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ProBlogger: 9 Benefits [and 3 Costs] Of Building Community On Your Blog

ProBlogger: 9 Benefits [and 3 Costs] Of Building Community On Your Blog

Link to @ProBlogger

9 Benefits [and 3 Costs] Of Building Community On Your Blog

Posted: 25 Mar 2013 08:14 AM PDT

Do you ever feel – as you blog – like you’re talking to an empty room?

Day after day you publish posts only to have them greeted by….

If that is how you feel – then you’re not alone. In fact one of the most common questions that I hear from bloggers is:

“How do I get my readers to interact with me?”

Over the next week I’d like to suggest some ways to increase reader engagement and would love to hear how you do it on your blog too in comments below.

But first – today I’d like to talk about WHY community and interaction on a blog is so important.

Blogging – More than Just Creating Content

There is no one way to build a successful blog but in my experience a blog really comes alive when there is at least some level of community on… or around… the the blog.

Perhaps the best example I can think of to illustrate this is the time I started Digital Photography School (my main blog).

When I launched dPS in 2006 I launched it without comments being activated on the blog. This was an experiment to see what impact not having comments would have on a new blog.

I quickly discovered that by starting a blog in this way had quite a few negative impacts upon the site – the main one being that not having reader feedback just felt plain weird and left ME as the blogger thirsting for interaction with readers. I guess I’d become used to getting readers engagement on my other blogs and without it just felt ‘wrong’ for my style of blogging.

Within a few weeks I’d not only turned comments back on at dPS but was already working towards starting a photography forum on the site too!

The impact of adding more and more opportunity for community engagement on the site was immediate and big. Page views went up, repeat/loyal readership increased and I feel the quality of the site also improved.

Why Build Community on Your Blog?

Lets take a bit deeper look at some of the benefits of focusing upon reader engagement and building community on your blog.

1. Community Increases Your Blog’s Usefulness

Right from the early days of ProBlogger my mantra has always been that a good blog is a useful blog.

If you’re not being useful to your readers on some level (and being useful can be many things from being informative, to entertaining, to keeping them up to date) it is very difficult to have success with your blog.

My experience of having community on a blog is that it makes the blog exponentially more useful – something James Surowiecki wrote about in his useful book – The Wisdom of Crowds.

Together we are a lot smarter than any single one of us.

I’ve seen this many times over on my blogs. While I work hard to have as much expertise on my topics there will always be things I don’t know but which my readership has experience and insight.

For example I once received an email from a reader – Mandy – asking how she should go about photographing her dying grandmother with dignity. This was a long way out of my expertise so I asked my readership and we had over 90 responses.

Without the community on dPS I would have been unable to help Mandy.

This is a fairly extreme example but I see it in action on a daily basis in the comments sections of my blogs when readers have their questions answered by others in the community.

Ultimately for me – increasing your blog’s usefulness to readers is the number 1 reason to build community on your blog. However there are other reasons too.

2. Community Builds Social Proof

Have you ever chosen to eat in a restaurant purely because you can see it is popular with other patrons or passed by one that is empty?

If so – you understand the concept of social proof.

People attract people in all kinds of places – a blog is no exception.

It is much easier to attract and get engagement from a reader if there is already engagement from other readers.

I’ve seen this numerous times on my blogs (but also social media accounts). The more genuine interaction you have on your blog the easier it is to convince others that your blog is worth a second visit.

3. Community Increases Page Views

Page views won’t matter as much to some readers of ProBlogger as others but for those of you monetizing your blog with advertising you might want to take note.

Page views are important for those using Ad networks like AdSense or selling ads directly to sponsors because the more times the ads are seen on your blog the more you’ll be able to earn.

Community increases page views. If someone leaves a comment on your blog on most blogs that means 2 page views instead of 1. That person is also more likely to return to see if others leave a comment responding to theirs so you’re up to 2, 4 or 5 page views (and even more if a conversation between readers emerges).

Add a forum area to your blog and the average pages viewed per visitor can skyrocket – we regularly see as many as 10 pages view per visit on the Digital Photography School Forum.

4. Community Makes Your Blog More Attractive to Advertisers

Speaking of advertising as a model to monetize your blog – I’ve discovered over the last few years of selling advertising directly to advertisers on dPS that many advertisers are looking to not only see their banner ads on a site – but they are willing to pay for engagement with your readers.

One of the best examples of this is an annual competition we’ve run on dPS to give away a price from one of our regular site sponsors.

This competition is part of an advertising bundle that we run with this sponsor (they also run some banner ads but also sponsor our newsletter regularly).

While they get value out of the banner ads and newsletter ads that they run it is the competition that really converts well for them because it gets our readers visiting their website and engaging with the products that they offer (because to enter the competition you need to leave a comment saying which product you’d like to win and why).

This is the third year in a row we’ve run this particular competition and we’ve had 700+ comments left on each year we’ve run it.

5. Community Makes Your Blog Easier to Create and Sell Products

Back in 2005 I ran a series of blog posts here on ProBlogger titled – 31 Days to Build a Better Blog. The project was so successful that I ran the project again in 2007 and then again in 2009.

Each time I ran the project it grew larger and larger and readers became more and more engaged with the concept but also with the rest of my blog (it was a great community building project in and of itself).

At the end of the 2009 project a strange thing happened – my readers began to beg me to compile the 31 posts I’d written that year into a PDF… to sell to them as an eBook.

Yes you heard it – out of a period of intense reader interaction and delivering tangible value my readers asked me to sell them a product.

Not only did they ask me to create a product – 31 Days to Build a Better Blog (now updated into it’s 2nd edition) went on to become my biggest selling eBook.

This illustrates just how powerful community is if you’re looking to monetize your blog through selling products of some kind.

I’ve seen the same thing happening on dPS where we’ve developed 11 photography eBooks – the readers who buy our products are often the most engaged members of our communities and interestingly when a discussion happens in our forum area on topics covered in our eBook it is our community members who ‘sell’ our eBooks to new members the best.

6. Community Makes Your Blog More Attractive to Sell

Over the years I’ve had a number of companies offer to buy my blogs. While I’m not looking to sell them it is always an interesting discussion to have.

In most cases the conversation starts with a potential buyer interested in your traffic numbers and income – however what I’ve noticed is that when you begin to talk about the high level of reader engagement that you have on your bog many buyers become a lot more interested and start talking about higher purchase prices.

This will depend a little on the business model of a potential buyer – but I’ve seen this happen on at least 3 occasions in the last few years.

Community makes your blog more attractive to potential buyers.

7. Community Creates an Army of Advocates and Evangelists

An engaged and loyal reader is a powerful thing – not only because they’ll make your site useful and might buy your products – but because they are also much more likely to help you grow what you do.

This happens very naturally really – when you help someone on a daily basis and they feel a sense of belonging to your site they’re highly likely to tell someone about your blog.

I’ve seen it time and time again. I’ll often meet readers at a conference and ask them how they first became readers – the story is regularly ‘I am friends with Jim/Sarah/Bill/Joe/Anne… and they told me what a great site it was’.

Engaged readers don’t only help find you new readers – they can help you in many other ways.

Example 1: Several years ago one of my readers emailed me with an introduction to a New York Times journalist that they knew who was looking for someone to interview for a story. A week later dPS was featured in that publication.

Example 2: Around the same time a group of readers started a campaign to get our site on the radar of Canon and Nikon because they wanted them to advertise on dPS. They started a petition and did end up helping us land a small advertising campaign!

8. Community Can Help with User Generated Content

In a similar way – engaged readers who feel that they belong are more likely to contribute to your site by generating content for it.

This again may not be something that all bloggers are interested in – however if you’re looking to supplement your own content with guest posts from readers it can be an effective way of generating such content.

The other aspect of this is that you may not want to feature full posts from readers – but having engaged readers can help you generate other kinds of content.

For example I recently asked readers of my Google+ Account to share with us their advice on the topic of ‘finding your voice’ as a blogger.

I had some great responses and am compiling the answers into a post for ProBlogger (to which I’ll add some of my own thoughts). While not a ‘guest post’ as such it brings the wisdom of readers out of my social media community areas and onto the blog.

In the past I’ve done exactly the same thing by asking readers for their advice in the comments section of a blog and bringing those comments into a blog post.

9. Community Brings More Personal Satisfaction to Blogging

When I first drafted this post I didn’t have this point but on reflection of my last decade of blogging perhaps the biggest benefit of having community on my blogs has been it exponentially increases the personal satisfaction I’ve received from blogging.

I’ve had 30 or so blogs in the last 10 years and the ones in which I’ve invested into the community and had readers invest back into it have been the ones that I’ve been able to sustain over many years.

The blogs where community didn’t really click (and this can be the result of many factors) were blogs that I found most difficult sustain – probably because I wasn’t getting the engagement, feedback and encouragement of readers.

Maybe it is just me – although I suspect not – but it is community that is a fuel that feeds my blogs. Without it I can only sustain them so long!

The Costs of Community

The benefits of building community on a blog are many (and I would encourage you to add more that you’ve experienced to the comments section below) however it would not be balanced of me to talk about the benefits of building community on a blog without at least acknowledging that there are some ‘costs’ involved.

1. Building Community on a Blog Takes Time

Relationships and community don’t just appear out of thin air. They take time – in two ways:

  1. Firstly – building true community is something that generally takes a long period of time to gradually happen. While you can get comments on your first blog post – to get readers deeply engaged can take months… and years. We’ll talk more about how to build this culture of community on a blog in the coming days.
  2. Secondly – once you have community (and building community) can be something of a time suck and if you’re time poor it can be a challenge to do on a day by day basis.

2. Building Community can be an Emotional Roller-coaster

Building relationships with readers can be something of an emotional roller coaster.

In the early days it can be incredibly disheartening when community doesn’t seem to be happening despite your very best efforts.

But then in the longer term after community does begin to happen it can be so difficult to maintain once your community begins to pull in different directions and on those occasions when things go badly.

When community goes well it can be powerful – but when trolls, spammers or competitors infiltrate it can make you wonder why you bother at all!

3. Community Can be a Little Risky

I can think of a few instances over the years when a ‘community’ or readership of a blog have turned against a blogger and have really hurt the brand of a blog.

While these instances are certainly in the minority it is worth noting that if you’re not willing to invest into a community and lead it that you leave your blog’s brand in a vulnerable position.

We’ll talk more about this in the coming days as we talk about how to build a good culture of community on a blog.

How to Build Community on a Blog

In the coming days here at ProBlogger I want to explore the idea of building community and deepening reader engagement on a blog further.

Tomorrow we’ll take a look at 5 stages of building a Culture of Community on a Blog and then the following day we’ll get a little more concrete and look at some strategies and techniques for building community.

As always – subscribe to our newsletter by adding your email address below for a wrap up email at the end of this series so you don’t miss out!

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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9 Benefits [and 3 Costs] Of Building Community On Your Blog

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Don’t chase the money – Chase the passion.

Posted: 25 Mar 2013 06:43 AM PDT

Post image for Don’t chase the money – Chase the passion.

I get messages from people all the time who want to make money online.  They read the blog/newsletter,  see my phat AdSense Check and think I have the magic bullett.

Guess what I DO!  Prepare yourself for it!

You have passion and expertise about something.  Share that with people.

Let me give you some examples.  I will start with myself.

  • In 2003, while working a full time job and also reselling computers online,  I discovered a way to format ringtones and wallpapers for my Nextel phone.  I loved doing it.  It was a fun hobby.  Long story short – I  took that knowledge and created a website that others could upload ringtones to.  By 2005 the site was getting a ton of traffic.  I got a call from Google that suggested I put AdSense code on the site.  Overnight that site turned into a multimillion dollar website that I sold in 2010.
  • In 2007,  after having success with contextual advertising and affiliate marketing I thought it would be fun to create AdSense looking ads that got high clickthroughs but instead of going through Google I would bypass them and use my affiliate link.  Then I thought it would be fun to allow others to use this.  Then one day at a conference a person from eBay said eBay affiliates were doing really well with my ShoeMoney Ads ad network and suggested I build it just around eBay.  I created AuctionAds that did exactly that.  I created this with a part time developer and within 4 months it was generating over 2 million a month and I sold the company literally 4 months to the day that it launched.  Again this was a fun project that was almost like a hobby.
  • In 2003 I started a blog for fun sharing my life.  Not a “how to make money” blog but just shit I was doing.  It evolved into what you are reading now.  And its made millions of dollars.
  • In 2010 I shared my knowledge and experience on how I learned to make money online via a product called the ShoeMoney System.  It’s sold over 2 million dollars worth to date and still continues to sell.
  • In 2011 for fun I created a website called freeseoreport.com.  It was a free site where people could run a report on their site and a keyword they were trying to rank for then showed them what they were doing vs the top 10 people in every country and ever search engine.  This was something I found of value myself in trying to figure out backlinks and onpage stuff that I was missing out on.  I made money on the “backend” by sending people value added emails educating them on a variety of subjects related to seo with affiliate links.  There was also a viral component where for each person you referred to the website you got another free report.  The site was getting about 600 new people a day running about 3,000 reports per day.   The site was purchased 7 months later by an SEO firm.
  • Many years ago,  really before I was well known,  3 other marketers and myself started a high dollar conference called the elite retreat.  Its 8k per person and limited to 30 people.   We will be having our 10th event this fall.
  • In 2012 I created an automated email marketing system called the PAR Program.  This is my total focus now.  I stumbled into this because I took what I loved about email marketing and all the money we had made from it,  did it for a large company and after seeing the results started offering it as a service.  I have done ZERO marketing (I am bogged down with sales) and the company is growing like a rocket.

Ive done other stuff but those are the key ones.  I have also had failures.  Not because they were bad ideas but I just did not have the resources time wise to devote to making them work.  All of them were fun projects but more importantly great experiences.

Lets look at others:

  • A friend of mine who is also passionate and educated about mixed martial arts started a site called ufcjunkie.wordpress.com (now mmajunkie.com due to trademark).  He started the site as a hobby just putting his thoughts about the world of mixed martial arts online.  He started the site on a wordpress free hosted platform.  Within 5 years the site sold to USA TODAY for 8 figures.
  • 2 kids from hawaii, who were passionate about cats, thought it would be funny to post a picture of a cat captioning it with what they think the cat would say in “cat language”.  They uploaded a picture regularly and people found them funny.  Again this was on a free wordpress hosted blog.  The site was called icanhazcheeseburger.wordpress.com.  The fun site got massive traction so they allowed others to upload their funny cat photos.  Then one day they stumbled on to a blog called ShoeMoney.com,  saw some guy holding a 134k AdSense check and put the code on their site.  It made a ton and they sold the site for millions.
  • A long time ago a kid who grew up with his parents owning a wine selling business decided to start blogging about wine.   People started stumbling on to the site who were also interested in wine.  Then he started recording himself and the video’s started to become very viral.  So much so that he got invites to appear on Conan Obrien and Ellen.  He is now a multimillionaire with a #1 best selling book bringing in residual income.  His site is winelibrary.com and his name is Gary Vaynerchuk.
  • A Chinese immigrant with very broken english started a blog because he was interested in making money online.  Then he decided to show how much he was making online monthly.  Started with very little.  Then the blog started getting traction.  He did this all while having a computer business.  But he kept on sharing how he was making money online from his blog and exactly how much he was making.  People loved it and he started getting a following.  The site literally is called “I make money by telling people I make money online”.  Thats it!   And now his site literally is nothing but promoting affiliate products or doing paid reviews of people’s “how to make money” products.  It worked out for him…  He now makes a high six figure income basically doing nothing….  He has someone doing his posts for him as he travels around the world making more money month after month.  He recently released a product keeping the same theme of being transparent and walking you through how to make money with a blog.  He crushed it.  -  John Chow of johnchow.com
  • A former collegate pitcher decided to make a website offering a product to teach people how to gain more MPH on their fast ball offered a dvd set doing just that.  He now has a thriving business at topvelocity.net
  • A guy started a blog making fun of celebrities for fun.  Years later it evolved into perezhilton.com

See a trend here?

Lets get back to the original question…   “I want to make money online.  Where do I start” ?

I don’t know ANY successful internet millionaire who did not stumble onto their internet success.  None of them had visions of being a internet millionaire.  They had passions, interest, and education about a subject and pursued it.  That is the key.   None of them had to quit their day jobs.  They all started because it was a hobby.  It was fun…

The one thing I have learned is when someone starts something that they consider “work” they will give up quickly.

  • I have handed over websites to people that were generating hundreds of dollars a month for them to take and run with.  Guess what?  They didn’t do anything they just sucked up the revenue and let it die.
  • I have given PPC keywords to people that I was making a lot of money with promoting affiliate offers.  Guess what?  They ran it until they died then came to me for more keywords.  The didn’t research or even care how it was making money.

 But honestly thats just the top of the ice berg.  

For everyone who is making money on line there is millions of people who “want to”.  Out of those very few will take action.  There is no doubt anyone can do it and the best part about it is you can do it from anywhere in the world no matter what level of education or experience.

This opportunity will not be around forever.  Mostly because big brands are just now starting to see the value of some of the marketing techniques and dumping in tons of money where guys like us just can’t compete.  Fortunately they move at a snails pace and for now guys sitting at home can do much more cutting edge techniques that big businesses can’t keep up.

I got a little off topic but my point is that if you really want to make money online it costs you no money at all to take action right now.  And I mean RIGHT NOW.

Chase the passion not the money.

 

 

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