaches a certain size and level of popularity, you can expect to gain regular football plans from other bloggers, product, people, book author, and all kinds of random people looking to help your site in exchange for links back to their. Guest posts are a wonderful way among writers (or products) to gain exposure and experienced bloggers to publish more varied content.


But the problem is that everyone plays the same game, and there are many more small Blogs than there are successful. Another problem is that the most successful Blogs get popular, since they put out a steady and high quality content, so all contributed by a guest writer must meet these standards – otherwise, you will lose the audience. That put pressure on the blog owner to be a tough editor, which often result in more negative than positive talks.


Tired of having to spend hours each week explains the mediocre writer why my site is not a platform to sell Lama calorie count apps, or to "7 vegetables you should know about" is not an interesting title, I knew I had to change the workflow.


Thought I hire an editor/Assistant, but not a big media blog, couldn't I fit it in my budget. I thought also pays for the higher quality writing – I write several blogs that pays me for my work – but didn't want to encourage people to send even more sites. I just wanted the places I get better. So I nixed these options.


Finally fixed, I require a $ 10 minimum donation to my campaign for charity water to even consider a service as a guest. Donation does not guarantee the post is published — it only guarantees I read and think it is. I chose a charitable donation, rather than a for-profit fee because I didn't want it seems to me that if I'm charging for links or by taking advantage of the authors. The sole purpose of the donation is saving me time and make sure that someone who sends a pitch is willing to put their money where their mouth is a serious writer.


Charity water has a fantastic online system that allows donations easy to track. I added my donation requirements at the top of my guest posting guidelines (the most likely landing page for anyone wanting to submit a guest post). I also created a canned responses in Gmail explain my policy, I can easily send to anyone inquiring about guest posts.


The results were astounding. Email pitches directly decreased in numbers dramatically. The amount of sites I get from self-promotion link asylum seekers (those I always reject) decreased from around 90% of pitches to about 20%, and no one has chosen to donate and have thought about his record. Above all, the few that has taken me up on my offer written fantastic post that I was happy to edit for clarity and publish in summer tomato.


Even more amazing are the answers to my new system. Self promoters responds almost never in my jar replies (win). The less experienced writers apologize for their inability to donate and leave me to my business (double win: these guys requires most back and forth emails and editing). And most remarkable of all those who have increased and contributed has been overwhelmingly positive about my guidelines, says things like "it looks like a large charity, I would have happily donated anyway" or "all places should require this" (Charlie Sheen-type # winning).


The reality is good authors know when they have something valuable to contribute and have no problem stepping up to the plate. Weaker authors (those that submit drafts with ten exclamation full throughout) know when they are to reach out in their league, and prevents them from unwillingness to proceed with the submission.


Be careful, however: donations are not required for each blog. If you are not currently spend much time answering pitches or edit guest, charges are not necessary. New bloggers can take advantage of those accept guest posts and go through experiences in order to edit them, Know your audience before you make any major changes to your blog policy.


All that said, not all of which contribute to my site. If I invite anyone to submit a post because I think they have something interesting to share, not the donation is needed. I do not like people to share their successes or their farmers ' market updates (this is a weekly segment on my blog), because I do not have the same problem with the quality and uncertainty that I get from raw pitches.


Required donations is a great deterrent for self promoters seeking links from high-profile websites. They also save you lots of time by increasing the quality and the reduction of places you need to read. Best of all, it is good to know all which contributed to the time you saved the building a water well and allow hundreds of people access to clean water.


Would you charge a fee for a guest post on your blog? Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

10 ways to use your blog to manage a crisis

Your blog is a very important part of your personal or your company's brand image. While you have invested time in its development, have you thought about how you can use your blog to manage a crisis?


A blog offers several advantages compared with press releases, Web sites, or other social media channels.

Picture of Jeff Domansky of Fotolia.com, used with permission

It lets you control your communication without media filters. It speaks with authority that your "voice on the record". In a crisis, your blog can be a valuable internal and external communications. And, above all, with swift action, it may help that you have heard correctly in a crisis.


Here are ten valuable ways you can use your blog to manage a crisis:


Issue your holding statement and/or the first ' official ' response to a crisis as soon as possible on your blog. This prevents a vacuum filled by messages of critics, competitors, or opponents. Addressing the concerns of the most obvious. Be proactive. Provide facts. Reassure the community that you are working actively on the issue and that safety is of paramount importance.


Scott Monty shows how SeaWorld used its blog effectively in an employee of one of its Killer whales tragic death.


Use your blog as your company's voice when you cannot reach any easier in other ways. A fire or other emergency situation can prevent you from accessing your e-mail system, office fax machine or equipment. In this situation be your blog, your single communications channel.


Recently tried to MAKE using Twitter to defend itself against media attacks around a tax issue. It did not work. 140 characters isn't enough. With the help of GE blog would have been more effective for such a complicated system. GE has finally quit trying to "spin" their story after a poor media relations effort.


Quick, timely updates through your blog can be invaluable to keep employees, customers, regulators, fire and safety officials, media and public informed of new developments. Remember that your updates can be very short and factual. Most crisis managers know it is important to show that even if you have not yet resolved the crisis you are working to resolve it.


BP attempted to use a blog for the Gulf oil spill cleanup updates, but had pointed criticism for their attempts to paint recycling unrealistic. BP then shuttered this blog and remove posts, shows how transparent and objective, you must be a success.


Your blog is critical in correcting mistakes, respond to misinformation and to ensure that the audience has the right information. Move quickly to correct material errors that were detected, but not to sweat the small stuff.


Chrysler's Ed Garsten used his corporate blog to go on record effectively with facts about firing a consultant for dropping F-bomb in a business tweet.


In a crisis are employed your most valuable resource. Encourage employees to view your blog. Suggest they provide links to your blog to their contacts. It informs employees, controls their messages and helps them respond to family, community, customers, and other concerns with the correct information.


Whole foods market "blog, the whole story, with a series of food safety services which shows his caring and commitment to safe and healthy food.


In the heat of a crisis, it may be difficult to reach the media. Your blog can provide critical media information and links to press releases, fact sheets, FAQs, photos, video and any other reporter needs if they cannot reach a spokesperson. Check your blog address and 24-hour phone number contacts is available on all media information.


Craigslist founder Craig Newmark's blog, craigconnects, has a simple Press page that works well.


Use your blog to provide advice, direction, and basic information such as phone numbers and addresses of companies, fire and security contacts, and community organizations. Provide all employees with information such as the blog address. Add a recorded message on your answering service to ensure that information on your blog is available after hours. This will help ease the pressure, reducing incoming calls and show concern while your team about the crisis.


Remember that much of this information can be prepared in advance before you have a crisis.


Your blog is a great vehicle for Visual, multimedia, links, and many more votes to allow richer, more effective, more human responses in your organization. Be creative. If time permits, to use all the advantages that social media in blogging.


No surprise that Disney Parks blog is one of the best with visitors behind the scenes with wonderful storytelling.


Careful use of keywords in your post titles and content will help you rank higher in search engines and news aggregators, so that you can compete on a fair and balanced share of voice in crisis coverage.


Companies often forget to do a summary after a crisis has been handled. Community, your customers, employees, officials, authorities, media and the public all must know that you handled the crisis well. They need to be assured that they are safe and that they can trust to do the right things now and in the future.


The Discovery Channel did so very effectively after their hostage crisis in 2010.


Don't forget to forward planning so that your blog can be used outside the installation in the event of a fire or other emergency that prevents the use of your Office. Create an address list of VIPs, media, employees and customers with smart, useful content.  In a crisis, make sure to warn your readers with blog address using Twitter updates when speed is critical.


Here are ten, your real time blogging play an important role in helping you prepare for, respond to and manage a crisis. You earn respect for openly communicate and definitively establish confidence in the future.


Remember: do not fit all situations in a size of social media. Anticipate, plan for the worst of the crisis, as you can imagine and blog at best.


Have you had success Blogging in a crisis? What was your biggest challenges? I would be hearing from you.

Thursday, 5 May 2011

Why your blog sucks

Your blog sucks. You know, just not there yet. On the other hand, my blog is great because my blog sucks really, and I know it.


I know that my blog must work and I always work to improve it. I wish I had fans that Chris Guillebeau from Species of non-conformity. I wish I could better "figure out" social media. I wish I had apps that Travelfish. I wish I could have better conversions, a better design and a million other things.


In short, I know that despite getting lots of traffic and is considered one of the largest travel websites on the Internet, my blog still sucks because I know that there is always room for improvement.


I am working on improving my site on every front. I understand that blogging takes time and that no two blogs are equal, and if I will do it, I'm always going to have to change, and constantly improve.


No two Blogs are equal. A common feature appears among many bloggers, however, is the idea that just because we all have blogs, we are all equal and deserve the same treatment. I think this term harkens back to the beginning of blogging, when the practice was seen as a more equitable form of journalism, and they were all in it together.


Even when the social aspect of blogging is set aside, and the factor by which companies will this equality idea is still alive, and it limits bloggers from developing large sites. Why would you need to improve your website if you think it already is level with the best sites on the Internet? You do not. After all, you are at the top of your game, right? But the mentality that ' all blogs are equal "only keep you from reaching the true potential of your site.


Think of it this way: is the same as this fantastic McDonalds burger place down on the street? Are two pizza places the same? Never! If any sushi restaurant believed they were the famous Nobu, why would they never bother to improve their services or quality? They wouldn't!


And this is the sort of attitude that keeps bloggers from developing truly outstanding websites. There is the assumption that if we all have a blog, we are all equal and deserve the same things. We all deserve to guest post on Zen Habits, get advertisers, write for CNN and get lots of great perks.


I run a travel site and PR people often comment on their talks with me that they find too many people calling for a journey, a free hotel or free regardless. The PR people will look at a blog and think, "this person has no reader, but he demands free programs. Why would I give them anything? "


They are right to think this way. You have a blog, but that doesn't mean you should have the right one. Anyone can start a blog. It takes about ten minutes. However, not everyone knows how to make a high quality blog.


Should the person who just installed WordPress be entitled to the same benefits as the person who has worked for two years to build a successful Web site? I think not. Would you get a guy CEO when he worked for the company in two weeks? You must prove himself and show you have value to offer.


I wake up every day thinking, "How can I be better? What am I doing right? What am I doing wrong? "Unfortunately, too many people do not. They only have a cookie cutter, free theme, and write short, unfocused speech. But blogging is more like.


Blogging, like it or not, is a company. (Yes, you can write a blog just for MOM and dad, but I suspect that most people who read this article to make a serious undertaking of his blog.) Blogging is like any other profession. You may not be better unless you improve yourself. But if you show yourself as best you can limit your ability to be great, because you yourself blind to your limitations.


I think it is good that you have a blog. You do something, and by reading ProBlogger, you probably already committed to bettering yourself. However, do not enter false mindset that all blogs are equal, because they are not. Recognize that your blog, just like my blog, need to be improved constantly. The more you improve yourself, the more traffic and readers, you will receive.


No other company you see people say "Okay, I opened a shop and that's all I need to do. Let the money roll in. "So I'm always baffled that believes that bloggers," Yes, I just started this blog, and even if my mother is the only person who reads it, I still receive that all expenses paid trip, I should be able to preview the new iPad,, talk to SXSWeller writing for Mashable. "


Stop thinking that way. Stop thinking you're the cat's Meow because you blog. Stop thinking you are the same as everyone else. Start thinking about ways to improve your site. Start looking at what is wrong and how to fix it. Setting goals for yourself, work on it and see what other people are doing.


Yes, it will be much more work than before. Yes, will be blogging as a job. But if your goal is to have a fantastic website that supports you, just post a blog entry is not going to cut it.


Make your blog with some improvements? What changes are you to improve your blog today?