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Ronn Torossian: 3 reasons no one reads your post (and how to change that)

Posted: 03 Mar 2014 06:45 AM PST

Ronn-Torossian-three-reasons-no-one-reads-your-posts

Confused Content - Ronn Torossian on how to write good content

for ShoeMoney.com

Ronn Torossian reveals 3 reasons no one read your post and explains how to change that

Ronn Torossian is the founder and CEO of 5W Public Relations and a noted PR guru with offices in NYC and Los Angeles.

You worked hard, researched well and edited pristinely. In fact, you checked that baby twice and were CERTAIN it was an epic entry into the web pantheon of excellent blogdom. Five minutes after you post it, you click over eagerly. One snarky comment from your brother or your college roommate. Otherwise, bupkis.

No worries, you think, it's only been a couple minutes. I'll come back. An hour later you click over and still nothing. In fact, you think you may have seen a tumbleweed bounce across the screen. What gives! That was some seriously awesome content!

Well, here are three reasons why no one read your post…and how you can keep that from happening again.

#1 – Wrong Timing

Confused Content - Ronn Torossian on how to write good content
Chances are, if the entire population of the Interwebs is jawing about one particular topic, and you bust out with mad wisdom regarding something totally unrelated, you will hear nothing but a great sucking sound where your clicks should be. There may be nothing inherently wrong with your piece, but – and hopefully this is not news to you – the web is search-based. People are looking for what they are looking for. Step one in getting clicks and reads and buy-ins is this: "Know what people are looking for." Even Ronn Torossian cannot write you a stellar enough release to overcome no initial interest. So do your homework. Find out what people are after, grab a niche to dominate and get posting, my friends.

#2 – Bad headline

Search engine results give you a headline and not much else. If your headline doesn't stand out, you will get stepped over. Think about it. We've all done it. You see a list of search results and breeze right by a couple looking for the one that grabs you the most. Guess what, intrepid Internet entrepreneur, everyone else is doing that too. Seriously. Everyone. So give the masses what they want – attention-grabbing headlines. Then, once you have their attention, deliver the good and get them hooked on the content you bring to the table. Speaking of content…

#3 – Confused content

Confused Content - Ronn Torossian on how to write good content

Double facepalm inducing frustration. That's the only way to politely describe the feeling you get when you land on a page and it is NOTHING like what you expected. The headline doesn't match the content and…even worse…the content doesn't seem to match the content. The points don't correlate and the logic (if there is any) doesn't flow. Worse, you can't apply any of it. And this last is key. To be good, your content must be useful. You need to give people something they can use right now. After all, they put a certain series of words in a search engine LOOKING for something specific. They NEED your help…give it to them already. Stick with relevant, actionable content. Don't get cute.

And, if your content is hyper specific, do your reader a favor. Link to other more general stories or content related to that topic. That way, they can read your content and see if, perhaps, there is more information to help them with their specific issue elsewhere.

Internet marketing may be a science, but it is not rocket surgery. Give good out and you will get good back. Fail to do so and you risk crickets.

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Here’s One Small but Crucial Factor to Remember When Choosing a Domain Name - DailyBlogTips

Here’s One Small but Crucial Factor to Remember When Choosing a Domain Name - DailyBlogTips


Here’s One Small but Crucial Factor to Remember When Choosing a Domain Name

Posted: 03 Mar 2014 08:00 AM PST

Let’s say you’re thinking through domain names for your new website, and you’ve shortlisted a few ideas.

If the one you want is available, it’s a no-brainer to go ahead and register it straight away.

Except…

… there’s one crucial check you need to make.

Is your domain name open to misinterpretation?

Let me share a few domain names with you:

www.penisland.com

oddsextractor.com

whorepresents.com

Did any (or all) of those sound a bit inappropriate for inclusion on DailyBlogTips?

Here’s the actual names of the sites in order:

Pen Island

Odds Extractor

Who Represents

Unfortunately, their domain names are far too easy to misread … as you may have noticed!

Does your domain name fall into this trap? (Even if it’s not a rude misreading.) If you think there’s room for misinterpretation, you might want to run it past a few friends or fellow bloggers – ask them to read the domain name then tell you the name of the site.

If you’re attached to the domain name you’ve chosen, you could consider adding a hyphen:

www.pen-island.com

www.odds-extractor.com

www.who-represents.com

We’d normally recommend avoiding hyphens (URLs are cleaner, simpler, and easier to remember and to spell over the phone without them) but in these cases, they’d probably be a good move.

Have you ever come across an all-too-easy to misread domain name? Share it with us in the comments.

 

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