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Do You Use The “30 Days to a Habit” Strategy? - DailyBlogTips

Do You Use The “30 Days to a Habit” Strategy? - DailyBlogTips


Do You Use The “30 Days to a Habit” Strategy?

Posted: 22 May 2013 06:33 AM PDT

The premise: many studies and researches found that successful people tend to have more habits (positive habits, mind you) when compared to average people. That’s because habits add consistency and discipline to your professional and personal life, traits that are essential to reaching your goals.

Examples of positive habits one can have:

  • Exercising for 30 minutes every morning
  • Meditating before going to sleep
  • Remembering and using the first name of everyone, on every interaction
  • Learning a new foreign language every couple of years
  • Settings goals for the day every morning
  • Reading a technical book for 30 minutes every morning

Cool, but how do we go about developing those habits?

The best strategy I have seen so far is this one: at the beginning of every month you will sit down and decide on which habit you want to develop over the next 30 days. It can also be a bad habit that you want to get rid of (e.g., smoking or eating junk food). After that you commit yourself to stick to the habits for those 30 days. Once the month is over you may decide to halt it, but most people find that 30 days is enough to get the habit rooted inside you, so most of them will stay.

For some habits I find that 30 days is not enough, so in those cases I commit to sticking to the play for 60 days at least, which seems to do the trick.

Matt Cutts, head of web spam at Google, is a big fan of this strategy. In fact if you visit his blog you’ll notice a category titled “30 days”. There you’ll find all his posts about the different habits he pursued in the past.

The month is almost over, so which habit will you develop over the next 30 days?

Wanna make money with your website?


Original Post: Do You Use The “30 Days to a Habit” Strategy?

ProBlogger: 7 Steps to Proofreading Like a Pro

ProBlogger: 7 Steps to Proofreading Like a Pro

Link to @ProBlogger

7 Steps to Proofreading Like a Pro

Posted: 21 May 2013 09:37 AM PDT

This is a guest contribution by Charles Cuninghame, website copywriter and owner of Text-Centric.

I'm sure we can all agree that proofreading is the least fun part of blogging. But while it may be tedious, it's well worth the effort.

Typos are not only embarrassing, they can also cost you money.

In a widely reported study in 2011, British entrepreneur Charles Duncombe found a single spelling mistake can cut online sales in half! If you don’t have a product, then you could be missing out a blog subscriber or repeat visitor!

A man shocked at your lack of proofreading!

Here's a tried and tested proofreading process that I've taught to many novice writers with great success. Once you get the hang of it, you should be able to thoroughly proofread an average length blog post in 5-10 minutes.

What you'll need:

  1. A printer
  2. A red pen
  3. A highlighter pen

Step 1: Set it aside

Time permitting, set your blog post aside for a while before you proofread it. An hour is good, a day is better. The more time you put between the writing and proofreading, the more refreshed you'll be and better able to spot any typos.

Step 2: Print it out

Research has shown that proofreading on-screen is not as effective as proofreading a printout. So do yourself a favour and print your post out. But run it through the spell checker first, to fix any obvious spelling mistakes.

Step 3: Mark up your changes

Get ready by minimising distractions. Proofreading requires your undivided attention. So turn off your phone, close your email and switch off the music.

Read through your post marking up typos and rough spots with your red pen as you go. Force yourself to slow down and concentrate. Focus on each word and character as you read.

Make your mark-ups obvious so you don't overlook them at the corrections stage. Punctuation marks (commas, apostrophes, full-stops/periods, etc.) are particularly easy to miss. So it's a good idea to circle the mark-up for extra emphasis.

It's also a good idea to put a cross in the margin next to a line that contains a correction.

Step 4: Read out loud

Once you're been through your blog post once, read it aloud. Reading aloud helps in two ways. Firstly, your ears will often catch mistakes that your eyes miss. Reading aloud forces a higher level of concentration than silent reading.

And secondly, reading out loud helps you to write conversationally. If your post sounds clunky when you speak it, you need to revise it until it sounds confidently conversational.

Step 5: Double-check details

There are some details that are particularly embarrassing or troublesome to get wrong. So you should double-check the following:

  • The spelling of people's names e.g. is it Janine or Jenean? Stuart or Stewart?
  • Ditto brand names e.g. is it WordPress, WordPress or Word Press?
  • Telephone numbers and email addresses
  • Prices
  • Click links to make sure they go where you want them to.

Step 6: Make corrections

Make all your corrections in one go, not as you find them. Be very careful as you make changes. You don't want to add in errors at this stage. Be especially careful with any sections you've rewritten. If you've rewritten a significant portion of your post it's best to print it out and proof it again.

A common mistake is missing corrections you've marked up on your printout. So as you make each change mark it off your printout with your highlighter. When you've finished making changes, go over your printout to make sure you haven't missed anything.

Step 7: Final check

As a final check, run the spell checker over your corrected post. Read it on-screen to make sure it looks OK. Break up any paragraphs that are longer than 5 lines. Now you're good to hit the publish button!

Charles Cuninghame is a website copywriter and the author of the Website Content Cheat-Sheet. For important documents he usually hires a proofreader.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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7 Steps to Proofreading Like a Pro