#11 - Incorporate Great Design Into Your Site
The power
of beautiful, usable, professional design can't be overstated. When readers
look at a blog, the first thing they judge is how it "feels" from a
design and UX perspective. Sites that use default templates or have horrifying,
1990's design will receive less trust, a lower time-on-page, fewer pages per
visit and a lower likelihood of being shared. Those that feature stunning
design that clearly indicates quality work will experience the reverse - and
reap amazing benefits.
If you're
looking for a designer to help upgrade the quality of your blog, there's a few
resources I recommend:
- Dribbble -
great for finding high quality professional designers
- Forrst -
another excellent design profile community
- Behance -
featuring galleries from a wide range of visual professionals
- Sortfolio -
an awesome tool to ID designers by region, skill and budget
- 99 Designs - a
controversial site that provides designs on spec via contests (I have
mixed feelings on this one, but many people find it useful, particularly
for budget-conscious projects)
This is
one area where budgeting a couple thousand dollars (if you can afford it) or
even a few hundred (if you're low on cash) can make a big difference in the
traffic, sharing and viral-impact of every post you write.
Click to Earn Money
Click to Earn Money
#12 - Interact on Other Blogs' Comments
As
bloggers, we see a lot of comments. Many are spam, only a few add real value,
and even fewer are truly fascinating and remarkable. If you can be in this
final category consistently, in ways that make a blogger sit up and think
"man, I wish that person commented here more often!" you can achieve
great things for your own site's visibility through participation in the
comments of other blogs.
Combine
the tools presented in #10 (particularly Google
Reader/Blog Search) and #4
(especially FollowerWonk) for
discovery. The feed subscriber counts in Google Reader can be particularly
helpful for identifying good blogs for participation. Then apply the principles
covered in this post on comment
marketing.
Do be
conscious of the name you use when commenting and the URL(s) you point back to.
Consistency matters, particularly on naming, and linking to internal pages or
using a name that's clearly made for keyword-spamming rather than true
conversation will kill your efforts before they begin.
#13 -
Participate in Q+A(Question & Answer) Sites
Every
day, thousands of people ask questions on the web. Popular services like Yahoo! Answers, Answers.com, Quora, StackExchange, Formspring and more
serve those hungry for information whose web searches couldn't track down the
responses they needed.
The best
strategy I've seen for engaging on Q+A sites isn't to answer every question
that comes along, but rather, to strategically provide high value to a Q+A
community by engaging in those places where:
- The
question quality is high, and responses thus far have been thin
- The
question receives high visibility (either by ranking well for search
queries, being featured on the site or getting social traffic/referrals).
Most of the Q+A sites will show some stats around the traffic of a
question
- The
question is something you can answer in a way that provides remarkable
value to anyone who's curious and drops by
I also
find great value in answering a few questions in-depth by producing an actual
blog post to tackle them, then linking back. This is also a way I personally
find blog post topics - if people are interested in the answer on a Q+A site,
chances are good that lots of folks would want to read it on my blog, too!
Just be
authentic in your answer, particularly if you're linking. If you'd like to see
some examples, I answer a lot of questions at Quora,
frequently include relevant links, but am rarely accused of spamming or link
dropping because it's clearly about providing relevant value, not just getting
a link for SEO (links on most user-contributed sites are "nofollow"
anyway, meaning they shouldn't pass search-engine value). There's a dangerous
line to walk here, but if you do so with tact and candor, you can earn a great
audience from your participation.
#14 - Enable
Subscriptions via Feed + Email (and track them!)
If
someone drops by your site, has a good experience and thinks "I should
come back here and check this out again when they have more posts,"
chances are pretty high (I'd estimate 90%+) that you'll never see them again.
That sucks! It shouldn't be the case, but we have busy lives and the Internet's
filled with animated gifs of cats.
In order
to pull back some of these would-be fans, I highly recommend creating an RSS feed using Feedburner and
putting visible buttons on the sidebar, top or bottom of your blog posts
encouraging those who enjoy your content to sign up (either via feed, or via
email, both of which are popular options).
If you're
using Wordpress, there's some easy plugins for
this, too.
Once
you've set things up, visit every few weeks and check on your subscribers - are
they clicking on posts? If so, which ones? Learning what plays well for those
who subscribe to your content can help make you a better blogger, and earn more
visits from RSS, too.
#15 - Attend
and Host Events
Despite
the immense power of the web to connect us all regardless of geography,
in-person meetings are still remarkably useful for bloggers seeking to grow
their traffic and influence. The people you meet and connect with in real-world
settings are far more likely to naturally lead to discussions about your blog
and ways you can help each other. This yields guest posts, links, tweets,
shares, blogroll inclusion and general business development like nothing else.
I'm a big
advocate of Lanyrd, an
event directory service that connects with your social networks to see who
among your contacts will be at which events in which geographies. This can be
phenomenally useful for identifying which meetups, conferences or gatherings
are worth attending (and who you can carpool with).
The
founder of Lanyrd also contributed this great
answer on Quora about other search engines/directories for events
(which makes me like them even more).
#16 - Use Your
Email Connections (and Signature) to Promote Your Blog
As a
blogger, you're likely to be sending a lot of email out to others who use the
web and have the power to help spread your work. Make sure you're not ignoring
email as a channel, one-to-one though it may be. When given an opportunity in a
conversation that's relevant, feel free to bring up your blog, a specific post
or a topic you've written about. I find myself using blogging as a way to
scalably answer questions - if I receive the same question many times, I'll try
to make a blog post that answers it so I can simply link to that in the future.
I also
like to use my email signature to promote the content I share online. If I was
really sharp, I'd do link tracking using a service like Bit.ly so I could see
how many clicks email footers really earn. I suspect it's not high, but it's
also not 0.
#18 - Add
Value to a Popular Conversation
Numerous
niches in the blogosphere have a few "big sites" where key issues
arise, get discussed and spawn conversations on other blogs and sites. Getting
into the fray can be a great way to present your point-of-view, earn attention
from those interested in the discussion and potentially get links and traffic
from the industry leaders as part of the process.
You can
see me trying this out with Fred Wilson's AVC blog last year (an incredibly
popular and well-respected blog in the VC world). Fred wrote a post about Marketing that I disagreed with
strongly and publicly and a day later, he wrote a follow-up where he
included a graphic I made AND a link to my post.
If you're
seeking sources to find these "popular conversations," Alltop, Topsy, Techmeme (in the
tech world) and their sister sites MediaGazer, Memeorandum and WeSmirch, as well
as PopURLs can all
be useful.
#19 -
Aggregate the Best of Your Niche
Bloggers,
publishers and site owners of every variety in the web world love and hate to
be compared and ranked against one another. It incites endless intrigue,
discussion, methodology arguments and competitive behavior - but, it's amazing
for earning attention. When a blogger publishes a list of "the best
X" or "the top X" in their field, most everyone who's ranked
highly praises the list, shares it and links to it. Here's an example from the
world of marketing itself:
That's a
screenshot of the AdAge Power 150, a list
that's been maintained for years in the marketing world and receives an endless
amount of discussion by those listed (and not listed). For example, why is
SEOmoz's Twitter score only a "13" when we have so many more
followers, interactions and retweets than many of those with higher scores? Who
knows. But I know it's good for AdAge.
Now,
obviously, I would encourage anyone building something like this to be as
transparent, accurate and authentic as possible. A high quality resource that
lists a "best and brightest" in your niche - be they blogs, Twitter
accounts, Facebook pages, individual posts, people, conferences or whatever
else you can think to rank - is an excellent piece of content for earning
traffic and becoming a known quantity in your field.
Oh, and
once you do produce it - make sure to let those featured know they've been
listed. Tweeting at them with a link is a good way to do this, but if you have
email addresses, by all means, reach out. It can often be the start of a great
relationship!
#20 - Connect
Your Web Profiles and Content to Your Blog
Many of
you likely have profiles on services like YouTube, Slideshare, Yahoo!,
DeviantArt and dozens of other social and Web 1.0 sites. You might be uploading
content to Flickr, to Facebook, to Picasa or even something more esoteric like
Prezi. Whatever you're producing on the web and wherever you're doing it, tie
it back to your blog.
Including
your blog's link on your actual profile pages is among the most obvious, but
it's also incredibly valuable. On any service where interaction takes place,
those interested in who you are and what you have to share will follow those
links, and if they lead back to your blog, they become opportunities for capturing
a loyal visitor or earning a share (or both!). But don't just do this with
profiles - do it with content, too! If you've created a video for YouTube, make
your blog's URL appear at the start or end of the video. Include it in the
description of the video and on the uploading profile's page. If you're sharing
photos on any of the dozens of photo services, use a watermark or even just
some text with your domain name so interested users can find you.
If you're
having trouble finding and updating all those old profiles (or figuring out
where you might want to create/share some new ones), KnowEm is a
great tool for discovering your own profiles (by searching for your name or
pseudonyms you've used) and claiming profiles on sites you may not yet have
participated in.
I'd also
strongly recommend leveraging Google's relatively new protocol for rel=author. AJ Kohn wrote a great
post on how to set it up here, and Yoast has another good one on building
it into Wordpress sites. The benefit for bloggers who do build large
enough audiences to gain Google's trust is earning your profile photo next to
all the content you author - a powerful markup advantage that likely drives
extra clicks from the search results and creates great, memorable branding,
too.
#21 - Uncover
the Links of Your Fellow Bloggers (and Nab 'em!)
If other
blogs in your niche have earned references from sites around the web, there's a
decent chance that they'll link to you as well. Conducting competitive link research
can also show you what content from your competition has performed well and the
strategies they may be using to market their work. To uncover these links,
you'll need to use some tools.
OpenSiteExplorer is my
favorite, but I'm biased (it's made by Moz). However, it is free to use - if
you create a registered account here, you can get unlimited use of the tool
showing up to 1,000 links per page or site in perpetuity.
There are
other good tools for link research as well, including Blekko, Majestic, Ahrefs and,
I've heard that in the near-future, SearchMetrics.
Finding a
link is great, but it's through the exhaustive research of looking through
dozens or hundreds that you can identify patterns and strategies. You're also
likely to find a lot of guest blogging opportunities and other chances for
outreach. If you maintain a great persona and brand in your niche, your ability
to earn these will rise dramatically.
Bonus #22 - Be
Consistent and Don't Give Up
If
there's one piece of advice I wish I could share with every blogger, it's this:
The above
image comes from Everywhereist's
analytics. Geraldine could have given up 18 months into her daily blogging.
After all, she was putting in 3-5 hours each day writing content, taking
photos, visiting sites, coming up with topics, trying to guest blog and grow
her Twitter followers and never doing any S.E.O (don't ask, it's a running joke
between us).
I'd guess
there's hundreds of new bloggers on the web each day who have all the
opportunity Geraldine had, but after months (maybe only weeks) of slogging
away, they give up.
When I
started the Blogging in 2010, I had some advantages (mostly a good deal of
marketing and S.E.O knowledge), but it was nearly 2 years before the blog could
be called anything like a success. Earning traffic isn't rocket science, but it
does take time, perseverance and consistency. Don't give up. Stick to your
schedule. Remember that everyone has a few posts that suck, and it's only by
writing and publishing those sucky posts that you get into the habit necessary
to eventually transform your blog into something remarkable.
Good luck
and good blogging from all of us at Blogger.com!
THANK YOU
YOGESH RAGHAV
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