Ads 468x60px

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney

Free Shirt Friday: Falcon Asphalt Repair Equipment @HotBoxRecycler

Posted: 06 Jun 2014 06:30 AM PDT

Post image for Free Shirt Friday: Falcon Asphalt Repair Equipment @HotBoxRecycler

This week’s Free Shirt Friday comes to us from Falcon Asphalt Repair Equipment.

Falcon Asphalt Repair Equipment (aka Falcon Road Maintenance Equipment) manufactures portable, affordable asphalt recyclers for routine pavement repairs —– point repairs, utility cuts, patches, potholes. Falcon's pothole patchers are used for repairing pavement with recycled asphalt to reduce both material and labor costs. It also helps the environment.

Founded in 2004, the company was recently recognized by Inc. Magazine as the fastest growing asphalt maintenance equipment manufacturer in the United States as well as one of the countries fastest growing woman owned businesses. Municipalities and private companies in 54 states and provinces across the United States and Canada include Falcon equipment in their road maintenance programs.

If you want to be a part of free shirt friday, please click here.  

Falcon - sarah@shoemoney.com - ShoeMoney Capital Mail.jpg

Trying to increase your Google rank that is like no other?

ProBlogger: Theme Week: Extend Your Ideas With Future Blog Posts

ProBlogger: Theme Week: Extend Your Ideas With Future Blog Posts

Link to @ProBlogger

Theme Week: Extend Your Ideas With Future Blog Posts

Posted: 03 Jun 2014 05:06 PM PDT

This week we’ve been looking at what to do after you’ve hit publish on your blog posts.

Today I’d like to suggest a task that I think has real potential to help our blogs to make a big impact upon our readers by taking them on our journey.

Think about how to extend the ideas in your post, and follow it up with more content.

Over the last 12 or so months I’ve noticed numerous blogs using a strategy that I think is a little short-sighted.

It comes in the wake of big sites like Upworthy and Buzzfeed who largely use curated content, wrap headlines about it that are either sensational or use curiosity, and then call those who arrive on the site to take action with a ‘like’ or ‘share’.

While this model of publishing is obviously working for sites like Upworthy and Buzzfeed, my concern is that within almost every niche now I see blogs that used to be creating quality original content moving to this model.

In the photography blogging space I can think of 4-5 blogs that used to publish 1-2 quality original posts per day (posts that were all about helping readers and building momentum from post to post), now publish as many as 15-20 curated posts per day.

While I’m sure their traffic is up, I’ve noticed something of a backlash happening on social media. Almost daily I see people complain about the ‘fluffy’ content and headlines that over-promise on the content that will be featured.

These blogs that had built loyalty, trust and community now are in danger of having a less-engaged readership, and brands that are somewhat damaged.

I guess it partly comes down the monetization model of the blog in question – this curated content approach certainly can drive significant traffic and thus increases advertising revenue – but I worry that blogs are becoming ‘fluffy’, and less relevant as a result.

In this time of ‘fluffy’ content, I see a real opportunity for bloggers who want to stand out by producing blogs that go deeper.

One of the ways I think bloggers could do this is to consider producing content that builds from one post to another – something that was very common place back in the day when I began blogging.

You’ll notice here on ProBlogger we’ve been doing this more and more over the past year with our ‘Theme Weeks’ (like the current one we’re running). Going deeper into topics with longer-form content.

A planned series of posts is just one approach to doing this. Another is simply to pause after you’ve written and published a post to ask yourself a simple question:

“Is there anything in what I’ve just written that I could extend or followup with another post?”

Get into the habit of asking this question, and you’ll naturally start to create content that goes deeper and builds momentum between your posts.

Other quick tips on ‘extending’ your content in this way include:

  • Pay attention to the tangents you consider taking mid post – many times we consider adding ideas into posts but don’t. These could well become separate posts.
  • Pay attention to the questions that your blog posts readers with in the comments on your posts.
  • Examine older posts in your archives that perhaps could be developed further because they’ve become a little dated
  • If you’ve written an opinion post – could you follow it up by exploring the opposing view?
  • Could you follow up the post with a case study or example of what you’ve been writing about?

Lastly – check out this mind mapping exercise that I wrote about a few years back which is all about taking a post you’ve written and finding ways to extend it.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

Theme Week: Extend Your Ideas With Future Blog Posts