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Archive for the 'Blogging' Category

Are You Victim to Online Content Thieves and Online Plagiarists?

May. 15th 2008

If you’re like me, you work hard strategizing what quality content will educate and inform your target audience on certain topics while promoting your expertise. You might have written an article yourself or paid a professional copywriter to write something fantastic, right? It’s time consuming and costly to create quality content. I feel your frustration. It’s high maintenance to track down these people who need content to make some cash on the side with advertising.

Who are these Copy Thieves?

You can try Yahoo, MSN, or Google and conduct a search using your article title. Then visit each site to make sure you are properly credited for your content.

Google Alerts (www.google.com/alerts) – Type in the title of your article with quotes for an exact match, then enter your email address to be alerted with relevant Google search results based on your search terms.

Copyscape (www.copyscape.com) – Insert your URL and their service scans the web for similar copy.

How to Fight Back Online Plagiarists

I would like to point to two great resources on this topic:

SubHub Publish For Profits article, “Stop Thief How You Can Fight Back Against Online Plagiarism

Lorelle on Wordpress article, “What Do You Do When Someone Steals Your Content

WHAT HAS YOUR EXPERIENCE BEEN DEALING WITH ONLINE COPY THIEVES?
Leave a comment.

Visual Tutorial: How To Install the Wordpress Blog Engine to Your Web Server

May. 8th 2008

Tutorial: How to Install Wordpress to Your Web Server

WOULD YOU LIKE TO START A BLOG FOR YOUR BUSINESS? Learn more about how Design Insomnia can create a Wordpress Blog to benefit your business. Call 1(619)872-0971 today!
Leave a comment.

Stormhoek’s “Blogger’s Wine Freebie” campaign

Mar. 27th 2007

Just attended a virtual seminar with Jennifer Laycock (Editor of Search Engine Guide) and Matt Bailey (of SiteLogic) discussing the influence of Social Media for your business. In their presentation, they discuss Stormhoek’sBlogger’s Wine Freebie 2345” campaign as a big success strategy in the blogosphere. As Erick Schonfeld writes, “Stormhoek hired Hugh McLeod, a well-known marketing blogger, to help kick off its campaign in the UK, and he is also designing some new labels for the wine featuring his trademark cartoon sketches.”

I believe this promotion ended September of 2005 but the publicity continues for Stormhoek! Bloggers had “no obligation to blog about Stormhoek in exchange for the free bottle” but blog about it they did (on personal blogs, Flickr…). When people blog about your products, search engines love that!

TELL US: So what promotion can you put into action (a contest, mailing out samples, etc.)? Leave a comment.

What Comedians and Bloggers Have In Common

Mar. 26th 2007

They are always looking for new material!

As a wave riding surfer chic, I like comparing good bloggers to good surfers. First your taught to surf with instruction on the sand. Your taught by experts how to pop up and stand on the board. You learn about the ocean and how waves are formed and eventually you take to the ocean… walking waist high then jump on your board and try to catch a wave. The more you practice, the more your learn and the more confident you’ll get to paddle farther (eventually sitting on your board while in the lineup). The lesson: “just start blogging!”

TELL US: Do you have a metaphor for bloggers? Leave a comment.

Cycle of Blogging

Mar. 22nd 2007

Thank you Jessica Hagy of Indexed for the inspiration.

Cycle of Blogging includes reading, forming an opinion, and then you blog about it.

TELL US: Do you agree? What has your Cycle of Blogging included? Leave a comment.

3 Parts to a Successful Blog

Mar. 22nd 2007

Thank you Jessica Hagy of Indexed for the inspiration.

Successful blogs are regularly updated, has great content, and offers something of value to its intended readership.

TELL US: Do you agree? What would your 3 Parts to a Successful Blog list have? Leave a comment.

Pros and Cons between Hosted and Self Hosted Blog Solutions

Mar. 16th 2007

Are you wanting to take that leap to start blogging for business? Are you have difficulty with the all important decision of choosing to go with a blog hosted (some with monthly fees and many free options) or self-hosted (installed on your web server) blog solution?

Advantages of Hosted Solutions

In short, it’s the easy, quick and cheaper route.

You go to Blogger.com (free), Typepad (monthly fee) or Wordpress.com (free) and fill out an online form. Within 5 minutes you can be blogging. The hardest part is probably coming up with the name for your blog. You use one of their themed templates for the look and feel of your site. You don’t have to worry about the technical aspects like installing software, installing a database, maintaining the database, keeping up with version controls of the software, updating to new & improved versions of the blog software, or worry about security. It’s an all-in-one package.

Disadvantages of Hosted Solutions

In one word - “limitations.”

Do you want to control how you brand your business? Questions to ask yourself:

  • Why promote someone else’s business (i.e. myblogname.blogger.com; myblogname.wordpress.com; myblogname.typepad.com)? Host the blog on your server and choose either to use the blog publishing platform (we recommend Wordpress.org) to:

    … manage your current website (mysite.com)
    … host a separate blog domain/site (mycompanysblog.com)
    … place your business blog in a subdirectory of your current website (mysite.com/blog)

  • If any part of your marketing relies on some form of search engine optimization, remember when your blog is through a hosted solution you might not be able to control your domain name (myblogname.blogger.com).
     
  • When it comes to the look & feel of your business and your marketing materials, shouldn’t they be consistent? You probably can’t find a theme or blog template on a hosted solution that really match the design of your current website and other marketing materials. Since my motto is to “harness the power of design to communicate the benefits of your products/services”, I recommend a self hosted blog solution which allows you to customize your blog.

    Need a portfolio site?
    Check out Eric-Powell.com’s site using Wordpress.

    Does your site look like a magazine or news site?
    Check out XXLmag.com’s site using Wordpress.

    Want your blog within your existing website (which bring your visitors within your main site)? Check out 37signal’s Signals vs Noise blog

When a hosted solution is conducting maintenance, will people be able to visit your blog? With a hosted solution, your blog is on a shared server. With so many other bloggers on the same server, your blog can experience downtime and visitors to your blog might experience slow downloads. Drawbacks to also consider when you want to upload, edit and manage your blog posts.

There might also be bigger marketing and technical headaches when you do decide to upgrade from a hosted to a self hosted solution.

TELL US: What pros and cons have you experienced as you’ve learned more about business blogging? Leave a comment.

Can You List 5 Reasons Why You Blog?

Mar. 16th 2007

Read Andy Wibbel’s “I Blog Because” and was inspired to respond, too. I liked his #1 and #2.

1. He who makes no mistakes makes nothing.

I know I’ve made my share of mistakes. I hope that’s a good sign towards success (ahem). I’m a big admirer of education. I like blogging about mistakes, how I learned from my mistakes. Helping others avoid what I went through makes me feel that I contribute to the universe in a positive way.

2. The 2nd of the 7 Deadly Sins: I do ‘Envy’ the Written Word

Blogging keeps this noggin on its toes. I admire you journalists, authors and the like, especially in the realm of copywriting for business. Once you start observing the power of words to sell, persuade, and influence thought… wow! It’s mind blowing. Maybe that’s why I love certain television shows so much - there are some talented scriptwriters out there that keep me hooked on the tube for hours! I have to work a little bit harder than those born writers but practice makes perfect, right?

3. Business is about Relationships

Blogging is conversational and interactive. You can potentially get instant feedback from your readers and readers can have dialogue with your other readers. Everyone learns from each other. It’s humbling when you get feedback especially when you didn’t know anyone cared about your thoughts, expertise, or point of view.

4. Life in the Fast Lane

I just love technology for business. Blogging is exciting. I love learning what new Wordpress plugins are being developed to help solve business solutions and help make life easier.

5. I’m not an Elephant

You know that saying, “An elephant never forgets.” Well, days pass and I don’t know what I’ve been doing. I know I’ve been busy. Having a blog compensates for my lazy memory. I can visit my blog and read posts where I might have document progress on a project, thoughts and observations around current events (business/life), lessons I learned, marketing and promotional efforts… the list goes on.

TELL US: Why do you Blog? Leave a comment.

Should Consultants Blog?

Mar. 16th 2007

It depends.

Step 1: Ask yourself, “In your industry, are there blog readers?”

It’s not necessarily just your potential audience we’re talking about here. How about your strategic partners, business associates, your current clients and their employees? Mike McLaughlin at Guerrilla Consulting says, “If the purpose of a business blog is to reach your targeted audience, it’s best to know someone out there would want to read your stuff.” Even if blogging isn’t so popular in your industry, would that fact give you a leg up over competition?

If your readership likes what they read and gets to know you better through your posts, don’t you think you have a better chance to stay on top-of-mind when they do need the products and services that you provide.

Step 2: Do you already have the characteristics of a good blogger?

Have you subscribed to blogs? How often to you read people’s blogs? Mike goes on to state, “You need to be a good blog reader before you can be a good blogger.” If you are considering blogging for your business, then swipe some of the techniques you admire of other great bloggers. Why do you like reading their blog posts? Why did you decide to subscribe? How did you feel about the ability to make comments? How did that blog engage you into the dialogue of concepts and ideas you had read? Were there consistent tones, a certain manner and structure used throughout the posts you can learn from? What do you think of the blog author?

Step 3: Determine your Blog’s Focus

In the 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen Covey wants you to, “begin with the end in mind.” Write down the results you are looking for, then brainstorm all the ways your blog will help accomplish these goals. According to Publish & Prosper. Blogging for your Business by DL Byron & Steve Broback, business blogs are created to focus on marketing, public relations and/or customer service.

So why will you be blogging? How can you make more money with the help of blogs?

Step 4: Are you Commited?

Have you ever played with domino pieces? Remember, you stand them up in long lines just so you can topple the first tile, which falls on the second tile, to the third… so on and so forth. How does the domino effect play a role in blogging? When you post to your blog (using a catchy title, sprinkle keywords throughout the post and share information of value that your readers can learn from) search engines are notified. Having a listing in various search engines enables more people to find the information that you are posting. They click to your blog post and then the possibilities are endless… Visitors may become frequent readers of your blog. They may subscribe. They may comment. They might write a blog post about your article and link back to your post. They may email you. You get the picture.

So, will you commit to a schedule of posting often to your blog? What does ‘often’ mean? From the words of Publish & Prosper, “the most important thing is to write posts that are relevant to your audience, it’s also vital that you do it frequently enough that search engines see the blog as an actively updated site and your readers have a reason to come back.” Does that sound overwhelming? You don’t think you can do it? Are you asking yourself, “Won’t that just create more work for me?”

Calm yourself. Keep it simple. Andy Wibbels, author of BlogWild! writes, “You don’t have to blog every day to have a successful blog. I recommend beginning bloggers commit to writing at least three posts each week… The e-mails you write to friends and colleagues, the interesting and enjoyable quips, ideas or comments you come across in your daily life, and even the ideas in articles and books you’ve read – all of this can become content for your blog… Be controversial. Be passionate.”

TELL US: What are your apprehensions about blogging for business? Leave a comment.

Do you have a burning question? Ask Maya!

MOTTO: DON'T TELL PEOPLE ANYTHING.
HELP THEM VISUALIZE THEIR OPTIONS AND SHOW THEM TOOLS TO GET THINGS DONE.