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“What I Learned From Liars and Journalists, and How it Made Me a Better Blogger” plus 1 more

“What I Learned From Liars and Journalists, and How it Made Me a Better Blogger” plus 1 more

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What I Learned From Liars and Journalists, and How it Made Me a Better Blogger

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 01:09 PM PDT

This guest post is by Austin Gunter, of WP Engine.

Trust Me, I'm Lying – Confessions of a Media Manipulator is the title of Ryan Holiday's new book about the tactics cutting-edge bloggers use to drive hundreds of thousands of viewers to their blogs, seven days a week, 365 days a year.

Ryan, author of controversial posts like The Top 5 Performing American Apparel Ads, And How They Get PR For Free (NSFW), is the Director of Marketing at American Apparel, and is a self-proclaimed "media manipulator." He has made a high-flying career serving irresistible blog content to places like the Huffington Post, Gawker, and Jezebel.

I waited more than a year for Trust Me, I'm Lying to hit the shelves. The book has pushed my limits as a marketer and as a person from the second it arrived in my mailbox. You must read the book. I've personally poured through the book late at night to wring every last bit of knowledge from its pages and make my own blogging irresistible.

From my reading, I've picked out a set of unexpected tactics that I want to share with the Problogger audience. In this post, we'll go in-depth with these unexpected methods, how you can use them to make your page views spike every single day.

Way back in history…

Way back in American History, nearly 150 years ago, newspapers were run by incredibly brilliant marketers. Folks like William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer learned how to sell newspapers one copy at a time using headlines and sensational stories to entice businessmen to spend their hard-earned money on a paper.

19th century newspapers like The New York Sun and The New York Journal were sold one paper at a time, their success riding on how compelling the front page was. The more engaging the content, the better the paper sold.

Sound familiar? That's because blogs live and die by the pageview. Every page on a blog has to stand on its own, or get lost in the shuffle of the Internet. Blogging and the "Yellow Journalism" of the mid-19th century are ridiculously similar.

Selling newspapers one copy at a time, in the hustle and bustle of the already-hectic, and often inhospitable island of Manhattan, for example, is the same hustle that bloggers must have to be successful.

There's money to be made, but how is a single blog supposed to stand out from the crowd and draw page views amidst the hustle and bustle of Twitter, Facebook, and Business-Insider's link-bait photo galleries?

How did The New York Journal and The New York Sun sell millions of copies of their papers?

And how can you, the blogger, use old-school journalistic tactics and a bit of sensationalism to draw traffic to the valuable content of your blog? Here are some suggestions.

Yellow journalism tactics that generate pageviews

Before I lay out these incredibly powerful blogging tactics, I want to issue a warning.

While the methods we're about to explore flat-out work, and can generate six-figure pageviews for your blog, many of them are inspired by the dark history of American journalism. Please know your limits before you go crazy injecting your writing with the the methods I share with you in this post.

Focus on the fear

Use headlines that might threaten your audience's way of life. Fear is a powerful motivator for immediate action. Writing a headline that invokes fear makes it nearly impossible for your audience to look away. This example from The New York Journal shows an irresistible headline.

Get news faster

"Special Edition" papers that broke the news sold in incredible numbers. Social media platforms make breaking news a minute-by-minute affair. If you can publish the story immediately, you benefit from the pageviews.

  • Liveblog the conferences you attend, embedding tweets and social shares on your blog using WordPress and Storify.
  • Publish short post quickly, and follow up with a more detailed analysis when the dust settles.
  • On the move? Use the mobile WordPress app to publish photos of news unfolding in front of you.

Even if the story is you sharing your opinion, you still posted first. As The Huffington Post advertises on their homepage: "Breaking News and Opinion…"

Get exclusives

Can you publish a story that nobody else can access? The story must be relevant and valuable to your audience, so if you write about WordPress, your exclusive can't be about Fantasy Football. But, if you have the inside scoop on WordPress 3.5, or you run an Apple Rumor blog and you know about secret bug fixes in Mountain Lion, that's big news that literally millions of people care about.

Ask the question, "Would this exclusive affect my audience's business or behavior?," if you're unclear whether the exclusive will be attention-grabbing.

Give away the story in the headline

You want the headline to contain the entire story. If you can tell the whole story in the headline, you'll still get the click. The art is in succinctly telling the story, with details, in about 110 characters, short enough to fit into a tweet without editing.

Here's a 19th century example from The New York Journal:

"CALL TO DUTY: 250,000 VOLUNTEERS ARE ASSIGNED TO WAR STATIONS. Preparing for the final blow at Cuba, New York Furnishes Twelve Regiments."

Here's a recent one from The Huffington Post this August:

"A PALL OVER PAUL. GOP PROS FUME: Romney Ceded Election With Ryan Pick."

That's a headline built for tweeting.

Embrace the controversy

Just like fear, outrage is a powerful motivator. The perfect recipe for controversy is to highlight the extreme position of a particular issue. Nuance won't inspire immediate action, and unfortunately anything that takes longer than "immediately" takes too long to tweet.

Politics has always been a good way to stir the controversy. Take this headline for example:

"BOTH HOUSES, In Uproar, Threatening Revolt, WARN M'KINLEY"

The emphasis is from the headline, not my own. Notice how the upper-case words focus the reader on the controversy at hand, while the lower-case words contain the nuance that requires a bit more time to process?

Don't be limited to the politics of presidential elections. Your online community has its own politics that you can engage. If the content gets people talking in the comments, there was a good chance it was controversial.

For example, this recent post engages the gender controversy, and generates some rather insightful and open discussions in the comments.

Use pictures!

Call it Industrial Revolution Link-Bait. The front pages of The New York Journal were full of images designed to push the limits on cultural mores, including illustrations of nearly-nude women and explosions from the wars that were happening.

Spain

Image courtesy Wikipedia

World

Image courtesy Wikipedia

By contrast, here's a post I wrote about the bodies of the summer Olympic athletes.

Conclusion

The tactics that I've laid out here are inspired by Ryan Holiday's exposé of the industry, Trust Me, I'm Lying. I've only scratched the surface of what he covers in the book, which is recommended reading for writers, from PR to bloggers, to community mangers, making their livings on the Internet.

Many of these tactics are controversial at best, and some of them may push our boundaries as writers. My goal isn't to write a post that makes you feel comfortable, but instead to provide insight into what it takes to generate page views for your blog. I do encourage you to know where your own limits are, and to decide how you want to define "success" for your online content.

Blogs live and die by the page view, just like Yellow Journalism, which was measured based on how many papers were sold each day. The question is: how much is one page view worth to your site?

Tell me in the comments how far you're willing to go for a click. I'm curious to see the spectrum of spectacle. On balance, who is a successful blogger that would never use any of these tactics?

Austin Gunter is a blogger, a writer, and a massive extravert. He works and lives as the Brand Ambassador for WP Engine, managing the marketing, branding, and PR for their Managed WordPress Hosting Platform. Austin drinks yerba maté daily and is really good at twitter You should follow him, @austingunter. His own WordPress is found at austingunter.com.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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What I Learned From Liars and Journalists, and How it Made Me a Better Blogger

The Problem with Almost All Blogs—and An Easy Solution

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 07:03 AM PDT

This guest post is by John Trayhorn of the ECHO Affiliate Blog.

This post describes a problem that affects almost all bloggers, and almost certainly affects you. Implement these changes, and you should see page views, revenues and social sharing soar.

How it begins

You start off a great blog.

To start with almost nobody reads it. Hey, it takes time to build up an audience. (If you've just started, don't give up—longevity is one of the keys to a successful blog!)

As time passes, you slowly gain an audience. When you publish a new blog post, you get a surge of readers.

But:

  1. Most of those readers will never see your old blog posts.
  2. Despite your increasing popularity, many people who do visit your blog and like it will miss many of your new blog posts.
  3. The readers never see your blog organised into a logical and coherent sequence.

There's a solution.

What's more, it's easy to implement, has huge benefits and doesn't take a lot of your time.

The solution to the problem

I first found the solution when I ran an Adsense website.

I noticed that most of the revenue came from our articles about jobs. We were already using an autoresponder website to send out our newsletters. But to maximise revenue, we needed to do something more.

Email blogging, done right

You may well have heard of autoresponders, or use one yourself, but hang on in with me—there's more to it than sending out a few emails when you write a new blog post, or have something to sell.

Instead, you send out an email about every post you have ever written.

Not at the same time, of course. If you have an old blog with a lot of posts, the process could be spread out over years! And don't include the post in the email—the aim is to get the reader back to your blog.

Instead, explain how each blog post will create value to your reader, and then include a link with a call to action back to the post. Remember to use a fantastic headline and to test these over time, so you get more and more opens—and more and more clickthroughs.

In my case, I took all our jobs articles, organised them into a logical sequence, emailed users about them over a couple of months, and watched our Adsense revenue explode from a few few hundred dollars to a peak of just under $3000.

You can see an example of one of our autoresponder emails here:

Autoresponder example

As I found out later, this approach works even better if you have a high-value product to sell.

Benefits for you, benefits for your readers

Think of this:

  1. Everyone you sign up gets to see every great post you have ever written (if any have bombed, you should cut them out of the email sequence—if not your blog).
  2. A one-off visitor can be turned into a person who visits your blog multiple times over the years using this technique.

What's more, an increase in regular visitors leads into other benefits, such as:

  • more social sharing
  • more links
  • more comments
  • more revenue
  • and the much greater relationship you get with long-term readers.

This approach does require a change of emphasis on your blog. If you use this technique, your primary goal should be to get readers to sign up, not just to read.

You will also need to create a clear benefit to signing up, such as a free guide, an email course or, if you are selling a product, discount codes. (An email course can be as simple as your existing blog posts organised into a more logical sequence.)

Don't think you are being selfish, either. There are clear benefits to the reader, who gets an organized sequence of free blog posts about a topic they’re interested in.

Have you used autoresponders to get traffic to your old posts? Tell us how it worked in the comments.

You can read more tips like this on the ECHO Affiliate Blog. And, of course, make sure you sign up so you get all of our fantastic tips via auto-responder!

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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The Problem with Almost All Blogs—and An Easy Solution

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Shamelessly namedropping Matt Cutts for fun and profit

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 06:53 AM PDT

I noticed Barry Schwatz bragging about how a Googler lives 2 minutes away from him – I suppose for a geeky webmaster that is cause to celebrate, especially if you or a client could exploit that acquaintance when things go sideways.

How random, I met a guy tonight who works at Google and is also a member in the same small Synagogue I am part of.  Too funny.  Oh, and he didn’t know who +Matt Cutts was, which may be more interesting.

But really, meeting a Googler isn't cause for a nerdgasm, unless maybe I fancy him for something other than "my client bought links and can't get rid of them, help!"  But then that opens up a whole new can of worms regarding conflict of interest, and really, the odds of you or me meeting someone from the fabled spam team during everyday life is nil.

He seemed shocked, however, that said Googler didn't know who Matt Cutts was.  Now Matt is definitely an a-list celebrity as far as webmasters go, you'd be hard pressed to find someone who doesn't know who he is in this industry.  But really, would there be a need for someone working on Google Wallet or Android really need to know who Matt Cutts is?

He mentioned that it was crazy people knew who Danny Sullivan was and not Matt.  But it really isn't so strange when you think about it.  Not only has Danny been in this industry for, well, forever, he writes on a lot more than merely search and spam issues.

But he did know who +Danny Sullivan was.  Which makes the +Matt Cutts thing even more interesting.  No?

But perhaps the most telling part of this conversation is the fact Barry felt the needed to drop both these names after having just met this Googler.  When I think back to Googler's I have met at conferences and events, "Do you know Matt Cutts?" really isn't in the front of my mind, unless he is part of the spam team.  And those tend to be few and far between :)  I see it the same as if someone commenting that I am from London and they ask if I know their cousin Ben who lives in Wales (and that is pretty annoying, by the way).   And it really isn’t to pick on Barry specifically, as a crazy number of other people would do or have done the identical thing too, I just happened to see Barry’s Google+ post and tweets when thinking about this topic.

For some SEOs, I can imagine name dropping Matt Cutts can have some pretty high end results, if they assume you must be in the know because you are "friends" with Matt.  It really isn’t a stretch for someone trying to land a client, especially one penalized, to namedrop the Matt Cutts connection, even if it is pantently untrue.  I have met some SEOs over the years who have both openly and secretly bragged that they have Matt in their pockets (although whether this is actually true or not remains to be seen).  But they want people to perceive that value added “connection” and the implication they can get those favors, even if it is implicitly untrue.  The same how some sleazy webmasters used to post a picture of themselves with Matt Cutts, again to imply they are in the know and know the right people, even though in all likelihood, that webmaster just approached Matt at a conference.

Has anyone gotten a special favor from name dropping Matt Cutts – or Danny Sullivan for that matter?  Do you know people (or do it yourself ;) ) who imply they can get those special favors when they are trying to lock down a client?

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