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Hey You, “Pay Me To Post On My Blog”

Internet Marketing Sucks!

Hey You, “Pay Me To Post On My Blog”

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 01:31 PM CDT

It’s not everyday you’re presented with a truly irresistible offer. Sure, the $67 ebooks about making $89,251.56 overnight by writing one article on a blogspot blog are tempting, but they’re so prevalent. If you miss one, there will be a new one the next day.

(And yes, the next one will still have that “wait! save $5 if you order now” offer when you try to close the page.)

Well, yesterday I was presented with a very kind - almost irresistible - offer. The kind offer, from a gentleman we’ll call Sammy Smitters, went something like this:

“You can contribute an article to my blog, and I’ll post it for just $10.”

(So irresistible I had to put the offer in a blockquote!)

mark joyner's the irresistible offer book

Isn’t that incredible? I do the hard work writing an article, and then I get to pay for it to be posted, too!

As if that wasn’t enough, the blog had an amazing PR3 and was full of high quality content ripped from ezinearticles.com! Wow, what a deal! I would be honored to be featured amongst such prestigious authors!

This Smitters dude must have read The Irresistible Offer by Mark Joyner, because I don’t how you could develop a ridiculously lucrative offer such as that without expert guidance!

Truly a remarkable feat of the human brain!

And to show you just how amazingly great this offer would be for me, here’s an example of what I’d have to settle for if I didn’t take Mr. Smitters up on his offer…

I would have to settle for publishing a guest post somewhere unpopular, say www.JohnChow.com. Then it would only reach his 35,000 fanatical feed subscribers and 300,000 loyal monthly visitors. How unfortunate!

But why do something worthwhile for free when I could waste my money adding my own article to a new PR0 page of a junk blog for the paltry sum of ten dollars?

That’s almost as bad as asking, “why not get a job instead of buying more $67 ebooks that have yet to teach you anything?” It just doesn’t make sense… ;)

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Hey You, “Pay Me To Post On My Blog”

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Blogging Questions & Answers 23

Daily Blog Tips

Blogging Questions & Answers 23

Posted: 31 Oct 2008 07:56 AM CDT

questions and answers

Time for Blogging Questions & Answers. The questions on this batch were sent via email over the past weeks. Next week I will get back to the ones posted on the comments section.

If you want to leave a question, the easiest way is to simply write it on a comment below.

1. Himanshu asks:

1. Is it okay if I Digg my own post myself ? Also I’ve seen couple of blogs where bloggers themselves comment with some other names just to let readers think about the popularity of their blog. Is it a good practice ?

2. I’ve a blog where I write about software and internet tips along with a bit of Blogging/SEO. Is it good to have that in one blog or shall I create another website for SEO content and separate out software/internet tips ?

1. It is OK to submit your own posts to Digg, as long as you do this rarely (i.e. once every month at most) and as long as the content itself is Digg worth. On the beginning of your blog you won’t have many readers, so you could try giving it a nudge yourself on social media.

Also, make sure to genuinely participate on the community. If all your submitted and dugg stories are coming from your blog people will consider you a spammer, even if you do that only once a month.

As for posting comments on your own blog, I have never done that and probably never will. First of all because I don’t think it is worth your time (go write more quality content if you have time to write fake comments!), and secondly because I don’t think it is ethical either.

Some people, however, recommend this is strategy. It is the so called “fake it till you make it.” A matter of opinion I think.

2. I would choose either one or the other topic, and create it on a single blog. Then focus all your energies on it, until you make it an authority on its niche. It is very hard to create one popular blog or site, let alone two at the same time!

Once your first blog is large and established you could think about launching an spin-off.

2. Sam Duvall asks:

Which do you think is better?
1. Email newsletter one’s a week, that would “feature” the weeks posts and
would have unique mini article.
2. Email subscription to the post as they come out.

I have the skills and motivation to make either work, but I just don’t know if
#1 is worth it, since #2 is very easy with feedburner.

I say both!

Use an email subscription feature on your blog to let the users that want to stay updated receive your articles on their email inbox, and use the Feedburner feature for this one.

Then also launch an email newsletter with extra or insider information, and once a week shoot your best articles as well to drive some more traffic to your site. For this option I would go with Aweber.

I am planning to launch my newsletter soon, for example, just lacking the time to.

If you don’t have time or money to setup a newsletter, then go just with the Feedburner email subscription feature because it is pretty fast and easy to setup.

3. Potato Chef asks:

Hi, My site, Potato Patch Recipes, has been live about 3 weeks. I submitted a site map to Google, the site was verified by Google. I basically did everything Google said you should do.

My questions is this: Why after posting about 15 posts can’t I find any of them on google when I do an organic search?

I don’t expect to be on the first page, but I have looked 50 pages deep and still have not seen any of my posts.

Is it too soon or have I overlooked something?

It is too soon AND you have overlooked something.

First of all yeah, do not worry if you are not ranked after 3 weeks. I would start taking a look on Google after one or two months, and even then just for curiosity’s sake. Real traffic should start coming in 6 months, if that.

Secondly, you are overlooking the main factor that will make you rank on Google: backlinks!

In fact, I don’t even recommend for people to submit their site to Google or to submit a sitemap. All you need to do is to get a backlink from an authority site and Google will crawl you.

I have been able to rank my sites in 48 hours in the past, just one with quality backlink.

How do you go about getting that? Ask friends if you can, or try to submit a guest article to a popular blog.

Overall, however, just think about proving value, growing and promoting your site, and the ranks will come naturally.

4. Kaheem asks:

I have a niche blog, that relies heavily on activity in the topic I’m covering. Every so often, I run a poll, create a “top 10″ list to fill the gaps between slow weeks. I’m fearful that my blog will become idle jabber when there is nothing to write on. Any ideas on how to keep my blog fresh.

Do you mean your blog is somewhat news-related, and that you depend on the events in your niche to have something to write about?

Well, that is a natural pattern with news blogs, and there is nothing you can do about it.

If you are blogging about an event that has a specific duration, like the 2008 Olympics, I guess the best thing would be to milk it for as long as the event goes on, and then just let the blog be and focus on new projects. Put AdSense and text links there and make as much money as possible with the remainder traffic you will see there.

If, on the other hand, you are blogging about something that goes on, like celebrity gossip or tv news, then there is nothing to fear. There will always be new things to write about on those niches right?

Check out the article 9 Steps to Better Blog Post Ideas for more ideas on this topic.

5. Keith asks:

What’s you opinion about turning off comments until the number of readers increase? I’ve tried trying to engage readers but it doesn’t seem to work. I’m just wondering if people may look at that like a forum that has a lot of threads and no replies, or if it’s just something I think too much about.

It is something you think too much about.

By turning off the comments you would killing even the small number of comments that you could get while your blog is young.

Additionally, it could be a turn off for some readers, and many could get used to the fact that your blog does not allow comments, making them more reluctant to comment even when you decide to turn it on.

6. Avinash asks:

I would like to know whether having multiple categories is good, or having categories with sub categories is better, does the category structure have any part to play with SEO as well?

I like to use a limited number of categories, and no sub-categories at all.

Why? Because I think it is easier for the end user to figure where a certain post might be if you only have 10 or 15 categories. The upper limit I would put is 20 categories. More than that would be overkill, and would just confuse your visitors.

If you want to offer them more granularity, use tags to complement the categories.

Finally, I don’t think that the number of the categories that you decide to have will have an influence on the SEO at all. Their name might, but even them just slightly.

7. Balaji asks:

i got some 12 visitor from google for the keyword”social network engine”. I saw
my blog on the 7th position.But after 2days i missed that ,why this happen?

This is the normal pattern in Google. The SERP (Search Engine Results Page) is always changing. Some pages will go up, others will go down.

The number of backlinks pointing to a page and it is overall relevancy is what will influence the direction of the page.

Sometimes your backlinks and relevancy might stay the same and you will still go down. Why? Because other pages improved their SEO factors and displaced your own.

8. lolbunnies asks:

Hi I run an image-based blog and was wondering what some good alt text tips are for image search rankings. I would like for my images to come up in various searches for my niche.

Also what is the difference between alt text and title for images? Do they both have importance in search engines? I have decided to use the same text for both the alt text and title.

On the ALT attribute you should put the text that best describes the picture, for people that might not be able to see it for one reason or the other.

The TITLE attribute, on the other hand, is used to provide more information about any image, and it is displaced as a tooltip by most browsers (i.e. when you hover over the image).

If you are worried about SEO, the best thing you can do is to do some keyword research before you even choose the name of the picture. Once you know what people search for, use that on the name on the image and on the ALT attribute. On the TITLE one you could use a more elaborate description of the image.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

Blogging Questions & Answers 23

The Revolution Theme Goes Open Source

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 12:08 PM CDT

You probably have come across the Revolution theme once or twice right? Created by my friend Brian Gardner (who also designed the first custom theme for Daily Blog Tips long time ago), it was a huge success around the blogosphere.

The themes used to sell for $79, and they were selling like hot cakes. Just think that Brian was able to quit his full time job thanks to the online revenues he was making.

revolution two theme

Brian is now shifting the direction of his project though. He wants to be more aligned with the open source mentality behind WordPress, and therefore he will be launching a whole new set of Revolution themes under an open source license. In other words, you can download and use them for free.

Currently they have 14 themes available, and I believe more are coming soon. You can visit the site on RevolutionTwo.com (a bit slow at the moment, probably due to the high load they are seeing).

If you need support with the themes, Brian will also be providing a subscription plan that will come with all sorts of perks and assistance.

I applaud Brian for taking this route. It is a good thing for the whole WordPress community given his design talent, and I am sure it will be another home rum for him.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

The Revolution Theme Goes Open Source

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3 Successful Bloggers Share their Blog Tips

ProBlogger - Latest Posts

3 Successful Bloggers Share their Blog Tips [VIDEO]

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 07:02 AM PDT

Here’s another compilation of blog tips from three prominent bloggers - Jeremy from Shoemoney, Steve Pavlina and Andy Wibbels.

The video was shot at Blog World Expo 08 on a Flip Video Mino Series Camcorder.

See this video at full size on YouTube, Blip.tv and Viddler. See the last video in this series with another 4 bloggers here.

Tags: , , , , ,

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Internet Marketing Sucks!

Internet Marketing Sucks!

BlogRush Is Shutting Down

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 09:01 AM CDT

In the latest news of epic FAILs by internet marketing gurus, you’ll see that BlogRush is shutting down.

It comes as no surprise to me - I switched to running BlogCrap widgets long ago as I predicted from the start that BlogRush would be useless. (Actually I didn’t switch, because I never bothered with BlogRush in the first place.)

If you read the sales letter explanation, you’ll see an interesting point:

We have received several offers & inquiries about acquiring BlogRush, but we are choosing not to go that route. While many might think this is crazy, we truly feel it’s the ‘right’ thing to do for our users. Believe it or not, it’s not always about the money. In fact, BlogRush will have lost a small fortune when it’s all said and done, and it was by choice. There were many things we could have done to monetize the service but we wanted to make sure it was going to benefit our users first.

Gullible readers will think, “wow, what a great showing of ethics and morals.” But anyone that’s been around the internet marketing game for a while will see right through that.

See, BlogRush never needed to make money directly. They just needed to build a huge database of blog traffic stats and user details. (Yes, there are always ulterior motives.)

Don’t be surprised if the data gleaned from the BlogRush network reappears in a new service business (income.com perhaps) or at least results in you receiving pitches about John Reese’s latest product launch.

In short, don’t be sympathetic. They’ll get their money’s worth in no time.

(And forget the whole “if you come up with an idea at 4 AM, go for it!” rhetoric. Yes, entrepreneurs should be bold, but not dumb. Mashable sums it up nicely.)

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BlogRush Is Shutting Down

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Try the RankSense SEO Software for 30 Days Free

Daily Blog Tips

Try the RankSense SEO Software for 30 Days Free

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 05:08 AM CDT

The guys from RankSense are having a promotional campaign where you can subscribe for an account with a 90-days money back guarantee (and it won’t be charged for the first 30 days).

So what is RankSense? It is an all-in-one SEO software that brings 12 integrated tools to optimize most aspects on your blog or website. I exchanged some emails with Hamlet Batista, the creator of the software, and the guy knows his SEO. He has made millions of dollars in search marketing and affiliate marketing deals, in very competitive niches like the Viagra one, just to give you an idea.

ranksense review

Here is what you will find inside the software:

  • an advanced keywords research tool (search for keywords related to your content, to your competitors, by topic and so on)
  • keyword analysis (estimated traffic, competition and so on)
  • competition analysis tool
  • website SEO check (the software will scan your websites to see if the essential SEO factors are there)
  • link structure analysis (where your links come from, what anchor text they have and so on)
  • link building tool (what are the best places to get links)

The interesting thing about the RankSense software is that their approach is towards simplicity and time saving. Some SEO tools there are really complex and have steep learning curves. RankSense, on the other hand, was developed to be as user friendly as possibly, so even beginners can work on their SEO efficiently.

You can try it for yourself though and see if you like. They require a credit card on the registration, but you won’t be charged for 30 days. If you find that the software is not what you were looking for, you just need to cancel before the first 30 days and you are good to go. Their basic plan starts at $25 monthly as well, which is considerably cheaper than some competitors. Click here to check the sales page with the registration link.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

Try the RankSense SEO Software for 30 Days Free

Blog Rush Shutting Down (I Told You…)

Posted: 30 Oct 2008 03:09 AM CDT

One of our readers (Mitchell Blatt) emailed me with the breaking news: Blog Rush is raising the white flag. If you are currently using the widget, you will need to remove it cause it won’t work anymore. Here is a quote from the official announcement:

BlogRush didn’t grow without its fair share of problems — from security issues to abusive users trying to ‘game’ the system to much lower click-rates than expected. We also had some problems with trying to fairly control the quality of the network, and in the process made many mistakes in deciding what blogs should stay or go. All of these issues, ultimately, limited the service’s full potential.

Our team worked very hard to try and build a service that would truly help bloggers of all sizes get free traffic to their blogs. This was our primary focus. Not once did we ever try to monetize the service with ads or anything else. BlogRush never made a single penny in revenue. We wanted to be able to help our users FIRST and then worry about monetizing the service later. Unfortunately, the service didn’t work out like we had hoped. (It happens.)

Six months ago I had already written a post criticizing the structure of Blog Rush.

Anyway, that stuff happens. I am not happy for seeing it fail just because I predicted it, and I wish John Reese the best of luck on his next projects.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

Blog Rush Shutting Down (I Told You…)

Should You Really Write About What You Love If You Want to Make Money Online?

Posted: 29 Oct 2008 11:39 AM CDT

That is a common cliché among bloggers, make money online experts and web entrepreneurs. I am sure you heard it before. Heck, I used to give this advice myself. It goes like this:

If you want to make money online, you got pick a topic that you are passionate about. You need to love it, else it will not work.

I used to agree with it, one hundred percent.

Lately, however, I started questioning that rule. Creating a website on a topic that you love is certainly a good strategy, and it works well for many people, but I am not sure if it is the only way to go, or the best one.

The first flaw I see on that rule is the following fact: if the niche or topic you love is not a profitable one, it will be pretty hard to make a lot of money online with it no matter what.

Suppose you love tea. Should you write about it if you want to make money online? I am not sure. You could certainly create a popular website around tea, but if you decided to go with a more profitable niche instead, while putting the same effort and time, you could end up making much more money.

One argument that people use to back up the “you got write about what you love” theory is the fact that if you choose a topic merely because it is profitable, soon you will lose the motivation. If you write about something you love, on the other hand, you will have content for years to come.

This is partially true, but not completely. Why? Because some people get motivated by the pure desire of making money or becoming successful.

In other words, if they start a website on a profitable niche and see that their efforts is bringing a good amount of money, they will get motivated no matter what the topic is. They will even do research and learn about it if needed.

So what is my position now? I think that both strategies can work. Choosing a niche or topic because you love it is a good route to success, but choosing a profitable one and approaching it scientifically can be equally successful.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

Should You Really Write About What You Love If You Want to Make Money Online?

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The Importance of Pillar Articles and why Obama and McCain are Idiots

ProBlogger - Latest Posts

The Importance of Pillar Articles and why Obama and McCain are Idiots

Posted: 29 Oct 2008 11:02 AM PDT

In this post - relatively new blogger CJ from Wise Money Matters shares what they’ve learned about using Pillar Articles (sometimes called evergreen content) to Grow Traffic to Your Blog.

I started blogging only 4 months ago. In the grand scheme of things, this is a very short time and my blog, wisemoneymatters.com, has a long way to go before I can become a "ProBlogger" like Darren. Due to my relative inexperience with blogging, I have spent the last 4 months scouring through various "how to blog" blogs such as Problogger, Copyblogger and have watched all of Yaro Stark’s BecomeABlogger videos. Through my studies I’ve heard about the importance of key core posts, also known as "pillar articles" but only recently have seen the effects of them.

Since my full-time work schedule doesn’t allow me enough time to fully market my blog via commenting on other blogs and engaging heavily in social media, I rely a lot on Google to pick up my posts. I do try to comment on at least 10 blogs per week, but to really jump start my blog, I should be doing closer to 10 per day. In the last month or so, since my blog has started to gain some steam and other bloggers are linking to me, my Google rankings for various search terms have been going up and certain pillar articles have really been the focus of most of my traffic.

In fact, here is a graph of my traffic sources via Google Analytics for the past month:

pillar-articles-traffic.png

In my personal opinion, while you need a good mixture of commenting on other blogs and social media interactivity, I find Search Engine traffic to be the best source of traffic for several reasons.

The primary reason is workload. Commenting on other blogs requires that I frequently visit those blogs to comment. I naturally comment on the blogs I already enjoy reading, but sometimes find myself simply going to various blogs to get my own name out. It’s simply work and not very fun. Frankly, I think it’s also kind of selfish as I’m not really adding much to the other blog but rather just trying to add to my own. Occasionally I make a good relationship with another blogger, such as Mr ToughMoneyLove from ToughMoneyLove.com, but that’s rare.

Social Media is even harder work. It requires constant attention which is something I don’t have. Maybe if I get to a "ProBlogger" status like Darren (he even took the time to add me as a friend on Facebook rather than waiting for me to add him… how cool is that?!?), I could find the time to devote to Social Media but until then, working my day job to pay the bills is more important.

With Search Engine traffic, it’s consistent traffic. As long as you don’t significantly lose your spot on a Google search term, you will get traffic over time. Little extra work is needed aside from making sure your posts are updated as needed. The traffic just keeps flowing.

Secondly, it’s attracting people who actually want your content. Often times when I comment on another personal finance blog, the only return traffic I get is that the owner of that blog comments on mine. While this can be good (see making good relationships above), it’s not really productive overall. The results of such efforts are often minimal. Granted, they do add up over time so I’m not suggesting stop commenting, but they aren’t as solid as someone who is actually searching for the information you are providing and seeing your site listed for the search term.

With things like Digg, you often have to go out of your way to make articles which specifically attract Digg users. Such articles often stray from the original core mission of your blog to get the "shock effect" that Digg users like so much. Worse than that, Digg users are there one day and gone the next. Don’t get me wrong, getting a good Digg has it’s rewards, but it requires so much energy for little consistency. I’m more of a passive blogger type of guy. Write a really good article which gets a good ranking on a popular Google search term and just let the people slowly stream in.

So don’t misunderstand me. You do need a good mixture of techniques to get your blog known but if time is a constraint, getting good solid Pillar Articles listed on Google should be your top priority and do the other stuff when you have extra time. Wait… does anyone actually ever have extra time?

Anyways, on to two types of Pillar Articles…

Seasonal Pillar Articles

Once the United States primaries had been pretty much finalized, I started to look at the two Presidential Candidates. I figured I could do a post comparing the candidates. Since my blog is a personal finance blog, I decided to look specifically at their economic stances. I wrote one blog post about each candidate. To give it a little spice, I titled them "Why Barack Obama is an idiot" and "Why John McCain is an idiot."

I figured those titles would at least draw the attention of a few people. However, I never thought it would be so beneficial to my blog. Since the election has really become cutthroat, those 2 posts have been 2 of the most viewed posts on my blog.

Here is a list of the top 10 search terms from Google which landed on my site (click to enlarge):

pillar-articles-2.png

As you can see, those two posts make up the entire top 5 search terms for my site.

The keys to seasonal pillar articles

Key #1: Timing. This is the most important. You need to be the first for a particular subject. I wrote these posts when the candidates for both parties were initially decided. I could have written those posts last week, but I would have only had 1 week to get the traffic. On top of that, due to my low overall Google Pagerank, other similar articles were bound to be written and I wouldn’t have been able to get to the top of the Google listings.

For instance, if I type "Obama idiot" into Google, my page is 4th on the list. When I first wrote this article, there was only one other article with a similar title. Now the search is filled with such articles. For "McCain idiot," I’m ranked 10th. When I first wrote this article there were no other articles with such a title and I was ranked #1. Due to my low PageRank and other factors, I’m now 10 being pushed out by the bigger websites.

So the key is to get in quick and early. The only downside is that when you notice such trends, you need to make sure and stay up to date on the post. For instance, when I initially wrote the McCain article, he had very little information available about his economic policy other than wanting to lower taxes. Now his plan has shaped and the information is now a little outdated. Also, both articles were written before the big decline on Wall Street and all of the bailouts, so neither of those issues were addressed.

Key #2: Good content. Frankly this is almost as important as #1. Timing will initially get you a high spot on Google searches, but good content will keep you there. This is something I struggle with because I’m not naturally a good writer. It’s important to continually check posts that make such a huge effect on your blog and remove any obvious mistakes. I edited the language and grammar of both of those posts at least 3 times after publishing them and realizing their popularity.

Key #3: Think outside the box. Since my blog is a personal finance blog, I was tempted to title the posts "Obama’s economic policies" and "McCain’s economic policies." While both of those titles may have received some traffic, they most likely would not hold their place against the major media channels who typically cover such topics with similar titles and frankly those titles are just plain boring. They don’t evoke any emotion and would track minor attention. However, due to the strong opinions on both sides regarding the current candidates, the titles I chose were perfect. I did expect them to get some Digg traffic, but I do realize the actual content of the posts aren’t really Digg material so I’m not necessarily disappointed that they didn’t.

So when you combine those keys listed above, you can drive some serious traffic to your site for the course of the event or season. Now I fully expect these posts to fall off the radar after the election, but for the time being, I’m reaping the rewards. Also, I suspect that at least one of these posts will remain popular after the election. Which post will depend on which idiot gets elected.

I will also admit one downside to this particular example. Much of the traffic that comes to the site will be a one time visit (see my comment on Digg at the top). I realize that most people searching for these terms are not looking for personal finance advice. The flip side of that is I am reaching an untapped audience. The blogosphere is cluttered with personal finance blogs. Many people looking for a personal finance blog have already found the one or two (or ten) blogs that they are looking for. This gives me opportunity to reach an audience who may want personal finance advice but didn’t know it yet.

Further Reading from the ProBlogger Archives

All-time Pillar Articles

If you notice on the top 10 search terms in the image above, 4 of the top terms were related to "Top Paying Jobs." This falls under an All-time Pillar Article. This drives a consistent amount of traffic to my website every single week. It’s currently listed as my most Popular Post on my website according to my site’s popularity plugin.

pillar-articles-popular-posts.png

I actually came across this by accident and wrote 2 posts about it. I did some research because I was interested myself in the top 50 highest paying jobs. I found a good list and basically cross posted it with my own comments. Then I was wondering about the top 50 highest paying jobs which don’t require a career. So I cross posted that as well. The results are great.

Again, this goes back to the passive traffic idea. I consistently receive traffic from these search terms. It’s not the quantity of the Seasonal Pillar Articles because the highest paying jobs is not the hot topic of the month, but it is consistent. That is one thing to remember when stumbling across such Pillar Articles. Don’t expect the masses to flock to your latest genius post. Give it time and let Google run it’s course. Sometimes you hit it and sometimes you miss.

There is however 1 primary key to making Pillar Articles that I learned from this experience. Post about what you want to know or learn. The only reason I have a post about the highest paying jobs is because I was curious. Since I don’t have a college degree myself, I was also interested in the highest paying jobs with no degree. The key is that if I’m curious about that, there has to be other people that are curious as well.

Now realize that Google has it’s preferences. If there is a hundred articles about the very post you are interested in writing, don’t expect to jump to the top. You should still write the article as over time your blog should gain a reputation (and therefore a higher PageRank) and the post will likely rise, but don’t be discouraged if that perfect post goes nowhere. Just keep writing great content and the traffic will follow.

I’d love to hear any other suggestions regarding tips on Pillar Articles as that’s what I really focus on and if you liked this article, please Digg it or Stumble it. I’m sure Darren would appreciate the extra traffic.

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Internet Marketing Masterminds - A Course for Small Businesses Wanting to Grow Their Online Presence

Internet Marketing Masterminds - A Course for Small Businesses Wanting to Grow Their Online Presence

Posted: 29 Oct 2008 07:01 AM PDT

Internet Marketing Masterminds
If you’re own or work for a small to medium business and are trying to get your head around how to use the internet, social media, blogging and other emerging online technologies to promote your brand, build income and drive sales then you should check out Internet Marketing Masterminds.

This course will kick off on 12th of November and is being put on by fellow Aussies Alister Cameron and Ben Galt from Australis Media.

Over the last year when I’ve been approached by businesses (large and small) wanting blog consulting I’ve referred them to Alister. The reports coming back from those I’ve referred over have always been really positive. He’s helped numerous businesses take their online presence to the next level. Internet Marketing Masterminds is designed to do the same thing.

There are limited places (150) and the pricing structure is one that goes up as places begin to fill (the earliest in get the cheapest rates).

The course spans over the full year of 2009 and includes monthly webinars, group knowledgebase, discussion forum and mailing list.

The curriculum covers a lot including starting blogs, social networking, internet marketing, developing killer content, SEO, Pay Per Click Advertising, Linkbait, Crowdsourcing, tools like YouTube, Flickr and Facebook and Analytics.

Who is this for?

This course is not really designed for beginner bloggers looking to grow their blogs (although I’m sure they’d learn a lot from it too). No - Internet Marketing Masterminds is a program for businesses owners (and employees) as well as SME marketers wanting to utilize the web to grow their businesses.

How Bloggers Make Money Online without Blogging [POLL RESULTS]

Posted: 28 Oct 2008 01:06 PM PDT

Last month I ran a poll here at ProBlogger which asked readers if they make money online from sources other than blogging.

The result was almost completely split with 1022 of the 2053 people who responded saying Yes and 1031 saying no.

make-money-non-blogging-sources.png

Some of the comments on the launch post of this poll revealed some of the ways people are making money online from sources other than blogging. They include:

  • Website Design
  • Flipping (selling) Websites
  • Selling ebooks
  • Youtube Partnership program
  • Freelance writing, graphic design
  • Teaching and Consulting
  • Owning other types of websites (directories, forums etc)
  • Business Documentation site
  • Developing web applications
  • Online Surveys
  • Paid to Click Sites
  • Selling Products and Merchandise
  • Affiliate Marketing
  • Writing on User Generated Content (Revenue Sharing) Sites
  • Make Online Games
  • Online Store - Selling Products
  • eBay
  • Selling Art
  • Business Referrals
  • Market Research
  • Software Development
  • Working as a Transcriptionist
  • Membership Sites
  • Generating Sales for Off-line Business from Websites

Lots of good ideas there and a nice reminder that there’s plenty to explore outside of blogging.

My own list of online money making sources that are not directly blogging include running a forum (advertising revenue), newsletter lists (affiliate marketing and some advertising), consulting (limited), selling a course, job boards, working at b5media (very part time)… and that’s about all I can think of.

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3 Newsletters You Should Definitely Subscribe To


3 Newsletters You Should Definitely Subscribe To

Posted: 29 Oct 2008 07:55 AM CDT

When I first started using the Internet, I was a bit afraid of subscribing to email newsletters. Why? Because I thought that people would just spam the heck out of me with offers and sales pitches.

Lately, however, I started subscribing to a few of them, and I must confess that some provide a real value for the subscribers. The trick is to identify people that genuinely want to build a community and help their readers (as opposed to helping their own pockets…).

There are 3 particularly that I think you guys would benefit from.

The first one is the WordPress Newsletter from my friend Joost de Valk. Joost is a Jedi Master when it comes to WordPress, and he shares all his tips on the newsletter and on his blog. He is also always looking for the coolest plugins, making it a must read if you use WordPress.

The second one is the email list from Jason Calacanis. Sure, the guy is a bit controversial, but he sure knows the online publishing and startup environment. His emails are always packed with information and opinions. If you consider yourself a web entrepreneur, go check it out.

Finally, Darren Rowse also launched his Problogger Newsletter a while back. It is basically a complement to the blog, but it brings some insider information, and access to some of his stuff before it goes live on the blog.

Now what about you, what newsletters are you subscribed to that you would recommend to other people? Let me know and I will check them out.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

3 Newsletters You Should Definitely Subscribe To

Web Censorship: The 10 Worst Countries To Blog From

Posted: 28 Oct 2008 02:50 PM CDT

I am sure most of you guys take the freedom on the Internet for given. If you live in a western country, this is a consequence of being able to access any website and to publish anything you feel compelled to.

That is not the situation on all parts of the world, however. On some countries people can’t access basic websites like Hotmail or Wikipedia. On others, they can’t have blogs or create websites. On others yet, they can’t even own a computer with Internet access!

Over at DailyBits we did a compilation with the Top 10 Countries Censoring the Web.

Here is a quote from the 10th position, Pakistan:

The rundown

Pakistan started censoring the web in 2000, when the main target was anti-Islamic content. Over the time, it seems, they liked the possibility to control the Internet traffic, and have been increasing the scope of their censorship system ever since.

How does the censorship work?

There are only three international gateways on the country, and all of them are controlled by the Pakistan Telecommunication Company. The government, therefore, is able to monitor and block most unwanted traffic using filtering software (although their technical apparatus is not sophisticated).

Internet service providers are also required by law to monitor the activity of their clients to make sure that they are not accessing prohibited websites.

What kind of content is blocked?

In the first years of the web censorship in Pakistan, the main target was anti-Islamic content and websites that were related to political autonomy movements (e.g., the Balochi one). In 2003, however, the Pakistan Telecommunication Company declared that they would also officially block all pornographic websites.

In 2006 mainstream western websites, including Wikipedia and several newspapers, got blocked as well. The intensification of the censorship was propelled by the episode of the Danish cartoons that contained images of the Prophet Muhammad.

Check the link above to read the full article and see the other 9 countries.


Copyright by Daily Blog Tips.

Web Censorship: The 10 Worst Countries To Blog From

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Do You Sell Text Links on Your Blog

ProBlogger - Latest Posts

Do You Sell Text Links on Your Blog? [POLL]

Posted: 28 Oct 2008 07:05 AM PDT

Do You Sell Text Links on Your Blog?

Warning - Before answering this question in comments you might want to consider doing so anonymously and without a link to your blog - particularly if your answer is YES. It could hurt you to identify yourself if you say yes publicly.

It is time for another poll here at ProBlogger - this one on the topic of selling text links.

A year or so back selling text links was the #1 income source for many bloggers. The practice was common and all done out in the open. Advertisers wanted to buy text links from blogs and websites that had been around for a while and had established decent page rank in Google. They were doing this to increase their own search engine authority. Bloggers saw the practice as relatively easy money - payments were recurring on a monthly basis and with services like TextLinkAds that emerged there was very little work in finding advertisers or collecting payments.

However the Text Link Ad selling industry came crashing down (to some extent) late in 2007 when Google took the step of penalizing many websites and blogs (some quite high profile ones) for the practice of selling text links. They see selling of text links as people trying to game or manipulate their ranking system and if they find people doing it - issue penalties which can hurt your search engine ranking.

As a result of this action many bloggers stopped selling text links. I had personally stopped selling them before Googles action (although was hit with a page rank penalty for a few days before Google corrected it).

The practice of selling text links continues today - however it’s done a lot less publicly than previously. Services still exist to arrange the buying and selling of links but it seems that it has gone much more underground with many deals being done directly between advertisers and bloggers and with advertisers less interested in site wide text links and more interested in buying them within content on individual pages.

While many bloggers have stopped doing it - quite a few continue to sell them either not aware of the risks or willing to take the risk for the income it provides.

The point of this poll is to find out just how many bloggers still sell text links.

As I mentioned above - if you want to comment on this poll below and you do sell text links you might want to do it anonymously or with a pseudonym as it wouldn’t be hard for Google to hit you with a penalty. Voting yes in the poll without commenting is anonymous however.

So it’s over to you - here’s the poll (it’s also in my sidebar):

Do You Sell Text Links on Your Blog
View Results

I’m looking forward to seeing the results on this one!

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Reflections on 48 Hours of Inviting Readers to Comment ‘Spam’ My Blog

Posted: 27 Oct 2008 01:04 PM PDT

OK - so I didn’t ask people to comment ’spam’ my blog - I asked them to ‘pitch’ us with their blog. Here’s what I learned from the experience….

On the spur of the moment over the weekend I decided to run a little experiment here on ProBlogger where I invited readers to leave a comment giving an ‘elevator pitch’ for their blog.

The experiment ran for 48 hours (it is now closed) and in that time over 1400 bloggers participated - so many that at times it slowed loading that page to a crawl for many. I’m amazed by the response and wanted to make a few comments/reflections about this experiment:

Twitter is Amazing

I put the success for this project largely down to Twitter. As I posted my invitation on ProBlogger I also Tweeted an invitation for my Twitter followers to get in early and pitch their blog. This tweet was retweeted time and time again by readers. I didn’t expect this wildfire of tweets (in fact people retweeted the retweets of others) and lost count at the number of people who ’sneezed’ my post throughout the Twittersphere. When we hit the 1000 submissions mark I tweeted about it and again the tweet was retweeted many times. An hour before closing it I tweeted and again it was retweeted many times over.

I’ve experienced things going viral online before but this one was explosive. Over 1000 of the submissions came in the first 20 hours - not bad for a weekend.

I Should Have Planned More - But I’m Glad I Didn’t

If I’d put more thought into planning this project I would probably have done it a lot differently. I wouldn’t have done it on a weekend, I probably would have thought strategically about how to spread it wider, I possibly would have put up a prize for participants, I would have put aside time over the 48 hours to spend extra time moderating comments etc.

I didn’t do any of that and in many ways I’m glad that I didn’t. The thing I loved about this was that it just happened. From the time the idea came to the time I posted it took about 15 minutes (if that). I put hardly any time into it (although there was a lot of comment moderation to do) and it was a rewarding experience.

The Benefits of the Project

Someone asked me via email today how much traffic the project drove to ProBlogger. The reality is that this weekends traffic has not been significantly different to any other weekend. Traffic wasn’t the point here.

The ‘point’ (if there was one) is that I wanted to give readers of this blog an opportunity to put themselves out there and connect with each other. That might sound a little selfless but at the time of doing it that was ‘the point’. There have of course been benefits to me from doing it - the main one of which is that there’s been a nice ‘buzz’ about the experiment and a feeling of ‘community’ and/or participation.

I never promised anyone masses of traffic from participating (in fact I said it was likely not to drive traffic) but people have been reflecting back to me that they feel ‘involved’ and that they felt like they were apart of something. I guess people don’t want to just ‘read’ or consume information on blogs - they want to participate.

The other benefit from the project to me was the impact upon my Twitter profile. I had 500 new followers over the weekend - largely from all the Retweets I’d guess.

What a Varied and Rich Community the Blogosphere Is

The thing that has struck (and even moved) me most this weekend is just what an amazing variety of blogs there are. As I read through segments of the list I found myself shaking my head and shouting out to my wife “hey there’s a blog about ……(insert obscure topic here).”

If nothing else this project has inspired me about blogging again. There are some truly creative and remarkable bloggers on in the list of submissions and I would highly recommend you set aside some time today to surf through as many of them as you can.

Link to those you find, spread the word of the hidden gems that you discover, subscribe to their feeds, connect with one another and be inspired by the creativity hidden in the list. The real benefits of this experiment happen now.

Elevator Pitches

Lastly - this project taught me a thing or two about ‘elevator pitches’. I’m not going to write too much about this here as I feel a post on the topic ‘brewing’ but I’ve heard from a number of bloggers who participated that they found the exercise of refining what their blog is about into 140 characters (although some thought it was 140 words) a very rewarding thing.

For those of you who missed the project I’d encourage you to think about how you would have described and pitched your blog in 140 characters - it could be a useful exercise (more on this later).

My Favorite Pitches

I said in my initial post that I’d post a few of my favorite ‘pitches’. At the time I thought there might be a few hundred to wade through not over 1400! I’m going to include a few of those that caught my eye here - but I feel that in doing so I’m doing an injustice to many others who have done a great job also. I would love it if you’d surf the list and highlight your own favorites either in comments below or even on your own blog (if it’s relevant).

Here are 10 (listed in no particular order) that caught my eye over the weekend (for one reason or another):

  • Are your beans for the birds? Learn about eco-friendly, sustainable coffee, and how your morning cup can change the world. - Coffee and Conversation
  • Mom-101. I don’t know what I’m doing either - Mom 101
  • I’m in a band called Linkin Park. For insight into the business and culture of music, plus updates on my band and art, visit me - Mike Shinoda
  • We are the TOP shed blog! Good Looking Sheds - Built To Last. Almost everyone needs a shed! We happen to think so :) - Idaho Wood Sheds Blog
  • You’ve just been sued for statements made on your blog. What do you do? How do you prevent it? Read the California Defamation Law Blog - California Defamation Law Blog
  • About a lioness travelling with a big kangaroo round the world. Right now, we are feeding at a watering hole called Tokyo - Lioness in Japan
  • My readers have called me both a hero and a straight laced prude. You decide - Maw Books
  • A budget fashionista’s hints, tips, tricks and trends for effortless style; because most of us could look better for less. - The Style PA
  • Some chubby math: A Fat man + various meats x bacon - vegetarianism = one funny and entertaining food blog - Eating Cleveland
  • Does this triathlon make my a** look fat? Running, swimming and biking at 51. Why couldn’t I take up knitting, like normal old people?! - Run Mom Run

As I say - these are just 10 of those that for one reason or another caught my attention. There’s 1400 others in the list - which caught your eye most?

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How To Build a Successful Email Newsletter

Posted: 27 Oct 2008 07:01 AM PDT

Build-A Successful-NewsletterOver the last week I’ve been talking about Newsletters a little. We’ve covered reasons start a newsletter and how I’ve increased my newsletter subscriber numbers 10 fold.

Today I want to finish this informal mini-series on newsletters off with some tips for actually writing a newsletter.

How to Write an Email Newsletter

Let me say up front that much of what I write below could equally be applied to ‘how to write a successful blog’ (or in fact could be applied to many mediums of communication).

1. Define Your Goals for the Newsletter

This is perhaps the most important thing that I’ll say in this post because virtually everything else flows from this.

What do you want to achieve with this email newsletter? Is it about:

  • driving traffic to your blog?
  • developing community among your readers?
  • building a list to ’sell’ to?
  • reinforcing your brand?
  • making money from advertising sold in the newsletter?
  • Something else?

When you subscribe to a few different bloggers newsletters it becomes quite evident that different bloggers are taking quite different approaches. For example Chris Brogan’s newsletter is much more about providing his subscribers with lots of new original content (it is well worth subscribing to if you’re into social media and building online communities). He explores a theme each week. On the other hand my photography newsletter is more about highlighting key articles and discussions on my blog and forums from the last week.

The reason our newsletters are so different is that we have different goals.

My main goal is simply to drive traffic back to my blog. I find that many of my readers are not using RSS (quite a few do but there is a sizable proportion of them that have never heard of it) and so my newsletter is a way of hooking these readers into ’subscribing’ and reminding them to check out fresh content each week.

Chris on the other hand seems to be using his newsletter to give his most committed readers something extra. This builds and reinforces his brand, builds community and gives those of us who subscribe a feeling of being on the inside of what he’s thinking (scary as that might sound).

So work hard on defining what you want to achieve with your newsletter. It can have numerous goals (for example I use mine to drive affiliate sales from time to time and to build a sense of community) but keep your primary goal as the main focus.

2. Communicate What Your Newsletter is About to Potential Subscribers

I subscribed to a newsletter a couple of weeks ago because on the subscription page it said that it gave weekly unique, insider tips from the blogger. However in two weeks I’ve had 6 emails and they’ve all been affiliate promotions (with no insider ‘tips’).

There’s nothing wrong with promoting affiliate products in a newsletter but if you promote it as having original content - provide it. If your newsletter is going to be largely updates form your blog and a way for readers to stay in touch with that don’t hide that fact. It is better to get fewer subscribers who are expecting what you’ll deliver than having people subscribe to find out that you’ve tricked them into joining your list.

3. Establish a Voice and Have Consistency

There are no real ‘rules’ when it comes to how to write a newsletter. In the same way that you can write in almost any ‘voice’ on a blog you can write in almost any style in a newsletter. I personally try to keep my newsletter ‘voice’ pretty similar to my blog (personal, as though I’m speaking to someone) and I find this effective (it means that those who enjoy your blog will enjoy your newsletter).

My main advice with developing your voice in a newsletter is not to chop and change it too much. As with a blog - readers come to expect a certain type of communication from you and so when you change things up a lot it can take away from what you might have already built up in terms of connection with readers.

This doesn’t mean you can experiment and/or evolve your voice over time but it does mean that you should try to have some sort of consistency in what you present to readers. This extends to the design and flow of your newsletter also. I try to stick to the one format over time and find that readers enjoy this consistent approach.

A Comment about ‘Hype’ - One important tip to note when it comes to thinking about your ‘voice’ is to avoid the ‘hyped up’ style that has been used for years by a lot of internet marketers. I’m sure a small number of people still get away with this but I find that most users of the web these days are quite suspicious of this style. Use your newsletter to build relationships and speak to people in a personal way and you’ll build a list that will stick with you (and trust you) over the long haul.

4. Build Value

In the same way that people will not stay subscribed to your blogs RSS feed if it doesn’t provide value to them in some way - people won’t stay subscribed to your newsletter if it isn’t meeting a need that they have.

This ‘value’ and meeting of ‘needs’ can take on many forms. It could be writing original content, giving insider information that you don’t publish on the blog, could be pointing out tools or resources and can even be simply pointing out ‘what’s hot’ on your blog. The key is to watch how users interact with the different parts of your newsletter (see what I write about ‘tracking results’ below) and listening to their feedback. When you do this you’ll soon see what they find useful and what they don’t.

An Important Note about Uniqueness of Content From Your Blog - I see some bloggers say that rehashing what is on your blog in your newsletter is not a good strategy. They argue that if it’s not new and unique content in your newsletter that readers won’t subscribe. While I think this applies in some circumstances it has not always been my experience. My biggest newsletter (my photography one) has 45,000+ subscribers and 90% of it is simply pointing readers to new posts on the blog and forum. Again - this comes down to knowing your blog’s goals. Even rehashing your blog’s content can be ‘useful’ for some readers who don’t have any other way to subscribe to that blog!

5. Scannable Content

It is important to have scannable content in almost every online medium including blogging - but when it comes to email I find it even more important.

If you’re using HTML emails you can do this with color, images, bolding, italics, lists, headings etc - but if you’re using Plain text emails you need to get a little more creative. Consider using symbols and characters, CAPS for headings, line breaks etc to draw the eye down the page.

Again - track different techniques and layouts to see what works best.

6. Track Results

Depending upon the newsletter tool that you use to publish your emails you should have access to be able to track how people are engaging with your newsletter. Aweber (the tool I use) gives a large variety of stats but so do many other quality newsletter tools. Some tools give more advanced reports than others but most will at least allow you to track how many people open your newsletters (this can help you to experiment with subject lines) and what links are being clicked on by how many people in your posts.

Paying attention to what links get clicked is a fascinating and productive thing to do. It not only helps you to work out how to write an effective newsletter (and how to improve it) but it gives you incredible insight into what topics your readers are interested in reading more about and what types of language they respond to.

I look forward to analyzing these stats each week and have many times written followup posts on topics that I see a lot of people clicking on in my newsletter.

7. Subject Lines and Opening Lines Matter

When it comes to blogging the most important words that you’ll write are your blog’s title (they can mean the differences between your post being read or not).

When it comes to your email newsletter your subject line really acts as your ‘title’.

I’m still working on what subject lines work best. I find that some readers seem to respond best when the subject line is the same each week (they look for the email each week and like consistency) while others become blind to the same thing each week.

I’d be interested in your thoughts on which is best.

Another thing to note is that what you put at the top of your newsletter will almost always get higher ‘conversion’ than what you put at the bottom. The links you have in your opening paragraph will get clicked more, the affiliate campaigns that you have at the top will convert better, the content that you have first will get read more. It’s the same concept as placing content ‘above the fold’ on a web page - what’s up top gets the most eyeballs!

8. Use a Reliable Newsletter Service

This is a lesson I learned the hard way. In my early days of newsletters I used a free newsletter service called Zookoda. I’m not sure how it performs these days while it worked well at the start it slowly deteriorated in terms of how reliable it was. Emails wouldn’t go out on time and the newsletters that were getting through to those who had subscribed was fewer and fewer every week.

Switching to Aweber saw drastic improvements in how many of my emails were being delivered (and I mean drastic). The ‘cost’ of using a free service may not have been monetary (well not directly) - but it was significant because it meant that I was missing out of connecting with thousands of readers each week.

9. Use Double Opt in Newsletter Services

It is very important to only ever start a newsletter that uses Double Opt in techniques to gather subscribers (ie the person needs to subscribe and then confirm that subscription from an email to them). You can do your brand terrible damage by adding people to your newsletter list without permission or by buying lists of email addresses. Having double opt in systems does decrease your actual subscriber numbers and causes some headaches - but it is important.

Similarly - give people a way to opt out of your newsletter and use a service that includes your postal address in the newsletter. These things are the law in many parts of the world and if you don’t adhere to them you run the risk of not only hurting your reputation with potential readers but suffering the consequences of breaking the law.

3 Bonus Newsletter Tips from Chris Brogan

I used Chris Brogan’s newsletter as an example above so thought I’d drop him a note to see what tips he’d give for budding newsletter developers. Here’s what he replied with:

  • Give useful information more than news. People *say* they like news, but what they really want are actionable items.
  • Chunk the text in the newsletter so that it’s VERY easy to read. Make it very lightweight.
  • Write it personably, because this encourages two way interactions, and if your newsletter has a side intent of helping you do business, every two-way touch is a chance for someone to grant you permission to talk business.

If you have a newsletter/s - what tips would you add?

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