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“The Importance of Your Essence in Blogging Success” plus 1 more

“The Importance of Your Essence in Blogging Success” plus 1 more

Link to @ProBlogger

The Importance of Your Essence in Blogging Success

Posted: 05 Jul 2012 01:09 PM PDT

This guest post is by Alden Tan of Alden-Tan.com.

So you got your blog started up. It’s time to put everything in place.

You start to study the market and conduct all the research needed. You read up on other blogs, scout forums, and buy an ebook that’s supposed to help you succeed.

Having bought into the hype, you actually force yourself to apply all the tactics you learnt, even though you don’t have a good feeling about them.

You’re basically basing your work on others’ success!

Already you’ve fallen into the category of tired bloggers who’ve tried everything and yet not seen any success. And then you’re attracted by other “gurus” who advertise “the real deal”. It’s a vicious cycle.

What’s lacking? What is that one, invisible quality that the top bloggers all seem to have? You may be spending too much time doing what others are doing, when the real problem is this:

Your blog lacks your “why”

How much energy are you expending on your blog? I don’t just mean writing, designing, optimizing SEO, or using social media.

I mean how much of yourself are you putting into your blog?

The power of your self, injected in your blog, can take you far. It’s about bringing forth your beliefs to the world and sharing your vision with people.

And it all fuses together to create your “why”.

The goal is not to do business with everybody who needs what you have. The goal is to do business with people who believe what you believe."—Simon Sinek, Start with Why

This attitude goes beyond merely following your passion and showing people you’re doing what you love. It’s also a step ahead of putting personality in your writing.

It’s the belief and vision you need to create your purpose. And with purpose, you’ll never be lost again.

How to find and express your blog’s essence

1. Find your own purpose in person

In order to find your blog’s essence, you’ve first got to find your own purpose in life.

Remember, your blog is you. You aren’t a ball of marketing tactics and business strategies. You need to continually express yourself in your blog to get all that essence out there.

I found and fine-tuned my purpose with this little exercise I did at RyzeOnline. This powerful exercise can help you to zoom in on your very being, building the strong roots needed for both yourself and your blog.

Furthermore, one of the things the exercise teaches is to be fully proud of your essence and loudly proclaim it to the world. You can easily do that by writing and portraying that on your About Me page, and in all your articles.

Ever since I completed this exercise, I’ve only written with purpose. To put it another way, I don’t write if I’m not inspired. I stopped churning out content just for the sake of having an update for my blog. Not only does it feel a lot better, but my articles have been receiving greater response in terms of comments.

Do the exercise now to create your blog’s roots.

2. Find your one person

Now, with your purpose and essence found, you need to as yourself: who will I bring this to?

Forget about finding a target audience or a demographic. Ask yourself this:

“Are you being completely you when having an intimate conversation with someone or when you’re addressing a large group?” You should be.

There is a fantastic article on finding your one person (or customer) over at Firepole Marketing, complete with a free worksheet.

Finding your one person makes it a lot easier for you and your blog to communicate your essence. It relieves the pressure of marketing and managing your entire blog.

For me now, when I write, everything is directed to my one person. And combining it with the first point—my why—I know for sure I’m on the right track.

So find your one person now, and write, blog, and talk to them.

3. Find your blog’s one true design

Every blog has a layout and design—otherwise it’s just a wall of words.

But does your blog visually scream your essence?

Good marketing for a blog would mean readers would know what you’re all about within just three seconds of landing on your page.

Your content and writing definitely plays a big role, but the fact is, people’s attention span fluctuate a lot, so you definitely have to get your blog’s look alone to grab attention. And when you do grab it, make sure the right messages are going through.

Zenhabits has a minimalist look and it works wonderfully. Firepole Marketing, with its tagline, “Marketing that works” easily tells us of the brand’s speciality in marketing.

I just went through a blog revamp myself. When I started out, I thought of taking pretty pictures of myself with a good camera, thinking that it would look good anyway. Now, the pictures of me easily tell of my life. Let me know if you get that.

Does your blog visually tell your story? If not, tweak it!

People will recognize your blog for you

When I started my own blog, I just thought I’d write and see what comes along, because I knew I was a good writer. But I ended up writing random articles that were at most entertaining.

It was only when I dug deeper into myself and find out why I wanted to blog that I found real purpose in blogging.

Not only does it feel good doing what I do everyday, but people eventually recognized me for that. I got personal emails from readers asking me for real advice. And all my “winning” strategic platforms thrive on their own—now I have more Twitter followers, more Facebook likes and more opt-ins.

Are you a little sceptical in the importance of essence? Essence is not some magical, cosmic energy at work in which the universe rewards you for the passion you have. It’s just building a strong foundation in your blog or business.

Remember, with strong roots, your blog will bear great fruit. And what better way to build your roots than by being yourself, being passionate, and being original?

Alden Tan is a rock star blogger who writes about personal development, passion and inspiration. He gets most of his essence from doing what he loves despite what others think of him. If you want to learn how to get your own essence out, check out his email series on learning how to stop caring about what others think and start living!

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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The Importance of Your Essence in Blogging Success

The Barnum & Bailey Guide to Internet Marketing

Posted: 05 Jul 2012 07:00 AM PDT

This guest post is by Steven A. Lowe of Innovator Consulting and Custom Software Development.

"There's a sucker born every minute."—P. T. Barnum *Note.

"They apparently all have Internet access."—S. A. Lowe

Rubix D. Newby—Rube to his friends—left the family farm to strike it rich in the Big City. On the road he happened upon a garish collection of tents and lights.

A circus!

But not just any old circus, this was the famous Internet Marketing Circus. He scurried towards the gate. Fishing in his pocket, he wondered if he had enough money to get inside.

An old man by the gate whispered "No money required to get in, son, but best keep a hand in your pocket anyway." The T-shirt he was wearing was faded and barely legible. "The Secret is Free," it said.

The barker in front of the gate was wearing a black tuxedo with tails and a top hat. The top hat jiggled back and forth as the barker shouted into a megaphone.

"Step right up folks, and be amazed!" he cried. "Ladies, and gentlemen, young and old, draw near and listen as the story unfolds! Opportunities for riches beyond your wildest dreams await you online through Internet Marketing schemes! So step inside, where gurus and ninjas await! With secrets and contraptions that will never abate! With these treasures and tricks you can build a fortune online! No effort! No labor! All in your spare time!"

The barker pointed his megaphone right at Rube. "The sky's the limit on how much money you earn, but what is the limit on the time you can burn? So step right up, and go on in, it's not MLM so you don't even need to bring a friend!"

Rube flowed with the crowd through the gate, mesmerized by the bouquet of booths, tents, rides, barkers, hawkers, carnies, signs, lights, sounds, smells, and promises inside. “Where to begin!?” he thought.

While Rube was gawking at the spectacle, a furtive young man dressed all in black and wearing a strange sword caught his attention. "Psst!" said the young man, "Have I got a deal for you!"

"Oh?" said Rube. "What is it?"

"Why, it's a push-button cash machine niche site generator!" he said.

"Oh?" said Rube. "What good is that?"

"What good is it?" asked the man. "Why, it's my own secret ninja guru formula and system guaranteed to bring you unlimited cash flow, practically overnight!"

"How interesting," said Rube. "What do I have to do to make it work?"

"That's the beauty of it!" said the man. "You just pick a niche by following my simple yet comprehensive formula, using a few tools that I conveniently provide for a small fee, then just push a button to automagically generate a web site that starts making you money instantly! And for a limited time, I am willing to sell this to you and only you for $97!"

Rube knew he didn't have $97. "Not interested," he said, and started to walk away.

"Wait!" the man said. "Just because I like you and don't want you to miss out on this spectacular opportunity, you can have it for $7!"

Rube stepped in something. “Must be elephants around here,” he thought.

Rube laughed. "Mister, if I had a magic cash machine I wouldn't sell it for any price, I'd just push that button over and over and over!"

The man suddenly vanished into the crowd. Rube had a sneaking suspicion and reached into his pocket. One of his dollars had gone missing.

“What a strange fellow,” thought Rube, wiping off his shoes in the straw.

Rube noticed a crowd gathering around a man wearing a suit covered in neon dollar signs, gesturing at a large circular device. He shook the straw off of his feet and shuffled over to the back of the crowd.

"Article marketing is the true secret sauce for building authority!" the man shouted through a megaphone. "A thousand articles on ten thousand sites and you'll be an authority practically overnight!"

"That sounds like a lot of work," Rube yelled over everyone's heads.

"Ah, my friend," replied the man, pushing through the crowd, "ordinarily it would be!" He draped one arm around Rube's shoulders, and steered him towards the strange device. "But not if you have this magical Spinner! Care to give it a try? Five spins for a dollar! Lifetime use for only $97! Step up and speak a few words into the magic funnel."

"Well, okay, I'll try it," said Rube. He gave the man a dollar, and considered what to say. "The effect is amazing!" he said.

The machine whirred and spun and spouted great gouts of flame and billows of smoke, then intoned "The outcome is astounding!" "The consequence is impressive!" "Extraordinary is the result!" "Amazed by the effect, you will be!" "Become awestruck by substantial ramifications!"

The spinning and the smoke made Rube a bit nauseous. He was glad he only paid for five spins, as they were starting to sound rather silly.

Rube thanked the man and wandered away. Soon he noticed another barker in front of a dark tent. The man was dressed up like a spider.

"Master the web! Feel important! Instant authority!" hollered the spider-barker. "Superstar rankings! Fully automated mega backlink generation!" he continued.

Rube still felt a bit ill from the spinning, and was becoming somewhat disenchanted with the circus. But, he still had one dollar. “Surely one of these things has got to work,” he thought.

"I could use some instant authority," said Rube, and handed the spider-barker his last dollar.

"Excellent choice, son," said the barker. "Nothing builds authority faster than a thousand carefully-chosen backlinks! Just take the lighted path to the center of the tent, and prepare to be amazed!"

Rube stepped through the entry way and followed a dimly-lit path to the center of the tent. A spotlight snapped on as he stepped up on a small pedestal.

"Speak your mind, and let your authority be recognized!" intoned a disembodied voice.

Rube thought for a moment, and then said, "Farming is hard work!"

A fanfare of music swelled, and the lights started to rise. Rube saw that he was surrounded by bleachers, but they were empty.

As the illumination increased, Rube heard the screech of rusty gears, and noticed an odd bellows-like machine at the top of the tent. "Commencing generation of massive authority-building backlinks!" shouted the voice. The machine sprayed something onto the bleachers with a loud Hroof! and a Hurrrm!

Now the bleachers were no longer empty, but were covered in …ants! There were thousands of them, arrayed around him in neat concentric circles.

As the lights reached full glare, the screeching stopped and all was quiet. Suddenly, all of the ants pointed at him and whispered, "Farming is hard work!"

This did make Rube feel important—for a moment. “But they are just ants,” he thought. “And they seem to be dead.” He was very disappointed, and headed directly for the exit. He crunched over a few hundred ants on the way out.

“This circus is not fun,” Rube thought. “And now I'm broke. Might as well go back to the farm.” He dejectedly shuffled back towards the gate.

“I guess I'm not cut out for this Internet Marketing thing,' he ruminated. “It’s too complicated, and costs too much money—and seems to be run by some very strange people!”

Lost in thought, he stumbled into a sign that had only two words: "Simple Truth." The sign was in front of a plain table with two chairs. Sitting in one of the chairs was the old man from the gate, except now his T-shirt read: "There is no ninja sauce". The old man gestured at Rube to take a seat.

"I got no more dollars," Rube told the old man.

"Don't need 'em," he replied.

"Then what do you want?" asked Rube.

"I want you to succeed," he said. "Have a seat."

Rube sat. The old man continued, "So, your money's gone, is it? Went broke fast trying to get rich quick, eh?"

"Yeah. I guess I don't understand this stuff; best give up," Rube said.

"There is another way," the old man said. "It's not flashy, it's not sexy, it's not overnight, and it's not a fully-automated push-button solution guaranteed to bring you loads of cash on autopilot while you sleep for only $97 per month. But it always works, and it costs nothing but time—and motivation. Oh sure, you can accelerate the process some if you spend wisely, but the knowledge and tools are essentially free."

"What is it?" asked Rube.

The old man chuckled. "It's called 'Getting Educated'. Learn the fundamentals. Internet marketing is not about tricks and gimmicks, it's about serving people. It's about relating to prospects and customers online the same way you would relate to them in person. That means finding them, listening to them, and caring about them. That means creating the most valuable content or product that you can, tracking and refining your methods, and never stopping learning. It's about real marketing, not trickery. And it works every time."

"Where do I go to do that?" asked Rube.

"Well, there are a few good places, and in time you should visit them all," he said. "I suggest learning about blogging, especially content marketing, then perhaps social media, how search engines work, and copywriting, for starters."

"But wouldn't these whizz-bang doohickeys be faster and easier?" asked Rube.

"If they actually worked, they might be," the old man said. "If they added value instead of noise, they might be. If they solved problems for people instead of gaming the system, they might be. If they provided lasting value instead of temporary gimmicks, they might be. Now, suppose you bought one, and that it worked for a while and then stopped; how would you fix it?"

"I don't know," replied Rube.

"That's right. You wouldn't know how to fix it. And if it didn't work to start with, you wouldn't know why. So you would be depending entirely on something you don't understand, that may be of dubious construction and quality. Does that sound like a good business model?"

"Well, no," said Rube, "of course not."

"Right," said the old man. "You've got to learn to earn. You got to give to get. That's the way of the world. The Internet is no different."

"Okay, I'll give it a try!" said Rube.

"You do that," the old man said. "And remember what you learned on the farm—prepare the soil, plant the seeds, tend the crops, and be patient. You can only reap what you sow, you know."

Rube stood up to leave. "Thank you. Anything else I should keep in mind?" he asked.

"Yes," the old man said, and handed Rube a tattered card. It read:

Rube put the card in his pocket, and found he was once again alone on the road to the Big City. But now he walked on with a confident smile.

Steven A. Lowe knows 101 Ways to Land More Business Using Landing Pages. When he's not studying marketing and copywriting or reading problogger.net, he runs Innovator LLC, which specializes in innovative consulting and custom software development.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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The Barnum & Bailey Guide to Internet Marketing

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Why people should stop being snarky at Bing’s link disavow tool

Posted: 05 Jul 2012 07:00 AM PDT

Last week Bing announced their new link disavow tool available in their Bing Webmaster Central, and SEOs immediately got snarky about how and why Bing could possibly need a tool such as this, especially when SEOs were all squirming with delight over the mere possibility that Google might come out with an identical tool, as Matt Cutts hinted at a couple of weeks ago.

Yes, we know in the bigger scheme of things that Bing doesn’t matter nearly as much as Google when it comes to driving traffic to your sites.  But once upon a time, Google didn’t matter nearly as much as the search engines back in their early days did either, and look at the immense power Google is rocking it out with these days.  Yes, Microsoft is huge, but Bing is still like their annoying little brother that just keeps tagging along.  But all the sharp minded SEOs are taking note that Bing’s market share is slowly but steadily taking teeny tiny dents out of Google’s market share.

So Bing launched this awesome tool last week that will allow webmasters to essentially say “hey, we don’t know where those links pointing to our site are, we want nothing to do with them, so please pretend they don’t exist”.  Pretty cool tool in this day and age where Google has been penalizing sites with suspected paid or otherwise iffy back link profiles – however, it was Bing that launched the tool and not Google.  So while Bing did something great for the webmaster community, it didn’t take long for all kinds of bitchy comments targeting Bing’s new tool to start.  It seemed to begin first with a Search Engine Land news story.

Now, doesn’t that title scream of a Rand Fishkin link bait title circa 2005?  Since Vanessa Fox is an ex-Googler, it isn’t surprising she came out with a blog post making a not so subtle jabs at Bing, but more so when she does it on the Search Engine Land platform.  She built Webmaster Central at Google, so yes, I can see her being someone defensive that Bing launched a cool new tool before her former baby, especially one that webmasters have been begging for.  It’s funny how SEL has long had a love/hate relationship with Google, despite the fact that Matt Cutts is usually the keynote speaker at SMX (and it ironically being at SMX Advanced where Matt first hinted at the possibility of offering such a tool).  But it just seemed to be very heavy  on the “Bing sucks” bias to many readers.

Vanessa’s article continues on with thinly veiled insults where she goes far out of her way to paint Bing in a pretty negative light, pulling out old blog posts and comments to show Bing’s contradictory stance (but hello, Google has it’s own contradictory posts too, which of course she didn’t happen to mention).  Ready to dig into her version of events?  You can read her blog post here here. And to put it into perspective, their competitor Search Engine Watch did a similar story, but just the facts and quotes from Duane Forrester.

Then of course after the blog post came the obligatory tweet (which was retweeted numerous times).

Now Search Engine Land and Vanessa Fox were far from the only ones who did it, it just happens she was the one who wrote a particularly critical look at it before most others did, and the one everyone was retweeting. And that seemed to give people permission to do their own digs at Bing for launching a link disavow tool too, when really, they shouldn’t be bitter at Bing for doing it first, they should be pissed at Google for not doing it..

At least some of them were pretty clever!  But I degress.

What people are missing is the real point of the whole thing.  Really, Bing did the biggest favor it could to SEOs, aside from making them look ahead of the game compared to Google.  Because now Google is going to have to come up with a response to that, because do they really want Bing to have the tool that all SEOs are stomping their feet to get?  Bing got a huge amount of mileage out of the story, and who knows, they might have heard Matt Cutts talk about the fact Google was considering offering the same tool and thought “Damn, we should do this first”, and while Google was pondering the ramifications of it (which could be significant depending on how it is rolled out, because of how spammers could manipulate it for their own good), Bing just went ahead and did it (and to be honest, I am surprised they did!)

While not many SEOs will actually sit down and use the tool for more than testing (unless they have been hit by Google’s penalties), I do hope Bing releases the numbers of how many links were disavowed or how many people are using it, the numbers could be surprising.   Bing won’t necessarily get more market share out of this per se, however, it did go a hell of a long way towards providing good will and happy feelings to the non-snarky webmasters.

What should Bing do next?  The best possible thing Bing can do right now is get the right people on board and continue building those dream tools that all the Google minded SEOs want, because it not only gets more people using the Bing Webmaster Central but it also puts Google on the defensive to answer with their own tool, or explain why they won’t offer it, but Google has so far been mum on the issue since Bing’s launch.

In other words, game on!

Looking for an SEO service that won’t get you banned?

How Not to Suck as an SEO

Posted: 05 Jul 2012 06:45 AM PDT

For every one kick ass SEO in the industry, there are three or four horrendously awful SEOs and at least a dozen wannabe SEOs.  While horrendously awful tend to burn their bridges in the industry (and get sites penalized) before they make it, wannabe SEOs can tend to make something of themselves if they work their asses off, which will again separate the wheat from the chaffe in the SEO world.  Wanting to put the time and effort into being a good SEO?  Here are some things you should do to NOT suck as an SEO.

Fact Check
Unless you have been in the industry for several years, are constantly reading on the topic, and pretty much eat, sleep and breathe SEO, take the time to fact check everything before you post or tweet.   You want to amaze people with your brilliance not cause people to question it because you said something as fact that is false or were spouting out outdated information.  After all, there was a time when it was considered a fairly safe practice to buy links, provided they weren’t from link farms or spammy sites.  So make sure your facts are coming from trustworthy sources (link to ppl to follow on twitter) and current.  If you can’t find a date on a blog post (like many do these days, to combat the appearance that some content is stale) find a second source.

Not a Jack of All Trades
Don’t be afraid to admit something is out of your expertise. Not all of us can be amazing writers or amazing link builders.  Some are stronger technically while others are strong designers.  Not everyone can be a jack of all trades in this industry, which is why many of us work with teams instead.  If something isn’t your strong suit, suggest someone to your client that would be better suited to that particular aspect of their needs.  It is better to have the client think you are awesome in your strong areas than for them to think you are only mediocre because your writing skills or your design skills were pretty lacklustre.

Take time to smell the roses
If you are looking at your analytics for less than five minutes a day, you are doing it wrong.  Period.  Whatever flavor of analytics you are using (although Google Analytics does offer a pretty awesome and comprehensive free analytics program) you can find out immense things about your visitors.  Do you know what percentage of your traffic is from mobile devices?  If not, you better look and see if you are missing the boat on offering a mobile-friendly website.  What is your top landing page after your index page?  What social media sends the most traffic?  What forums have been linking to your site this week?  What pages in your top ten have a higher than average bounce rate and what can you do to fix that?

Know your keywords
It is all fine and dandy to ranking number one for a 5 word keyword phrase, but if only one person searches for that a month, why does it matter?  Make sure you are focusing on the keywords that can bring you in the most traffic and the most conversions because bragging to anyone about your #1 ranking for an obscure keyword combination will make you look like a clueless idiot.

Bigger picture tools
Especially if you are learning or not quite “an old hat” at SEO yet, tools can be your new best friend.  There are plenty of tools out there, if you know them and can find them, that are designed to give SEOs an advantage either in time or scope.  They can help you see the bigger picture of all kinds of data, then as you get more experienced you can drill down to what things are most important for each specific client or website.  And then don’t forget to use the tools.  We have all signed up for some cool tool and then barely used it for whatever reason.

Network
Sure you might be writing the most brilliant blog posts of the year on your personal SEO blog.  But if you only have three people reading it, chances are almost certain that anyone who really matters in the industry will never see it.  So follow – and more importantly, interact – with people on Twitter.  Guest blog at one of the many industry blogs that take guest posts.  Pitch for conferences, even the smaller ones that might not have as many pitches.  You want to do whatever you can to get your name out there and noticed, but get noticed in a good way of course!  Which brings me to my next point.

My bad
We all screw up occasionally.  Fortunately, some of us do it with only a couple people knowing, while others will screw up so royally that it will generate hundreds or thousands of tweets about it.  If you screw up, particularly in a humiliating way that results in people calling you out and talking about it, fess up.  Whether you are saying “my bad”, or have to release a full fledged apology on your blog, do it and do it quick.  The worst thing you can do is fuck up and then be not willing to admit it, because people will remember.

So if you are stuck in that wannabe or “no quite an expert” SEO rut, consider adding things things to your daily “to do” list.  Send out a guest blog proposal every day; make a point of @reply an industry expert daily; add a few new SEO blogs to your RSS reader; sign up for a new tool every week, even if it is just a free trial – and then use it.  For every expert SEO you see, you can pretty much guarantee they did their time in the trenches doing all these things while building their reputation and client base.

Now, ready, set, GO!  And don’t suck :)

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